Tivoli Storage Manager for Windows: Administrator's Guide


Preparing Media for Manual Library Devices

Media must be inserted into a drive and labeled before it is useful to a manual library device. While stand-alone devices are not typically thought of as library devices, TSM uses a construct called a manual library to help manage and report on media that is manually mounted by humans, and not by robots.

Task Required Privilege Class
Labeling Media for use in a Manual Library Device System
Labeling Media for Devices not Supported by the TSM Device Driver System
Making Volumes Available to Stand-alone, Manual Library Devices Any Administrator

Labeling Media

Any volume, used in any TSM library device, requires a label. All labels used with TSM must meet the following criteria:

Note:
Some devices that are not supported by the TSM device driver must be labeled using the manufacturer's or Windows utilities. See Labeling Media for Devices not Supported by the TSM Device Driver.

Labeling Media for use in a Manual Library Device

Administrators can label tapes and optical disks for use in a manual library device by inserting the media into the drive and invoking the Labeling Wizard.

  1. From the TSM Console, expand the tree for the machine you are configuring.
  2. Click Wizards, then double click Media Labeling in the right pane. The Media Labeling Wizard appears.
  3. Click Manual Media Labeling in the right pane of the TSM Server Utilities.
  4. Click the Start button. The TSM Manual Device Media Labeling Wizard appears.
  5. Follow the instructions in the wizard.
Note:
After labeling a tape for a manual library device, place the tape on the shelf. See Labeling Volumes Using TSM Commands.

Labeling Media for Devices not Supported by the TSM Device Driver

You must label CD-ROM, Zip, or Jaz volumes with the device manufacturer's or Windows utilities because TSM does not provide utilities to format or label these media. The operating system utilities include the Disk Administrator program (a graphical user interface) and the label command. See Labeling Media.

Making Volumes Available to Stand-alone, Manual Library Devices

Stand-alone devices are always associated with manual libraries, and as such, they require a human (and not a robot) to load media into drives. After media has been labeled, it is ready to use, and requires no check in processing.


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