Hi,
I have talked directly with Seagate about this, the following is reply from Seagate, I have not tried this yet. Again, this is not my advice, it is Seagate reply. Maybe Charlie or somebody in the know will see this, and reply?
+++Seagate Reply++++
Log into Root.
Depending on the modules running try this.
Type rmmod ide-tape and enter.
Type rmmod ide-scsi and enter.
Type insmod ide-scsi and enter.
Type insmod sg and enter.
Insert a tape into the drive wait till it stops moving.
Now type tar -cvf /dev/st0 /etc and enter.
+++End Seagate Reply+++
+++Dan Question+++
BEFORE I do any of this, it will not mess my system up will it?
+++End Dan Question+++
+++Seagate Reply++++
No.
Linux needs an IDE tape drive to emulate SCSI.
If the IDE-TAPE and IDE-SCSI modules are both loaded, IDE-TAPE causes issues.
So we unload both modules then load IDE-SCSI which will have the tape drive emulate a SCSI drive making its device name st0.
It is a known issue.
+++End Seagate Reply+++
+++Dan Question+++
Do you have to do the commands every time the server is restarted?
+++End Dan Question+++
+++Seagate Reply++++
If the system is booted it will load the modules wrong again.
Do this.
Add the following lines to the modules.conf file located in the /etc
directory
alias ide-tape off
below st ide-scsi
The "alias ide-tape off" line will turn off the ide-tape module at boot.
The "below st ide-scsi" will load the ide-scsi module after st has loaded,
at boot.
+++End Seagate Reply+++