read_ger.txt Driver File Contents (R55149.EXE)

TapeWare 6.30 SP2E                            17 December 2002
       
       This document includes updated information for the
       documentation provided with TapeWare Version 6.30. The
       information in this document and in the Help system
       may be more up-to-date than the information contained
       in the printed manuals. Many of the issues outlined in
       this document will be corrected in upcoming releases.
       
       1. CORRECTIONS IN THIS SERVICE PACK                  2
           1."RESTORED 0 FILES" WHEN DOING DISASTER RECOVERY
           UNDER ALL NETWARE VERSIONS                       2
           2.EXTENDED PARTITIONS AND DISASTER RECOVERY UNDER
           WINDOWS NT/2000/XP                               2
           3.BUILDING BACKUP SELECTION LIST TAKES A LONG TIME
           2
           4.LINUX CONSOLE MODULE LOAD STATUS INDICATOR     2
           5.TAPEWARE FOR LINUX TAKES A LONG TIME TO LOAD   2
           6.IDE DEVICES UNDER LINUX                        3
           7.COMMAND NOT SETUP ERROR 403                    3
           8.RESTART SERVER DIALOG REAPPEARED AFTER CLICKING
           OK3
           9.POTENTIAL PROBLEM IF MORE THAN ONE INSTALLED
           OBDR DRIVE                                       3
           10.DOUBLED FILE CAPACITY FOR SINGLE DIRECTORIES  3
           11.LINUX LOGIN HANGS WHEN USING "ESC" KEY        3
           12.GRAPH NOT DISPLAYING PROPERLY WHEN BACKING UP
           MORE THAN 8 STREAMS                              3
           13.SLOW PERFORMANCE WITH DOMAIN CONTROLLER AND
           IPX/SPX, BUT NOT ACTIVE DIRECTORY                3
           14.UNINSTALLING TAPEWARE OPTIONS SOMETIMES DELETES
           ADDITIONAL FILES                                 3
           15.STREAM SYNC ERRORS NO LONGER OCCUR ON SYSTEMS
           WITH 1GB RAM OR MORE                             3
           16.TAPEWARE NOW ASKS FOR A CORRECT TAPE AFTER IT
           EJECTS A FULL TAPE                               3
           17.TAPEWARE WOULD OCCASIONALLY HANG WHEN A MEDIA
           BECAME FULL DURING LARGE BACKUP JOBS             3
           18.TAPEWARE NOW CORRECTLY MANAGES BACKUP JOBS IN
           INSTALLATIONS WITH MULTIPLE TAPE DRIVES          4
           19.TAPEWARE COMPLETES PHASE 3 OF DISASTER RECOVERY
           IN NETWARE 6 INSTALLATIONS                       4
       2. FEATURES IN THIS SERVICE PACK                     4
           1.AUTO DEVICE BUFFER AND TRANSFER SIZE ALLOCATION4
           2.BACKING UP TO MULTIPLE TAPE DRIVES WITH AUTO-
           VERIFY                                           4
           3."SILENT INSTALL" NOW SUPPORTED                 4
           4.FLOPPY VERIFICATION AND ERROR DETECTION PHASE 15
           5.DISASTER RECOVERY UNDER NETWARE 6.X            5
           6.SMTP MAIL CONNECTOR CAN NOW SEND LOGS LARGER
           THAN 64K IN SIZE                                 5
           7.F5-F8 KEY MAPPINGS UNDER LINUX CONSOLE         5
           8.INSTALLING TAPEWARE AS A SERVICE UNDER LINUX   5
