X-Git-Url: https://git.sur5r.net/?a=blobdiff_plain;f=docs%2Fmanuals%2Fen%2Fmain%2Fsupporteddrives.tex;fp=docs%2Fmanuals%2Fen%2Fmain%2Fsupporteddrives.tex;h=5eda0d249ea47dedbb72830916f4deb69630a361;hb=6851bcb9e95a17f47f0a27c9c2170eaa901d0c9f;hp=73f0759943d05e5ce525c3329ee0a7b67774fefe;hpb=74bf3875eb2aad73a573366d6639e297bf9342aa;p=bacula%2Fdocs diff --git a/docs/manuals/en/main/supporteddrives.tex b/docs/manuals/en/main/supporteddrives.tex index 73f07599..5eda0d24 100644 --- a/docs/manuals/en/main/supporteddrives.tex +++ b/docs/manuals/en/main/supporteddrives.tex @@ -10,7 +10,8 @@ Bacula uses standard operating system calls (read, write, ioctl) to interface to tape drives. As a consequence, it relies on having a correctly written OS tape driver. Bacula is known to work perfectly well with SCSI tape drivers on FreeBSD, Linux, Solaris, and Windows machines, -and it may work on other *nix machines, but we have not tested it. +and it may work on other *nix machines. + Recently there are many new drives that use IDE, ATAPI, or SATA interfaces rather than SCSI. On Linux the OnStream drive, which uses the OSST driver is one such @@ -24,6 +25,10 @@ is a good chance that it will not work. We are working with the kernel developers to rectify this situation, but it will not be resolved in the near future. +Generally any modern tape drive (i.e. after 2010) will work out +of the box with Bacula using the standard Bacula Device specification +in the bacula-sd.conf file. + Even if your drive is on the list below, please check the \ilink{Tape Testing Chapter}{btape1} of this manual for procedures that you can use to verify if your tape drive will work with