RSM Does Not Recognize Changes in Media Slots Inside a Library
This article was previously published under Q250916 SYMPTOMS If you manually rearrange media in a tape changer without using Removable Storage Manager (RSM) eject / inject wizards, RSM may attempt
to mount the wrong media when an application calls for it. Since the media
cannot be mounted, RSM (optionally) starts a full inventory for each piece of
media in the changer. During this inventory, RSM re-catalogs media that was
manually moved to different slots and moves it to the offline media library.
For each piece of media that is re-cataloged in this way a new piece of media
with the same name will appear in the import pool. CAUSE This issue can occur because RSM recognizes two pieces of
media as exact duplicates. RESOLUTION To work around this issue, perform the following steps:
STATUS This behavior is by design. Duplicate media is always
treated like different media and will appear in the import pool during a full
inventory. MORE INFORMATION To illustrate this behavior, lets use the following
example:
For additional information about how
RSM identifies media, click the article number below to view the article in the
Microsoft Knowledge Base: 250468 (http://support.microsoft.com/kb/250468/EN-US/) How Removable Storage Manager and Applications Recognize Media
A tape changer has four slots that are occupied by the following tapes: Backup Tape 1 -1 (slot 1) Backup Tape 2 -2 (slot 2) Backup Tape 3 -3 (Slot 3) Backup Tape 4 -4 (Slot 4) The administrator (or operator) gains door access to the changer and moves 'Backup Tape 1 -1' to slot 4 and 'Backup Tape 4 -4' to slot 1. After closing the door to the changer, the operator now opens Ntbackup.exe and attempts to catalog 'Backup Tape 1 -1'. RSM cannot mount the tape in slot 1 because it is not the tape that is cataloged. When the mount does not complete, RSM performs a full inventory and the following events occur:
Now RSM has duplicate records for the tape that was in slot 4 (Backup Tape 4 -4), one off-line and one on-line. When RSM was identifying the media in slot 1 (step #1 above) it created new records in the RSM database for this media, which resulted in a new LMID, PMID, and PartID. Windows NT Backup refers to this media using the LMID so when the program attempts to mount the tape (Backup Tape 4 -4) it refers to the LMID that points to the tape in the off-line library. RSM notifies the operator to mount this tape even though it is in the library. APPLIES TO
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