           9.LINUX INSTALLATION PROGRAM ERROR REPORTING     5
           10.ADDED CAPABILITY TO DISABLE RSM WHENEVER
           TAPEWARE LOADS                                   5
           11.TAPEWARE AND THE "FILESNOTTOBACKUP" REGISTRY
           ENTRY UNDER WINDOWS NT/2000/XP                   5
           12.64-BIT FILE SYSTEM SUPPORT UNDER LINUX        6
           13.TAPEWARE FOR WINDOWS IS NOW COMPILED WITH THE
           MICROSOFT .NET COMPILER                          6
           14.UPGRADING TAPEWARE ALSO UPGRADES INSTALLED
           OPTIONS                                          6
       3. ACCESSING ONLINE DOCUMENTATION                    6
           1.HOW TO VIEW OR PRINT THE CD BASED DOCUMENTATION6
           2.HOW TO VIEW WEBHELP HTML BASED HELP            6
           3.LINUX ONLINE DOCUMENTATION/HELP                6
       4. GENERAL NOTES                                     7
           1.USING MULTIPLE SCSI BUSES WITH AUTOLOADERS     7
           2.DEVICE BUFFER SIZES                            7
           3.WINDOWS .NET INITIATIVE                        8
       5. NOTES FOR WINDOWS NT/2000/XP                      8
           1.WINDOWS 2000 SERVICE PACK 2 REQUIRED FOR
           DISASTER RECOVERY OPTION                         8
           2.WINDOWS 2000 COMPATIBILITY                     8
           3.INSTALLING TAPEWARE ON WINDOWS TERMINAL SERVER 8
           4.LATER PHASES OF DISASTER RECOVERY ON JAPANESE
           SYSTEMS IS PARTLY IN ENGLISH                     8
           5.LOCATION OF UPDATED DRIVERS                    8
           6.NEW MINIMUM REQUIREMENTS FOR NT 4.0            9
       6. NOTES FOR NOVELL NETWARE                          9
           1.USING NWASPI.CDM AND FIBRE CHANNEL ON THE
           NETWARE OPERATING SYSTEM                         9
           2.NWASPI.CDM MUST BE LOADED                      9
           3.DISASTER RECOVERY CANNOT FIND AN UPDATED SCSI
           DRIVER                                           9
           4.RECOVERING MIRRORED PARTITIONS                 9
           5.TAPEWARE DISASTER RECOVERY REQUIREMENTS FOR
           NETWARE 6                                        9
           6.TAPEWARE DOES NOT BACK UP THE NSS ADMINISTRATION
           VOLUME BY DEFAULT                                9
           7.TAPEWARE SUPPORTS NSS PARTITIONS THAT ARE LARGER
           THAN 4GB                                         9
       7. NOTES FOR LINUX                                  10
           1.KEY PROMPTS BEING CUT FROM BOTTOM OF SCREEN   10
           2.TERM= ENVIRONMENT VARIABLE NOT CORRECTLY SET  10
           3.DEFAULT INSTALLATION PATHS                    10
           4.ONLINE HELP IS NOT AUTOMATICALLY INSTALLED    10
           5.COPYING THE INSTALLATION PROGRAM TO A LOCAL DISK
           10
           6.TCP/IP MAY NOT SEE OTHER TAPEWARE SERVERS     10
           7.SCSI AUTOLOADERS MAY NOT BE DETECTED          10
           8.IDE TAPE DEVICES ON DELL POWEREDGE SERVERS    11
           9.SGM VERSIONS                                  11
           10.TELNET-ING FROM WINDOWS                      11
           
