This is the command mt-dds that can be run in the OnWorks free hosting provider using one of our multiple free online workstations such as Ubuntu Online, Fedora Online, Windows online emulator or MAC OS online emulator
PROGRAM:
NAME
mt-dds - tool to control a dds device.
SYNOPSIS
mt-dds comp-on|comp-off|comp-query|comp-log
mt-dds < tell|label > [ -b # ]
DESCRIPTION
mt-dds controls the compression mode of dds tape devices (DAT).
mt-dds may also report the current tape position in absolute records (relative to begin of
tape) in a format that may be used later by dds2tar(1) to access tar archives that are not
the first file on tape.
The default device is /dev/nst0, which may be overridden with the environment variable
TAPE, which in turn may be overridden with the -f device option. The device must be a
character special file.
OPTIONS
DDS tape device control options
comp-on
Enable the hardware compression mode if supported by the device.
comp-off
Disable the compression mode, switch to normal mode.
comp-query
Print to stderr if compression mode currently is disabled or enabled. A 0 means
compression is disabled, a 1 means compression in enabled.
comp-log
Print to stdout four lines of information about transferred kilobytes before and
after hardware compression from and to the device since initialization.
dds2tar service functions
tell Print three lines with the current tape position, a block size value (20 by
default, may be overridden with -b option) and a block length value (blocksize*512)
to stdout. If this output is redirected to a location file locfile, this file may
be used by dds2tar(1) to access archives on tape.
label If the current tape position is the beginning of an archive and the archive is
labeled, mt-dds writes the label to stdout and moves the tape back to the current
position (or back over the filemark).
ts If the current tape position is the beginning of an archive and the archive is
labeled, mt-dds writes the timestamp in octal format to stdout and moves the tape
back to the current position (or back over the filemark). If you are using only
one computer, the timestamp can be used as a unique archive identifier.
-b # Specify the block size # value that is used as a default for the written value with
the mt-dds tell command (see above). Also the internal buffer size is specified
with this option which is used to read one block in order to get the block size of
the current tape block. So specify the block size of the archive or a larger
number.
other options
-f device
Device of the tape archive (default is /dev/nst0). Must be a character special
file connected to a dds tape device.
-V,--version
Print the version number of mt-dds to stderr and exit immediately.
--help print some screens of online help with examples through a pager and exit
immediately.
EXAMPLES
Example 1: checking the compression mode of the default tape device
mt-dds comp-query
Example 2: Write the location information as dds2tar command line options to stdout.
mt-dds
ENVIRONMENT
The environment variable TAPE overrides the default tape device /dev/nst0.
PAGER The environment variable PAGER overrides the builtin pager command ("/bin/more") to
display the output of the --help option.
Use mt-dds online using onworks.net services