Subsections


Supported Tape Drives

Yes, Bacula supports your tape drive. Bacula does not directly access hardware. If the tape drive is accessible from your operating system, then it should just work with Bacula. If you can access your tape drive from the command line, then so can Bacula.

Bacula uses standard operating system calls (read, write, ioctl) to interface to tape drives. As a consequence, it relies on having a correctly written OS tape driver. Bacula is known to work perfectly well with SCSI tape drivers on FreeBSD, Linux, Solaris, and Windows machines, and it may work on other *nix machines, but we have not tested it. Recently there are many new drives that use IDE, ATAPI, or SATA interfaces rather than SCSI. On Linux the OnStream drive, which uses the OSST driver is one such example, and it is known to work with Bacula. In addition a number of such tape drives (i.e. OS drivers) seem to work on Windows systems. However, non-SCSI tape drives (other than the OnStream) that use ide-scis, ide-tape, or other non-scsi drivers do not function correctly with Bacula (or any other demanding tape application) as of today (April 2007). If you have purchased a non-SCSI tape drive for use with Bacula on Linux, there is a good chance that it will not work. We are working with the kernel developers to rectify this situation, but it will not be resolved in the near future.

Even if your drive is on the list below, please check the Tape Testing Chapter of this manual for procedures that you can use to verify if your tape drive will work with Bacula. If your drive is in fixed block mode, it may appear to work with Bacula until you attempt to do a restore and Bacula wants to position the tape. You can be sure only by following the procedures suggested above and testing.

It is very difficult to supply a list of supported tape drives, or drives that are known to work with Bacula because of limited feedback (so if you use Bacula on a different drive, please let us know). Based on user feedback, the following drives are known to work with Bacula. A dash in a column means unknown:

OS Man. Media Model Capacity
- ADIC DLT Adic Scalar 100 DLT 100GB
- ADIC DLT Adic Fastor 22 DLT -
FreeBSD 5.4-RELEASE-p1 amd64 Certance LTO AdicCertance CL400 LTO Ultrium 2 200GB
- - DDS Compaq DDS 2,3,4 -
SuSE 8.1 Pro Compaq AIT Compaq AIT 35 LVD 35/70GB
- Exabyte - Exabyte drives less than 10 years old -
- Exabyte - Exabyte VXA drives -
- HP Travan 4 Colorado T4000S -
- HP DLT HP DLT drives -
- HP LTO HP LTO Ultrium drives -
- IBM ?? 3480, 3480XL, 3490, 3490E, 3580 and 3590 drives -
FreeBSD 4.10 RELEASE HP DAT HP StorageWorks DAT72i -
- Overland LTO LoaderXpress LTO -
- Overland - Neo2000 -
- OnStream - OnStream drives (see below) -
FreeBSD 4.11-Release Quantum SDLT SDLT320 160/320GB
- Quantum DLT DLT-8000 40/80GB
Linux Seagate DDS-4 Scorpio 40 20/40GB
FreeBSD 4.9 STABLE Seagate DDS-4 STA2401LW 20/40GB
FreeBSD 5.2.1 pthreads patched RELEASE Seagate AIT-1 STA1701W 35/70GB
Linux Sony DDS-2,3,4 - 4-40GB
Linux Tandberg - Tandbert MLR3 -
FreeBSD Tandberg - Tandberg SLR6 -
Solaris Tandberg - Tandberg SLR75 -

Don't see your drive?

If you do not see your tape drive listed above, go back and read the first few paragraphs of this page. The list above contains only the hardware that people have reported. If your OS can see the hardware, so can Bacula.

There is a list of supported autochangers in the Supported Autochangers chapter of this document, where you will find other tape drives that work with Bacula.


Unsupported Tape Drives

Previously OnStream IDE-SCSI tape drives did not work with Bacula. As of Bacula version 1.33 and the osst kernel driver version 0.9.14 or later, they now work. Please see the testing chapter as you must set a fixed block size.

QIC tapes are known to have a number of particularities (fixed block size, and one EOF rather than two to terminate the tape). As a consequence, you will need to take a lot of care in configuring them to make them work correctly with Bacula.

FreeBSD Users Be Aware!!!

Unless you have patched the pthreads library on FreeBSD 4.11 systems, you will lose data when Bacula spans tapes. This is because the unpatched pthreads library fails to return a warning status to Bacula that the end of the tape is near. This problem is fixed in FreeBSD systems released after 4.11. Please see the Tape Testing Chapter of this manual for important information on how to configure your tape drive for compatibility with Bacula.

Supported Autochangers

For information on supported autochangers, please see the Autochangers Known to Work with Bacula section of the Supported Autochangers chapter of this manual.

Tape Specifications

If you want to know what tape drive to buy that will work with Bacula, we really cannot tell you. However, we can say that if you are going to buy a drive, you should try to avoid DDS drives. The technology is rather old and DDS tape drives need frequent cleaning. DLT drives are generally much better (newer technology) and do not need frequent cleaning.

Below, you will find a table of DLT and LTO tape specifications that will give you some idea of the capacity and speed of modern tapes. The capacities that are listed are the native tape capacity without compression. All modern drives have hardware compression, and manufacturers often list compressed capacity using a compression ration of 2:1. The actual compression ratio will depend mostly on the data you have to backup, but I find that 1.5:1 is a much more reasonable number (i.e. multiply the value shown in the table by 1.5 to get a rough average of what you will probably see). The transfer rates are rounded to the nearest GB/hr. All values are provided by various manufacturers.

The Media Type is what is designated by the manufacturers and you are not required to use (but you may) the same name in your Bacula conf resources.

Media Type Drive Type Media Capacity Transfer Rate
DDS-1 DAT 2 GB ?? GB/hr
DDS-2 DAT 4 GB ?? GB/hr
DDS-3 DAT 12 GB 5.4 GB/hr
Travan 40 Travan 20 GB ?? GB/hr
DDS-4 DAT 20 GB 11 GB/hr
VXA-1 Exabyte 33 GB 11 GB/hr
DAT-72 DAT 36 GB 13 GB/hr
DLT IV DLT8000 40 GB 22 GB/hr
VXA-2 Exabyte 80 GB 22 GB/hr
Half-high Ultrium 1 LTO 1 100 GB 27 GB/hr
Ultrium 1 LTO 1 100 GB 54 GB/hr
Super DLT 1 SDLT 220 110 GB 40 GB/hr
VXA-3 Exabyte 160 GB 43 GB/hr
Super DLT I SDLT 320 160 GB 58 GB/hr
Ultrium 2 LTO 2 200 GB 108 GB/hr
Super DLT II SDLT 600 300 GB 127 GB/hr
VXA-4 Exabyte 320 GB 86 GB/hr
Ultrium 3 LTO 3 400 GB 216 GB/hr

Kern Sibbald 2009-02-06