           
   1.    Corrections in this service pack
       
   1.   "Restored 0 files" when doing Disaster Recovery under all
       NetWare versions
       
       On certain configurations of NetWare, TapeWare would
       restore 0 files during phase 4 of Disaster Recovery.
       This was due to NWASPI.CDM not being correctly added
       to the startup files. This has been fixed.
       
   2.   Extended partitions and Disaster Recovery under Windows
       NT/2000/XP
       
       On certain partition configurations under Windows
       NT/2000/XP, extended partitions would be created
       incorrectly when using Disaster Recovery. TapeWare now
       restores these partition layouts correctly.
       
   3.   Building backup selection list takes a long time
       
       This was due to the overhead of our Encrypted File
       System (EFS) support utility, which called a certain
       function every time a file was scanned. We now use a
       different function, and have set EFS support to OFF by
       default. You can re-enable it by adding the following
       line to the [configuration] section of TapeWare.ini:
       
       efsEnable=Yes
       
   4.   Linux console module load status indicator
       
       Linux console user interface now correctly shows
       module load status on initialization.
       
   5.   TapeWare for Linux takes a long time to load
       
       TapeWare now scans by default for only 5 devices
       instead of 20. This greatly decreases its load time
       under Linux systems. If you have more than 5 devices
       on your Linux machine, you can enable them by adding
       the following line to the [configuration] section of
       the TapeWare configuration file:
       
       maxScsiDevices=x
       
   6.   IDE devices under Linux
       
       There is a known problem with IDE-SCSI and check
       conditions for which we have created a work around.
       
   7.   Command not setup error 403
       
       A race condition involving multiple streams and the
       Disaster Recovery module was fixed.
       
   8.   Restart server dialog reappeared after clicking OK
       
       After a full restore under Windows, the restart server
       dialog reappeared after clicking OK, requiring user to
       click OK again. Now the dialog only appears once
       before restarting server.
       
   9.   Potential problem if more than one installed OBDR drive
       
       In installations with more than one OBDR drive, OBDR
       generation could result in an unstable backup. Now
       OBDR backups are generated sequentially, which may
       increase the time to generate an OBDR backup.
       
   10.  Doubled file capacity for single directories
       
       In the TapeWare database, doubled the capacity for
       total files in a single directory.
       
   11.  Linux login hangs when using "Esc" key
       
       During login in Linux installations, using the "Esc"
       key no longer causes system to hang.
       
   12.  Graph not displaying properly when backing up more than 8
       streams
       
       When backing up more than 8 streams, the graph now
       displays properly.
       
   13.  Slow performance with Domain Controller and IPX/SPX, but
       not Active Directory
       
       When checking for active directory in installations
       with the IPX/SPX protocol stack and no active
       directory, the system would not respond promptly,
       resulting in slow performance. Now the system verifies
       that the machine is a domain controller before
       checking for active directory.
       
   14.  Uninstalling TapeWare options sometimes deletes
       additional files
       
       When uninstalling one or more TapeWare options, at
       times the system would also delete additional files.
       
   15.  Stream sync errors no longer occur on systems with 1GB
       RAM or more
       
       Some users experienced stream sync errors on systems
       with 1GB RAM or more. Now TapeWare computes the device
       buffer size differently (see Device buffer sizes
       below).
       
   16.  TapeWare now asks for a correct tape after it ejects a
       full tape
       
       Previously, if you selected Append to all or Append to
       first tape, overwrite others for the Write mode for a
       backup, the tape correctly ejected the tape if it was
       full. Then it prompted you to re-insert the same tape.
       Now TapeWare asks for the correct tape.
       
   17.  TapeWare would occasionally hang when a media became full
       during large backup jobs
       
       Some customers reported that TapeWare would
       occasionally hang when a media became full. This
       occurred during large backup jobs. TapeWare now
       handles full media conditions correctly.
       
   18.  TapeWare now correctly manages backup jobs in
       installations with multiple tape drives
       
       In installations with more than one tape drive,
       TapeWare tries to use all available drives. When a
       backup job starts, it determines whether or not it
       needs a second drive. Customers with this type of
       configuration could experience either of the following
       problems:
       
          ú    TapeWare allocates two or more tape drives for the job.
            The first drive contains a tape, but the second drive is
            empty. As the job runs, TapeWare asks the user to insert a
            tape in the second drive. If the user clicks Abort, which
            temporarily removes the drive from the job, TapeWare would
            hang. Now, TapeWare runs the job correctly in this scenario.
ú    The media in the first drive becomes full, so TapeWare
ejects the media. Then it continues backing up to the media in
the second drive. When it runs the verification step, an error
message occurs because the media is no longer loaded in the
drive. Now, TapeWare will not eject the first media until it
fills the media in the second drive.
       
   19.  TapeWare completes Phase 3 of Disaster Recovery in
       NetWare 6 installations
       
       In some NetWare 6 installations, TapeWare could stop
       during Phase 3 of Disaster Recovery. Now this phase
       finishes properly in these installations.
       
       
   2.   Features in this service pack
       
   1.   Auto device buffer and Transfer Size Allocation
       
       TapeWare now automatically allocates a percentage of
       free physical memory for device buffers, and better
       utilizes device transfer sizes of 64-1kb. This
       increases performance across the board.
       
