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sg3_utils (1m)

名前

sg3_utils - a package of utilities for sending SCSI commands

形式

sg_*  [--help]  [--hex]  [--maxlen=LEN] [--raw] [--verbose] [--version]
[OTHER_OPTIONS] DEVICE

説明

SG3_UTILS(8)                       SG3_UTILS                      SG3_UTILS(8)



NAME
       sg3_utils - a package of utilities for sending SCSI commands

SYNOPSIS
       sg_*  [--help]  [--hex]  [--maxlen=LEN] [--raw] [--verbose] [--version]
       [OTHER_OPTIONS] DEVICE

DESCRIPTION
       sg3_utils is a package of utilities that  send  SCSI  commands  to  the
       given  DEVICE  via  a  SCSI pass through interface provided by the host
       operating system.

       The names of all utilities start with "sg" and most  start  with  "sg_"
       often  followed  by  the name, or a shortening of the name, of the SCSI
       command that they send. For example the "sg_verify" utility  sends  the
       SCSI  VERIFY command. A mapping between SCSI commands and the sg3_utils
       utilities that issue them is shown in the COVERAGE file.

       SCSI draft standards can be found at http://www.t10.org . The standards
       themselves  can  be  purchased  from ANSI and other standards organiza-
       tions.  A good overview of  various  SCSI  standards  can  be  seen  in
       http://www.t10.org/scsi-3.htm  with  the SCSI command sets in the upper
       part of the diagram. SCSI commands in common with all device types  can
       be  found  in  SPC  of  which  SPC-4 is the latest major version. Block
       device specific commands (e.g. as used by disks) are in SBC, those  for
       tape drives in SSC and those for CD/DVD/BD drives in MMC.

       It  is  becoming more common to control ATA disks with the SCSI command
       set.  This involves the translation of SCSI commands  to  their  corre-
       sponding  ATA  equivalents  (and  that  is an imperfect mapping in some
       cases). The relevant standard is called SCSI to  ATA  Translation  (SAT
       and  SAT-2  are now standards at INCITS(ANSI) and ISO while SAT-3 is at
       the draft stage). The logic to perform the command translation is often
       called  a  SAT  Layer or SATL and may be within an operating system, in
       host bus adapter firmware or in an  external  device  (e.g.  associated
       with a SAS expander). See http://www.t10.org for more information.

       There  is  some  support  for SCSI tape devices but not for their basic
       commands. The reader is referred to the "mt" utility.

       There are two generations of command line option usage. The newer util-
       ities (written since July 2004) use the getopt_long() function to parse
       command line options. With that function, each option has two represen-
       tations: a short form (e.g. '-v') and a longer form (e.g. '--verbose').
       If an argument is required then it follows a space (optionally) in  the
       short  form and a "=" in the longer form (e.g. in the sg_verify utility
       '-l  2a6h'  and  '--lba=2a6h'   are   equivalent).   Note   that   with
       getopt_long(), short form options can be elided, for example: '-all' is
       equivalent to '-a -l  -l'.   The  DEVICE  argument  may  appear  after,
       between or prior to any options.

       The  older  utilities, such as sg_inq, had individual command line pro-
       cessing code typically based on a single "-" followed by  one  or  more
       characters.  If  an  argument  is  needed  then  it follows a "=" (e.g.
       '-p=1f' in sg_modes with its older interface). Various options  can  be
       elided  as long as it is not ambiguous (e.g. '-vv' to increase the ver-
       bosity).

       Over time the command line interface of these  older  utilities  became
       messy  and  overloaded  with  options. So in sg3_utils version 1.23 the
       command line interface of these older utilities  was  altered  to  have
       both  a  cleaner  getopt_long() interface and their older interface for
       backward compatibility.  By default these  older  utilities  use  their
       getopt_long()  based interface.  That can be overridden by defining the
       SG3_UTILS_OLD_OPTS environment variable or using '-O' or '--old' as the
       first  command  line option. The man pages of the older utilities docu-
       ments the details.

       Several sg3_utils utilities are based on  the  Unix  dd  command  (e.g.
       sg_dd) and permit copying data at the level of SCSI READ and WRITE com-
       mands. sg_dd is tightly bound to Linux and hence is not ported to other
       OSes.  A  more generic utility (than sg_dd) called ddpt in a package of
       the same name has been ported to other OSes.

LINUX DEVICE NAMING
       Normal disk block devices have names like /dev/sda, /dev/sdb, /dev/sdc,
       etc.  SCSI disks in Linux have always had names like that but in recent
       Linux kernels (e.g. lk 2.6 series)  it  is  becoming  more  common  for
       almost  all  disks  to be named like that. Partitions within a disk are
       specified by a number appended to the device name, starting at 1  (e.g.
       /dev/sda1 ).

       Tape  drives are named /dev/st<num> or /dev/nst<num> where <num> starts
       at zero. Additionally one letter from this list: "lma" may be  appended
       to   the  name.  CD,  DVD  and  BD  readers  (and  writers)  are  named
       /dev/sr<num> where <num> start at zero. There are less used SCSI device
       type  names,  the dmesg and the lsscsi commands may help to find if any
       are attached to a running system.

