1 /* 2 The compile-time configurable defaults for the Linux SCSI tape driver. 3 4 Copyright 1995 Kai Makisara. 5 6 Last modified: Sun Sep 24 11:46:15 1995 by root@kai.makisara.fi 7 */ 8 9 #ifndef _ST_OPTIONS_H 10 #define _ST_OPTIONS_H 11 12 /* The driver allocates the tape buffers when needed if ST_RUNTIME_BUFFERS 13 is nonzero. Otherwise a number of buffers are allocated at initialization. 14 The drawback of runtime allocation is that allocation may fail. In any 15 case the driver tries to allocate a new tape buffer when none is free. */ 16 #define ST_RUNTIME_BUFFERS 0 17 18 /* The minimum limit for the number of SCSI tape devices is determined by 19 ST_MAX_TAPES. If the number of tape devices and the "slack" defined by 20 ST_EXTRA_DEVS exceeds ST_MAX_TAPES, the large number is used. */ 21 #define ST_MAX_TAPES 4 22 23 /* The driver does not wait for some operations to finish before returning 24 to the user program if ST_NOWAIT is non-zero. This helps if the SCSI 25 adapter does not support multiple outstanding commands. However, the user 26 should not give a new tape command before the previous one has finished. */ 27 #define ST_NOWAIT 0 28 29 /* If ST_IN_FILE_POS is nonzero, the driver positions the tape after the 30 record been read by the user program even if the tape has moved further 31 because of buffered reads. Should be set to zero to support also drives 32 that can't space backwards over records. NOTE: The tape will be 33 spaced backwards over an "accidentally" crossed filemark in any case. */ 34 #define ST_IN_FILE_POS 0 35 36 /* If ST_RECOVERED_WRITE_FATAL is non-zero, recovered errors while writing 37 are considered "hard errors". */ 38 #define ST_RECOVERED_WRITE_FATAL 0 39 40 /* The "guess" for the block size for devices that don't support MODE 41 SENSE. */ 42 #define ST_DEFAULT_BLOCK 0 43 44 /* The tape driver buffer size in kilobytes. */ 45 #define ST_BUFFER_BLOCKS 32 46 47 /* The number of kilobytes of data in the buffer that triggers an 48 asynchronous write in fixed block mode. See also ST_ASYNC_WRITES 49 below. */ 50 #define ST_WRITE_THRESHOLD_BLOCKS 30 51 52 /* The maximum number of tape buffers the driver allocates. The number 53 is also constrained by the number of drives detected. Determines the 54 maximum number of concurrently active tape drives. */ 55 #define ST_MAX_BUFFERS (2 + ST_EXTRA_DEVS) 56 57 58 /* The following lines define defaults for properties that can be set 59 separately for each drive using the MTSTOPTIONS ioctl. */ 60 61 /* If ST_TWO_FM is non-zero, the driver writes two filemarks after a 62 file being written. Some drives can't handle two filemarks at the 63 end of data. */ 64 #define ST_TWO_FM 0 65 66 /* If ST_BUFFER_WRITES is non-zero, writes in fixed block mode are 67 buffered until the driver buffer is full or asynchronous write is 68 triggered. May make detection of End-Of-Medium early enough fail. */ 69 #define ST_BUFFER_WRITES 1 70 71 /* If ST_ASYNC_WRITES is non-zero, the SCSI write command may be started 72 without waiting for it to finish. May cause problems in multiple 73 tape backups. */ 74 #define ST_ASYNC_WRITES 1 75 76 /* If ST_READ_AHEAD is non-zero, blocks are read ahead in fixed block 77 mode. */ 78 #define ST_READ_AHEAD 1 79 80 /* If ST_AUTO_LOCK is non-zero, the drive door is locked at the first 81 read or write command after the device is opened. The door is opened 82 when the device is closed. */ 83 #define ST_AUTO_LOCK 0 84 85 /* If ST_FAST_MTEOM is non-zero, the MTEOM ioctl is done using the 86 direct SCSI command. The file number status is lost but this method 87 is fast with some drives. Otherwise MTEOM is done by spacing over 88 files and the file number status is retained. */ 89 #define ST_FAST_MTEOM 0 90 91 #endif