   2.   Backing up to multiple tape drives with auto-verify
       
       TapeWare jobs are now more intelligent when dealing
       with single streams spanned over multiple devices.
       TapeWare will wait until all possible media have been
       used before ejecting a tape and prompting the user. In
       this way, verifies can function without user
       interaction while spanning across multiple devices.
       
   3.   "Silent Install" now supported
       
       You can now create custom .inf setup file and have
       TapeWare install itself without any user action.
       First, create a file called autoinst.inf, place it in
       the appropriate installation folder (i.e. win\lin\net)
       and run the installation.
       
       Example:
       
       ;-----------------------------------------------------
       -------------------------
       ; Auto install options
       ;-----------------------------------------------------
       -------------------------
       [license]
       document=3DE7FEF9-C7AFE3E7
       
       [configuration]
       serviceInstalled=Yes
       regComp=Company
       regUser=User
       createZone=Yes
       zone=TapeWare storage zone
       node=ComputerName
       targetDir=c:\Program Files\TapeWare
       protocol=Tcp
       
   4.   Floppy verification and error detection Phase 1
       
       TapeWare now verifies floppies upon creation. However,
       we still highly recommend using new floppies for
       Disaster Recovery.
       
   5.   Disaster Recovery under NetWare 6.x
       
       We have addressed many bugs in Novell's initial
       release of NetWare 6.x and now fully support disaster
       recovery under NetWare 6.0. You must install NetWare
       6.0 SP1 or later.
       
   6.   SMTP Mail Connector can now send logs larger than 64k in
       size
       
       Users can now specify the maximum length of an email
       they want TapeWare to be able to send. To enable this
       feature, add the following to the TapeWare.ini file:
       
       Example:
       
       Set the email log file size limit to 1 megabyte:
       
       [smt]
       sizeLimit=1048576
       
   7.   F5-F8 key mappings under Linux console
       
       We added a shortcut key combination (ctrl-k) in the
       Linux console which switches between the two possible
       mappings for function keys above F5. This allows such
       keys as shift-F5 to function properly on most
       terminals.
       
   8.   Installing TapeWare as a service under Linux
       
       Added the option to let the user choose whether or not
       TapeWare will be installed as a service under Linux.
       
   9.   Linux installation program error reporting
       
       Added the capability for the installation program to
       return error codes if it could not load successfully.
       
   10.  Added capability to disable RSM whenever TapeWare loads
       
       Added the capability for TapeWare to automatically
       disable the Removable Storage Manager (RSM) service
       under Windows 2000/XP. To enable this feature, add the
       following to [configuration] section of the
       TapeWare.ini file:
       
       disableRsm=Yes/No
       
   11.  TapeWare and the "FilesNotToBackup" registry entry under
       Windows NT/2000/XP
       
       Added a routine to parse and add the files listed in
       HKEY_LOCAL_MACHINE\SYSTEM\ControlSet\Control\BackupRes
       tore\FilesNotToBackup to the exclude filters of
       TapeWare. To enable this feature, add the following to
       the TapeWare.ini file:
       
       [Ods-File System Connector]
       filterRegExclude=Yes/No
       
   12.  64-Bit File system Support under Linux
       
       TapeWare now supports files larger then 2 gigabytes
       under Linux.
       
   13.  TapeWare for Windows is now compiled with the Microsoft
       .Net Compiler
       
       TapeWare now works even better with newer versions of
       Windows, including the upcoming .NET server platform.
       Due to the .NET compiler's new optimizations, TapeWare
       for Windows is now also 10% faster than previous
       versions.
       
   14.  Upgrading TapeWare also upgrades installed options
       
       When upgrading from an earlier service pack, the
       TapeWare installer now upgrades all installed options,
       whether they are licensed or not. You no longer have
       to reinstall your various options.
       
       
   3.   Accessing Online Documentation
       
   1.   How to view or print the CD based documentation
       
       Windows - Adobe Acrobat
       After installing TapeWare, select
       Start|Programs|TapeWare|TapeWare
       Documentation|Printable Documents. In order to view or
       print this documentation, you must have the Adobe
       Acrobat v4.0 reader installed on your system. If you
       do not already have this installed, you may install it
       from the TapeWare CD by selecting
       Documentation|Install Acrobat from the main TapeWare
       installation screen.
       
