Magnetic tape controller

From Computer History Wiki
Revision as of 14:53, 29 December 2023 by Jnc (talk | contribs) (Discuss master/slave drives with formatter)
Jump to: navigation, search

A magnetic tape controller, also called a formatter in some variants, is the term for the electronics which connect magnetic tape drive(s) to a computer. Exactly what functionality is included all depends on the manufacturer, and often on the particular product line, though; how they partition functionality, and how they pull out common sub-units to prevent un-needed duplication.

One common variant is the division of the controller functionality into a unit which is the actual interface to the computer, and another, the formatter, which understands how to talk to the drive(s), and write standard formatted tapes. Sometimes, the formatter is included with the first drive of a string, which is called the 'master' drive, the others being denominated as 'slave' drives. (This approach is common with computer interfaces which can only control a single drive at a time; having only a single formatter, in the aster, reduces the cost of the slave drives.)

An example of the single controller organization is the DEC TU10/TM11 system (which also uses the master/slave approach); the DEC MASSBUS system of a MASSBUS interface, TM02 formatter, and tape drives, is an example of a separate formatter and bus interface.