T.R | Title | User | Personal Name | Date | Lines |
---|
772.1 | | FORTSC::MESSENGER | Late in the 20th Century | Thu Feb 15 1990 12:11 | 7 |
| I don't know anything about _public domain_ streamer backup software,
but...
I read in comp.sys.atari.st that both Berkeley Microsystems and ICD
have packages, and will sell them separately from their
drives/adapters.
- hbm
|
772.2 | SCSI BIOS(RWABS) | EIGER::BOLLIGER | | Fri Feb 16 1990 10:53 | 13 |
| SCSI COMMANDS GROUP #0
Wat you have to do is write your one bios driver (rwabs)
all SCSI device understan the group #0 Commands like
READ BLOCK(S) WRITE BLOCK(S) START UNIT STOP UNIT
SO IT IS VERY EASY TO WRITE A DRIVER FOR ANY SCSI DEVICE
IF YOU WANT I COULD SEND YOU AN EXAMPLE OF A DRIVER
FRED
Greetings from Switzerland....
|
772.3 | Who knows cheap SCSI-streamers? | HAM::LITSCH | Jens Schmidt | Tue Feb 20 1990 09:06 | 19 |
| As I'm currently building such an SCSI-board (from ST-Computer
magazine) and like to easy my backups, I'd like to have a streamer too.
I even would write some software for it, so that full partition backup
and may be even file operations from the desktop are possible. There
is just one small problem:
I've yet to find an inexpensive streamer having SCSI. Most ads only
say "Complete streamer package for IBM PC and compatibles", but don't
give any details. There are three different common interfaces for
streamers:
- QIC (Quarter Inch Committee), which is for streamers only. You need
one more interface to use that with SCSI.
- Floppy-like, which is very cheap, connected to the floppy port, slow
and incompatible with everything including itself :-)
- SCSI, which is what I want.
If anyone finds such a beast for a decent price, please tell me. You
will be rewarded be getting some driver software for it a while later
(if I really buy it of cause).
Jens
|
772.4 | 8mm SCSI ???? | CITYFS::SM | Not now, I'm eating my lunch!!! | Thu Jan 31 1991 08:45 | 10 |
|
I have access to an Exabyte 8mm SCSI tape drive , has anyone had
any luck using one of these drives on the ATARI. I am getting a
SCSI adapter to hook up a hard disk but have know idea about what
drivers etc are needed for one of these tape drives.
BC
|
772.5 | tapedrives connected to floppy-controller | UFHIS::BFALKENSTEIN | | Thu Aug 29 1991 07:37 | 32 |
|
Meanwhile I tried to connect a TK50 with a TZK50 SCSI-Controller on my
Atari with no luck, the interface from MAXON simply couldn't see any
connected device besides the harddisk. I had this idea after reading
that the Amiga people use TK50s alot.
So, I'm still looking for a cheap backup device. There are two
standards that might be ok for the Atari: QIC40 and QIC80. These two
kinds of cartridge tapedrives are controlled via floppy controller.
Because during the night there's time enough to do a backup, speed
is no problem. In the latest computer cataloque I saw a QIC80 tapedrive
for PCs, called Colorado Streamer, for 2xx $. They said that it's
shipped with compaction software for PCs that enables to store 120MB
on a cartridge and that the drive is connected to the floppy-port.
Now I have some questions:
- had one of the noters ever had a tapedrive connected to the floppy-
port and did it work?
- the floppyport of the Atari is kind of standard Shugart-bus, so it
works with 5.25 inch floppydrives. Could there be any problems in
connecting such a tapedrive to it?
- If there's no problem connecting the drive, do I use it then like a
floppy-drive, e.g. "Copy C:\*.* B:\*.*" or do I need a special driver
software (writing a backup problem wouldn't be a problem in the
first case...)?
I mean, can I just simply go out, buy a QIC80 tapedrive, connect it to
the floppy-port, use the floppy-B icon and dragg my files onto it?
Bernd
|
772.6 | Any resolution? | DETOO::HEARN | Time will tell... | Mon Jun 22 1992 14:44 | 7 |
|
so Bernd,
Did you ever get past his point? How did you finally decide?
Rich
|
772.7 | using the Syquest now | UFHIS::BFALKENSTEIN | | Tue Jun 23 1992 03:51 | 19 |
|
the companies I phoned wanted to sell me the software only with the
hardware. So I am using the Syquest removable media harddisk for
backup now. Using ST-DCL I wrote a backup procedure that scans each
partition for folders of the rootdirectory, calls LZH with the
parameters "include subdirs" and then compresses the files to the
Syquest. Another pass with the "MAKE_SFX"-Programm creates *.TOS files
out of the *.LZH that are then self-extracting and have the name of the
original folder. On the 44MB Syquest I can store the roughly 120 MB that
are momentarily used on my harddisk.
It takes some hours during the night, but restore is as simple as
doubleclicking on the desired selfextracting archive. Well, I can live
with overnight backup once a week, specially when everything is fully
automatic now. Maybe one could shorten the time by using another option
of LZH, the "new files only", for incremental backup.
Bernd
|
772.8 | Tnx & I'll post an answer... | DETOO::HEARN | Time will tell... | Tue Jun 23 1992 08:45 | 11 |
|
Bernd,
Thanks for the response. It sounds like a good "answer"
to a not so good situation. I guess I'll check with Chris out
at BMS and see what he has to say about hd/sw for a tape. When
I do, I'll post the information here in the conference.
Thanks again,
Rich
|