       DOS/NetWare/Linux - Adobe Acrobat
       Use a Windows workstation to access the
       \DOC\language\ACROBAT subdirectory on the TapeWare CD
       where language is the localized language name. You
       must have the Adobe Acrobat v4.0 reader installed on
       your Windows workstation in order to view or print the
       documentation. The localized version of Acrobat Reader
       for Windows is also included in the Acrobat
       subdirectory in case you do not have Acrobat installed
       on your system.
       
       DOS/NetWare/Linux - HTML
       You may also use the HTML formatted documentation from
       the \DOC\language\HTMLHELP subdirectory. The two files
       contained in the directory are identical. One is
       compressed with standard DOS/Windows PKZIP while the
       other is compressed with Linux GZIP and TAR. Copy this
       file over to a separate subdirectory on your hard
       disk, and decompress the file. Approximately 1600
       files will be extracted which is the HTML version of
       TapeWare online help. To start the help system, use a
       browser to open the index.htm file. This will open the
       TapeWare table of contents and the opening pages.
       
   2.   How to view WebHelp HTML based help
       
       HTML Web based help is included in the
       \DOC\lng\HTMLHELP\HTMLHELP.ZIP and HTMLHELP.TGZ. Both
       files are the same but zipped differently. The TGZ
       file uses Linux tar/gzip while the ZIP file uses
       standard WinZip. Unzip either of these files to your
       local hard disk and launch the index.htm file as the
       root of the Help tree.
       
   3.   Linux Online Documentation/Help
       
       To use the documentation system for the Linux X-Window
       based user interface, unzip either HTMLHELP.TGZ or
       HTMLHELP.ZIP to the "installation
       "directory/htmlhelp". By default, this would be
       /usr/local/TapeWare/htmlhelp.
       
       
   4.   General Notes
       
   1.   Using multiple SCSI buses with autoloaders
       
       If your autoloader and the devices within the
       autoloader are connected to different SCSI buses, the
       driver may become confused as to which device is
       contained in the autoloader. If the drives and
       autoloader use either the SCSI-2 serial number or the
       new SCSI-3 identifier protocol, all devices will be
       correctly assigned. However, if the autoloader
       supports neither the SCSI-2 serial number nor the SCSI-
       3 identifier protocol, you must connect the devices to
       the same SCSI bus as the autoloader, or manually
       configure the drivers as follows:
       
       1.   Run the administrator as you normally would. Note the
           name of the device and autoloader. For this example, the
           loader will be "Ldr-2.0.3.0: ADIC Scalar" with the two devices
           being "Dev-3.0.3.0: DLT 4000" and "Dev-4.0.3.0: DLT 4000".
       
       2.   Add a line in the .ini configuration file as follows:
       
               [Ldr-2.0.3.0: ADIC Scalar]
               device1=Dev-3.0.3.0: DLT 4000
               device2=Dev-4.0.3.0: DLT 4000
       
       3.   Restart the service and the administrator, if necessary,.
       
   2.   Device Buffer Sizes
       
       With the advent of TapeWare SP2E, it is no longer
       necessary to set the devBufferSize in the
       configuration section of the TapeWare.ini file.
       TapeWare now will automatically adjust the device
       buffer size based on a percentage of free physical
       memory on the system in question. You can still force
       TapeWare to use a specific buffer size, and you can
       also change the percentage of free memory you want
       TapeWare to use for device buffers. To change these
       settings, edit the TapeWare.ini using a standard text
       editor. Under the [configuration] section, add the
       following:
       
               fixedBufferSize=Yes
               devBufferSize=n
       
       where n is the buffer size in Kb. For example, to set
       the buffer size to 4Mb, use devBufferSize=4096.
       
               fixedBufferSize=No
               usePercentFreeMem=n
       
       where n is the percent of free memory to use. For
       example, to set it to 15 percent, use
       usePercentFreeMem=15
       
       Setting these values higher can significantly enhance
       performance. This causes TapeWare to buffer more data
       in memory that is en route to the tape device. By
       doing this, TapeWare can read larger amounts of data
       from the disk subsystems and fill the buffers faster.
       This has the effect of "smoothing" file sizes by
       taking advantage of larger files. However, setting
       these values too high will cause the operating system
       to "page" these data buffers to/from disk when
       accessed by TapeWare. This will significantly reduce
       the performance since additional disk operations will
       be required.
       
