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Length: 1952 (0x7a0) Types: TextFile Names: »README«
└─⟦a0efdde77⟧ Bits:30001252 EUUGD11 Tape, 1987 Spring Conference Helsinki └─⟦this⟧ »EUUGD11/euug-87hel/sec1/tapemgr/README«
Tapemgr is a program that tries to avoid the problem of having someone else access the tape drive you have your tape mounted on. This program has only been run/tested on a BSD4.2 operating system and I expect that it will not run without modification on another type of operating system. Also it requires getopt which has been distributed over the network several times, with other programs and alone so I haven't bothered sticking it in here. To install this program there are a number of things you should do. 1) Set up a group called tapemgr. Add those people who may need special privileges with the tape drive(ignoring timeout and reseting drives not allocated to them.) i.e. "tapemgr:*:300:root,sys1,thompson,wicat" 2) Set up an account called tapemgr that is in the group tapemgr. i.e. "tapemgr:*:30:300:Magnetic Tape Manager:/:/bin/csh" 3) Go through the defines at the beginning of tapemgr.c and change any that need changing (the pid and gid of tapemgr for starters if you didn't use 30 and 300 and the number of drives you actually have if you have more than one) the comments with the various defines will tell you what they are for. 4) Compile and install tapemgr "make install". 5) Install the manual entry tapemgr.1 6) Create the log file if you want a log kept. 7) Change the owner and group of /dev/mt* and /dev/rmt* to tapemgr and change /dev/nmt* and /dev/nrmt* to symbolic links to the appropriate /dev/mt* and /dev/rmt* (e.g. /dev/nmt0 becomes a symbolic link to /dev/mt4). Also change protection on all /dev/mt* and /dev/rmt* to 600. NOTE: except for the symbolic link stuff everything(changing ownership, group and mode) could be done with the command "/usr/local/tapemgr -v -r all". 8) Add the following two lines to your /etc/rc.local. echo cleaning up tape drives. >/dev/console /usr/local/tapemgr -v -r all >/dev/null