Short story: There was an HD68 SE terminator on the tape drive. Long story:
After messing about with block sizes the highest throughput seen was 38.7 MB/s. Possibly a coincidence, but that seemed awfully close to 40MB/s such as one might see on an SE scsi bus. Also, the drive hung when I tried to run HP's ltt drive test, and when its cable was unplugged a mysterious message appeared in /var/log "Transceiver state has changed to LVD mode", implying that it was in some other mode before. Neither the cable nor the terminator the previous admin had used was marked, but I figured the most likely thing was that the terminator was SE and not LVD. So an LVD terminator was ordered. Today, with the new LVD terminator in place, the dd read/write tests (from /dev/zero on write, to /dev/null on read) were much better (this is with compression on): BS N WriteRate ReadRate (rates in MB/s) 32768 20000 53.6 83.2 65536 20000 97.2 145 131072 20000 122 167 262144 20000 134 183 524288 20000 149 192 mt -f /dev/nst0 compression off apparently did what it said, even though neither "mt status" nor the contents of "/sys/class/scsi_tape/nst0/*" changed. With compression off this table was generated: BS N WriteRate ReadRate (rates in MB/s) 32768 10000 37 42 65536 10000 49 54 131072 10000 54 57 262144 10000 57 58 Just under 60MB/sec seems to be the maximum tape transport read/write limit. Pretty reliably the first write from the beginning of tape was a bit slower than writes started further into the tape. I also tried tests at 524288, 1048576, and 2097152 block size. The the latter one unfortunately seems to have crashed the entire server. Also, even with the right terminator, using HP's LTT device test (option 11) hung the tape drive so hard that a full power cycle on both the drive and the server was needed to regain control. The 60MB/sec is pretty impressive, much better than the 36MB/sec on our SDLT 600. On the other hand, the SDLT drive has never crashed our server! Regards, David Mathog [EMAIL PROTECTED] Manager, Sequence Analysis Facility, Biology Division, Caltech _______________________________________________ Beowulf mailing list, Beowulf@beowulf.org To change your subscription (digest mode or unsubscribe) visit http://www.beowulf.org/mailman/listinfo/beowulf