   3.   Windows .Net Initiative
       
       Yosemite Technologies, Inc is constantly trying to
       improve our current product and plan for the future.
       Part of this initiative is making sure that TapeWare
       is constantly updated in order to be prepared for the
       latest and greatest technologies. For this reason
       TapeWare is now fully .NET aware with the integration
       of the .NET compiler throughout the Windows portion of
       TapeWare. The result is a faster, smarter and more
       robust backup solution from Yosemite Technologies,
       Inc.
       
       
   5.   Notes for Windows NT/2000/XP
       
   1.   Windows 2000 Service Pack 2 required for Disaster
       Recovery Option
       
       The original release of Windows 2000 has a problem
       with registry quotas. When running TapeWare to build a
       Disaster Recovery diskette set, CD-R or tape, the
       registry quota would soon become exhausted. For this
       reason, TapeWare checks the running version of Windows
       2000 and specifically disables all Disaster Recovery
       functions if Service Pack 2 is not installed. To
       obtain this patch, follow this link to obtain SP2:
       
       http://www.microsoft.com/downloads/release.asp?release
       id=29423&FeatList=3
       
       Note: This URL is subject to change.
       
       After the update is applied, TapeWare should recognize
       the new update and enable the Disaster Recovery option
       after it has been installed.
       
   2.   Windows 2000 compatibility
       
       TapeWare currently supports most Windows 2000
       functionality. However, a couple of areas are not
       supported:
       
       1.   If you use junction points, TapeWare will consider the
           junction as a complete volume; In other words, it will follow
           the junction point and backup all the files in the junction
           rather than simply backing up the metadata. On restore, if the
           junction point is not mounted, TapeWare will create a
           subdirectory with the same name as the junction point and
           restore to the same disk that was previously hosting the
           junction point.
       
       2.   RSM - Remote/removable storage manager is not currently
           supported. If TapeWare is run, the RSM service is temporarily
           disabled, TapeWare will allocate all tape device and tape
           loader devices, then RSM is restarted.
       
       3.   The TapeWare Disaster Recovery option for Windows NT/2000
           will support basic disk configurations only. If you attempt to
           restore your system with dynamic disks enabled, TapeWare will
           not be able to restore the volume information.
       
   3.   Installing TapeWare on Windows Terminal Server
       
       If you are running Terminal Server, you must install
       TapeWare as a service. This allows multiple user
       interfaces to share the common resources of the
       service.
       
   4.   Later phases of Disaster Recovery on Japanese systems is
       partly in English
       
       The final phases of Disaster Recovery are not
       translated into Japanese. All other languages are
       supported, but the Japanese will revert to English. In
       addition, some non-English characters may be displayed
       as black boxes when displayed on the log screen. This
       is normal and can be ignored. All files will be
       recovered to the correct names.
       
   5.   Location of updated drivers
       
       The Windows Disaster Recovery requires all drivers to
       be located in the %SYSTEMROOT%\SYSTEM32\DRIVERS
       subdirectory. If you have a driver that is required to
       run your tape device or disk devices and it installs
       to a different location, put a copy of this driver
       into the DRIVERS directory.
       
   6.   New minimum requirements for NT 4.0
       
       TapeWare now requires that you have the Windows NT
       Service Pack 6a or above installed when using NT 4.0.
       This is due to the new dependency requirements of MFC
       7.0 (oleacc.dll).
       
       
   6.   Notes for Novell NetWare
       
   1.   Using NWASPI.CDM and Fibre Channel on the NetWare
       operating system
       
       If all devices are not detected during auto detection,
       or devices are missing within the device explorer,
       make sure that you are loading NWASPI with the /LUN
       option as follows:
       
               load NWASPI.CDM /LUN
       
       This line is typically found in your STARTUP.NCF.
       
