> > As an aside, I highly recommend CentOS as an option for RH shops moving > > forward. RH9 is far from supported, while CentOS (being an RHEL rebuild) > > will be supported for years.
Or until Red Hat goes under due to too many people using the parasitic clone products that do nothing to support Red Hat's bottom line. > Will have to talk with the machine owner. The system was intended to > run software from Bruker (sp?) Scientific (NMR analysis) and I don't > know that they are supporting anything other than RH Enterprise I've seen elsewhere online that some vendors who's products are certified to run under RHEL are refusing to give support to folks using clones when the need arises. > [EMAIL PROTECTED] dev]# cat /proc/scsi/scsi > Attached devices: > Host: scsi0 Channel: 00 Id: 00 Lun: 00 > Vendor: HL-DT-ST Model: CD-RW GCE-8160B Rev: 2.11 > Type: CD-ROM ANSI SCSI revision: 02 > ?? The 'dmesg' output you sent showed an aic7xxx showing up as scsi1, with > the tape drive and changer attached to that. They should still be there. > Are there any SCSI errors in /var/log/messages? And, again, 'lsmod' will > show us whether or not the aic7xxx driver is still loaded. Granted I'm not using the same hardware as you, but I've got a changer hanging off of my Red Hat ELAS 3 box and I found the changer and the tape drive itself (they are two separate devices on my system) by using the tapeinfo -f /dev/sgn command where n was an integer that I kept incrementing until it came back with what appeared to be reasonable representations of my devices, turned out to be on /dev/sg3 (the changer itself) and /dev/sg4 (the tape drive itself). After I found them, I made symlinks for /dev/changer which points to /dev/sg3 and /dev/tape which points to /dev/nst0. The mtx and mt commands will default to these devices (/dev/changer and /dev/tape) respectively. Good luck. -- Dave Hull Software Engineer Networking and Telecommunications Services A Division of Information Services The University of Kansas