Dear Adam !

I recently tested ltfs and it works as expected. Manually load your
tapes with mtx, format the tapes for ltfs and then you can just mount
the tape like a disk. I used Quantum LTO-7 drives, worked flawlessly.

I installed ltfs on a debian bullseye (11.5) machine by compiling from
source. Its actually easy, this where the steps i had to take:

> sudo apt install automake autoconf libtool fuse uuid libxml2 snmp
> libicu67 pkg-config icu-devtools libfuse-dev libxml2-dev uuid-dev
> libsnmp-dev
> 
> git clone https://github.com/LinearTapeFileSystem/ltfs.git
> cd ltfs
> ./autogen.sh
> ./configure
> make
> sudo make install
> sudo ldconfig -v

You might need a few more packages, depending on the state of your
machine.

Hope this helps,
regards,
karl


Am Montag, dem 14.11.2022 um 18:44 +0000 schrieb Adam Weremczuk:
> Hi,
> 
> Has anybody had much success with it?
> 
> This is the closest thing that I've managed to find: 
> https://github.com/LinearTapeFileSystem/
> 
> Only Debian 10 version with no updates for almost 2 years 🙁
> 
> My tape drive is Quantum LTO8 HH SAS External and works pretty well
> with 
> WS 2019.
> 
> Regards,
> Adam
> 
> 
> _______________________________________________
> Bacula-users mailing list
> Bacula-users@lists.sourceforge.net
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