   2.   NWASPI.CDM must be loaded
       
       For systems using .HAM drivers, make sure that
       NWASPI.CDM is loaded from your AUTOEXEC.NCF or
       STARTUP.NCF. If not, the final phase of Disaster
       Recovery will not be able to access the tape device.
       
   3.   Disaster Recovery cannot find an updated SCSI driver
       
       TapeWare searches for required drivers, first in the
       C:\NWSERVER directory, followed by the SYS:SYSTEM
       directory. If you update a driver, make sure the
       updated driver is also placed in C:\NWSERVER.
       
   4.   Recovering mirrored partitions
       
       All mirrored partitions are now correctly initialized
       during the recovery procedure if a full system
       recovery is selected. To prevent any data loss on
       other partitions, mirror pairs are not automatically
       recreated if only the boot disk recovery method is
       used.
       
   5.   TapeWare Disaster Recovery requirements for NetWare 6
       
       In NetWare 6 installations, you must install NetWare 6
       SP1 to support TapeWare Disaster Recovery.
       
   6.   TapeWare does not back up the NSS administration volume
       by default
       
       TapeWare no longer backs up the NSS administration
       volume _ADMIN by default under NetWare 6. This now
       matches TapeWare behavior under NetWare 5, which does
       not back up the NSS administration volume NSS_ADMIN by
       default.
       
   7.   TapeWare supports NSS partitions that are larger than 4GB
       
       Many NetWare installations require NSS partitions that
       are larger than 4GB under NetWare 6. Now TapeWare
       supports all functions, including disaster recovery,
       in these installations.
       
       
   7.   Notes for Linux
       
   1.   Key prompts being cut from bottom of screen
       
       TapeWare displays key prompts on the bottom of the
       screen using logical keys. The terminal you are using
       may map these keys differently on your keyboard. For
       example, for the Shift-F1 key, some keyboard's drivers
       may map this as F11 while others will map this as
       Shift-F1. If this is the case, TapeWare's Shift-F1
       maps to F11, Shift-F2 maps to F12, Shift-F3 maps to
       Shift-F1, etc. In addition, if your screen driver is
       setup for less than 25 rows, TapeWare will remove the
       bottom line of the screen.
       
   2.   TERM= environment variable not correctly set
       
       Under Red Hat Linux, when running the TapeWare
       character-based interface under the xterm console in X-
       Windows, the screen may be corrupted. This is due to a
       bug in the console driver. You can correct this
       problem by using the following command prior to
       starting TapeWare:
       
               export TERM=xterm-color
       
   3.   Default installation paths
       
       You should install to the default /usr/local/tapeware
       directory. If you install to any other directory, you
       must manually enter the path name when upgrading,
       installing options or removing TapeWare as the
       installation program will not search for existing
       installations except in the default
       /usr/local/tapeware directory.
       
   4.   Online help is not automatically installed
       
       The online help is not installed by default since it
       is rather large. You may find the online documentation
       under the /doc directory on the CD. The documentation
       is in HTML format and can be viewed with any browser.
       See "Accessing Online Documentation" above.
       
   5.   Copying the installation program to a local disk
       
       If you copy the installation files from the CD, make
       sure you mark the install and lin/DLunxins files with
       the executable attribute.
       
   6.   TCP/IP may not see other TapeWare servers
       
       Under some conditions, the Linux TCP/IP driver will
       not be able to display other Storage Servers on the
       TCP/IP network. Make sure that you have entered a
       valid TCP/IP default gateway, or specify the server
       address in the TapeWare host address dialog box during
       installation.
       
   7.   SCSI autoloaders may not be detected
       
       By default, most SCSI drivers under Linux do not
       enable LUN support, which is required to support
       integrated autoloaders. To enable LUN support on
       Linux, add the following line to the end of
       /etc/lilo.conf:
       
               append= "max_scsi_luns=2"
       
       After this line is added, make sure you run lilo to
       update the configuration with the following command:
       
               lilo
       
       After this is completed, reboot your system.
       
