/ltfs

Reference implementation of the LTFS format Spec for stand alone tape drive

Primary LanguageCBSD 3-Clause "New" or "Revised" LicenseBSD-3-Clause

GH Action status CodeFactor BSD License

About this branch

This is the master branch of the LTFS project. At this time, this branch is used for version 2.5 development. So it wouldn't be stable a little. Please consider to follow the tree on v2.4-stable branch if you want to use stable codes.

What is the Linear Tape File System (LTFS)

The Linear Tape File System (LTFS) is a filesystem to mount a LTFS formatted tape in a tape drive. Once LTFS mounts a LTFS formatted tape as filesystem, user can access to the tape via filesystem API.

Objective of this project is being the reference implementation of the LTFS format Specifications in SNIA.

At this time, the target of this project to meet is the LTFS format specifications 2.5.

Supported Tape Drives

Vendor Drive Type Minimum F/W Level
IBM LTO5 B170
IBM LTO6 None
IBM LTO7 None
IBM LTO8 HB81
IBM TS1140 3694
IBM TS1150 None
IBM TS1155 None
IBM TS1160 None
HP LTO5 T.B.D.
HP LTO6 T.B.D.
HP LTO7 T.B.D.
HP LTO8 T.B.D.
Quantum LTO5 (Only Half Height) T.B.D.
Quantum LTO6 (Only Half Height) T.B.D.
Quantum LTO7 (Only Half Height) T.B.D.
Quantum LTO8 (Only Half Height) T.B.D.

LTFS Format Specifications

LTFS Format Specification is specified data placement, shape of index and names of extended attributes for LTFS. This specification is defined in SNIA first and then it is forwarded to ISO as ISO/IEC 20919 from version 2.2.

The table below show status of the LTFS format Specification

Version Status of SNIA Status of ISO
2.2 Published the Technical Position Published
2.3.1 Published the Technical Position -
2.4 Published the Technical Position Published
2.5.1 Published the Technical Position Not started yet

How to use the LTFS (Quick start)

This section is for person who already have a machine the LTFS is installed. Instruction how to use the LTFS is also available on Wiki.

Step1: List tape drives

# ltfs -o device_list

The output is like follows. You can have 3 drives in this example and you can use "Device Name" field, like /dev/sg43 in this case, as the argument of ltfs command to mount the tape drive.

50c4 LTFS14000I LTFS starting, LTFS version 2.4.0.0 (10022), log level 2.
50c4 LTFS14058I LTFS Format Specification version 2.4.0.
50c4 LTFS14104I Launched by "/home/piste/ltfsoss/bin/ltfs -o device_list".
50c4 LTFS14105I This binary is built for Linux (x86_64).
50c4 LTFS14106I GCC version is 4.8.5 20150623 (Red Hat 4.8.5-11).
50c4 LTFS17087I Kernel version: Linux version 3.10.0-514.10.2.el7.x86_64 (mockbuild@x86-039.build.eng.bos.redhat.com) (gcc version 4.8.5 20150623 (Red Hat 4.8.5-11) (GCC) ) #1 SMP Mon Feb 20 02:37:52 EST 2017 i386.
50c4 LTFS17089I Distribution: NAME="Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server".
50c4 LTFS17089I Distribution: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 7.3 (Maipo).
50c4 LTFS17089I Distribution: Red Hat Enterprise Linux Server release 7.3 (Maipo).
50c4 LTFS17085I Plugin: Loading "sg" tape backend.
Tape Device list:.
Device Name = /dev/sg43, Vender ID = IBM    , Product ID = ULTRIUM-TD5    , Serial Number = 9A700L0077, Product Name = [ULTRIUM-TD5] .
Device Name = /dev/sg38, Vender ID = IBM    , Product ID = ULT3580-TD6    , Serial Number = 00013B0119, Product Name = [ULT3580-TD6] .
Device Name = /dev/sg37, Vender ID = IBM    , Product ID = ULT3580-TD7    , Serial Number = 00078D00C2, Product Name = [ULT3580-TD7] .

Step2: Format a tape

As described into the LTFS format specifications, LTFS uses the partition feature of the tape drive. It means you can't use a tape just after you purchase a tape. You need format the tape before using int on LTFS.

To format a tape, you can use mkltfs command like

# mkltfs -d 9A700L0077

In this case, mkltfs tries to format a tape in the tape drive 9A700L0077. You can use a device name /dev/sg43 instead.

Step3: Mount a tape through a tape drive

After you prepared a formatted tape, you can mount it through a tape drive like

# ltfs -o devname=9A700L0077 /ltfs

In this command, the ltfs command try to mount the tape in the tape drive 9A700L0077 to /ltfs directory. Of cause, you can use a device name /dev/sg43 instead.