   8.   IDE tape devices on Dell PowerEdge servers
       
       If using an IDE tape device attached to a Dell
       PowerEdge server, please consult the Red Hat
       installation notes provided with your server and tape
       drive. The documentation contains important
       information required for the proper operation of your
       PowerEdge server and IDE tape device. For more
       information, visit http://www.dell.com/linux.
       
   9.   SGM Versions
       
       If you are upgrading from an earlier version of
       TapeWare, you must restart your machine so that the
       latest version of sgm.o will be loaded. You may also
       manually unload any running version of sgm.o by using
       the Linux rmmod command.
       
   10.  Telnet-ing from Windows
       
       Here are the steps you need to configure in order for
       the TapeWare to respond correctly in CRT:
       
       1.         Copy the mappings below and save them into a file
           called TapeWare.key
2.        Select Session Options from the CRT's Options menu
3.        Select the Emulation category
4.        Select vt100 for the terminal
5.        Check ANSI Color
6.        Select Custom for the keyboard and enter full path
to TapeWare.key
7.        Select the Appearance category and use the vt100
font
       
       Make sure you export the variable TERM to xterm-color
       using the command:
       
               export TERM=xterm-color
       
       On some systems, such as CorelLinux, xterm-color is
       not available so you must use xterm instead. Unlike
       xterm-color, xterm is only back and white.
       
       You can also put "export TERM=xterm-color" in
       /etc/profile or ~/.bash_profile for permanent setting.
       
       Key mappings placed in TapeWare.key:
       
               N    VK_INSERT                "\e[2~"
               N    VK_F1                    VT_PF1
               N    VK_F2                    VT_PF2
               N    VK_F3                    VT_PF3
               N    VK_F4                    VT_PF4
               N    VK_F5                    "\e[15~"
               N    VK_F6                    "\e[17~"
               N    VK_F7                    "\e[18~"
               N    VK_F8                    "\e[19~"
               N    VK_F9                    "\e[20~"
               N    VK_F10                   "\e[21~"
               E    VK_INSERT                "\e[2~"
               S    VK_F1                    "\e[23~"
               S    VK_F2                    "\e[24~"
               S    VK_F3                    "\e[25~"
               S    VK_F4                    "\e[26~"
               S    VK_F5                    "\e[28~"
               S    VK_F6                    "\e[29~"
               S    VK_F7                    "\e[31~"
               S    VK_F8                    "\e[32~"
               S    VK_F9                    "\e[33~"
               S    VK_F10                   "\e[34~"
       
       

Notice
Information in this document is subject to change without
notice. Yosemite Technologies, Inc makes no representations or
warranties with respect to the contents of this document and
specifically disclaims any implied warranties of
merchantability or fitness for any particular purpose.
Further, Yosemite Technologies, Inc reserves the right to
revise this publication and to make changes without obligation
to notify any person or organization of such revisions or
changes.

Copyright
Under copyright laws, the contents of this document may not be
copied, photocopied, reproduced, translated or reduced to any
electronic medium or machine-readable form, in whole or in
part, without prior written consent of Yosemite Technologies,
Inc.

Copyright c 2002 Yosemite Technologies, Inc
www.TapeWare.com

Trademarks
TapeWarer is a registered trademark of Yosemite Technologies,
Inc. NetWarer is a registered trademark of Novell, Inc.
Windowsr and Windows NTr are registered trademarks of
Microsoft Corporation. Linuxr is a registered trademark of
Linus Torvalds.

Download Driver Pack

How To Update Drivers Manually

After your driver has been downloaded, follow these simple steps to install it.

  • Expand the archive file (if the download file is in zip or rar format).

  • If the expanded file has an .exe extension, double click it and follow the installation instructions.

  • Otherwise, open Device Manager by right-clicking the Start menu and selecting Device Manager.

  • Find the device and model you want to update in the device list.

  • Double-click on it to open the Properties dialog box.

  • From the Properties dialog box, select the Driver tab.

  • Click the Update Driver button, then follow the instructions.

Very important: You must reboot your system to ensure that any driver updates have taken effect.

For more help, visit our Driver Support section for step-by-step videos on how to install drivers for every file type.

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