If mount process is successfully done, you can access to the LTFS tape through /ltfs directory.

You must not touch any st devices while ltfs is mounting a tape.

Step4: Unmount the tape drive

You can use following command when you want to unmount the tape. The ltfs command try to write down the current meta-data to the tape and close the tape cleanly.

# umount /ltfs

One thing you need to pay attention here is it is not a unmount completion when umount command is returned. It just a finish of trigger to notify the unmount request to the ltfs command. Actual unmount is completed when the ltfs command is finished.

The ltfsee_ordered_copy utility

The ltfsee_ordered_copy is a program to copy files from source to destination with LTFS order optimization.

It is written by python and it can work on both python2 and python3 (Python 2.7 or later is strongly recommended). You need to install the pyxattr module for both python2 and python3.

Building the LTFS from this GitHub project

These instructions will get you a copy of the project up and running on your local machine for development and testing purposes.

Prerequisites for build

Please refer this page.

Build and install on Linux

./autogen.sh
./configure
make
make install

./configure --help shows various options for build and install.

In some systems, you might need sudo ldconfig -v after make install to load the shared libraries correctly.

Buildable Linux distributions

Dist Arch Status
RHEL 8 x86_64 OK - Not checked automatically
RHEL 8 ppc64le OK - Not checked automatically
RHEL 7 x86_64 OK - Not checked automatically
RHEL 7 ppc64le OK - Not checked automatically
CentOS 8 x86_64 GH Action status
CentOS 8 ppc64le OK - Not checked automatically
CentOS 7 x86_64 GH Action status
CentOS 7 ppc64le OK - Not checked automatically
Fedora 28 x86_64 GH Action status
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS x86_64 GH Action status
Ubuntu 16.04 LTS ppc64le Build Status
Ubuntu 18.04 LTS x86_64 GH Action status
Ubuntu 18.04 LTS ppc64le Build Status
Ubuntu 20.04 LTS (Need icu-config) x86_64 GH Action status
Debian 9 x86_64 GH Action status
Debian 10 (Need icu-config) x86_64 GH Action status
ArchLinux 2018.08.01 x86_64 OK - Not checked automatically
ArchLinux 2018.12.31 (rolling) x86_64 OK - Not checked automatically

Currently, automatic build checking is working on GitHub Actions and Travis CI.

For Ubuntu20.04 and Debian10, dummy icu-config is needed in the build machine. See Issue #153.

Build and install on OSX (macOS)

Recent Homedrew system setup

Before build on macOS, you need to configure the environment like below.

export ICU_PATH="/usr/local/opt/icu4c/bin"
export LIBXML2_PATH="/usr/local/opt/libxml2/bin"
export PKG_CONFIG_PATH="/usr/local/opt/icu4c/lib/pkgconfig:/usr/local/opt/libxml2/lib/pkgconfig"
export PATH="$PATH:$ICU_PATH:$LIBXML2_PATH"

Old Homedrew system setup

Before build on OSX (macOS), some include path adjustment is required.

brew link --force icu4c
brew link --force libxml2

Building LTFS

On OSX (macOS), snmp cannot be supported, you need to disable it on configure script. And may be, you need to specify LDFLAGS while running configure script to link some required frameworks, CoreFundation and IOKit.

./autogen.sh
LDFLAGS="-framework CoreFoundation -framework IOKit" ./configure --disable-snmp
make
make install

./configure --help shows various options for build and install.

Buildable macOS systems

OS Xcode Package system Status
macOS 10.14.6 11.3 Homebrew Build Status
macOS 10.15 12.4 Homebrew OK - Not checked automatically
macOS 11 12.4 Homebrew OK - Not checked automatically

Build and install on FreeBSD

Note that on FreeBSD, the usual 3rd party man directory is /usr/local/man. Configure defaults to using /usr/local/share/man. So, override it on the command line to avoid having man pages put in the wrong place.

./autogen.sh
./configure --prefix=/usr/local --mandir=/usr/local/man
make
make install

Buildable versions

Version Arch Status
11 x86_64 OK - Not checked automatically
12 x86_64 OK - Not checked automatically

Build and install on NetBSD

./autogen.sh
./configure
make
make install

Buildable versions

Version Arch Status
8.1 amd64 OK - Not checked automatically
8.0 i386 OK - Not checked automatically
7.2 amd64 OK - Not checked automatically

Contributing

Please read CONTRIBUTING.md for details on our code of conduct, and the process for submitting pull requests to us.

License

This project is licensed under the BSD License - see the LICENSE file for details