       There is also a SCSI  device  driver  which  offers  alternate  generic
       access  to  SCSI  devices. It uses names of the form /dev/sg<num> where
       <num> starts at zero. The "lsscsi -g" command may be useful in  finding
       these  and  which  generic name corresponds to a device type name (e.g.
       /dev/sg2 may correspond to /dev/sda). In the lk 2.6 series a block SCSI
       generic   driver   was  introduced  and  its  names  are  of  the  form
       /dev/bsg/<h:c:t:l> where h, c, t and l are numbers. Again see the  lss-
       csi  command  to  find the correspondence between that SCSI tuple (i.e.
       <h:c:t:l>) and alternate device names.

       Prior to the Linux kernel 2.6 series these  utilities  could  only  use
       generic device names (e.g. /dev/sg1 ). In almost all cases in the Linux
       kernel 2.6 series, any device name can be used by these utilities.

WINDOWS DEVICE NAMING
       Storage and related devices can have several device names  in  Windows.
       Probably the most common in the volume name (e.g. "D:"). There are also
       a "class" device  names  such  as  "PhysicalDrive<n>",  "CDROM<n>"  and
       "TAPE<n>". <n> is an integer starting at 0 allocated in ascending order
       as devices are discovered (and sometimes rediscovered).

       Some storage devices have a SCSI lower level device name  which  starts
       with  a  SCSI  (pseudo) adapter name of the form "SCSI<n>:". To this is
       added sub-addressing in the form of a "bus" number, a "target"  identi-
       fier  and a "lun" (logical unit number). The "bus" number is also known
       as a "PathId".  These are assembled to form a device name of the  form:
       "SCSI<n>:<bus>,<target>,<lun>". The trailing ",<lun>" may be omitted in
       which case a lun of zero is assumed. This lower level device name  can-
       not often be used directly since Windows blocks attempts to use it if a
       class driver has "claimed" the device.  There  are  SCSI  device  types
       (e.g.   Automation/Drive  interface  type)  for which there is no class
       driver. At least two transports ("bus types" in  Windows  jargon):  USB
       and IEEE 1394 do not have a "scsi" device names of this form.

       In  keeping  with DOS file system conventions, the various device names
       can be given in upper, lower or mixed case. Since "PhysicalDrive<n>" is
       tedious to write, a shortened form of "PD<n>" is permitted by all util-
       ities in this package.

       A single device (e.g. a disk) can have many device names. For  example:
       "PD0"  can  also  be "C:", "D:" and "SCSI0:0,1,0". The two volume names
       reflect that the disk has two partitions on it.  Disk  partitions  that
       are not recognised by Windows are not usually given a volume name. How-
       ever Vista does show a volume name for a disk which has  no  partitions
       recognised by it and when selected invites the user to format it (which
       may be rather unfriendly to other OSes).

       These utilities assume a given device  name  is  in  the  Win32  device
       namespace.  To make that explicit "\\.\" can be prepended to the device
       names mentioned in this section. Beware that  backslash  is  an  escape
       character  in  Unix  like  shells  and the C programming language. In a
       shell like Msys (from MinGW) each backslash may need to be typed twice.

       The sg_scan utility within this package lists out Windows device  names
       in a form that is suitable for other utilities in this package to use.

FREEBSD DEVICE NAMING
       SCSI  disks have block names of the form /dev/da<num> where <num> is an
       integer starting at zero. The "da" is replaced by "sa"  for  SCSI  tape
       drives  and "cd" for SCSI CD/DVD/BD drives. Each SCSI device has a cor-
       responding pass-through device name of the  form  /dev/pass<num>  where
       <num>  is an integer starting at zero. The "camcontrol devlist" command
       may be useful for finding out which SCSI device names are available and
       the correspondence between between class and pass-through names.

SOLARIS DEVICE NAMING
       SCSI  device  names below the /dev directory have a form like: c5t4d3s2
       where the number following "c" is the controller (HBA) number, the num-
       ber  following  "t" is the target number (from the SCSI parallel inter-
       face days) and the number following "d" is the LUN. Following  the  "s"
       is  the  slice number which is related to a partition and by convention
       "s2" is the whole disk.

       OpenSolaris also has a c5t4d3p2 form where the number following the "p"
       is  the  partition number apart from "p0" which is the whole disk. So a
       whole disk may be referred to as either c5t4d3, c5t4d3s2 or c5t4d3p0 .

       And these device names are duplicated in  the  /dev/dsk  and  /dev/rdsk
       directories.  The former is the block device name and the latter is for
       "raw" (or char device) access which is  what  sg3_utils  needs.  So  in
       OpenSolaris  something  of  the form 'sg_inq /dev/rdsk/c5t4d3p0' should
       work.  If it doesn't work then add  a  '-vvv'  option  for  more  debug
       information.   Trying this form 'sg_inq /dev/dsk/c5t4d3p0' (note "rdsk"
       changed to "dsk") will result in an "inappropriate  ioctl  for  device"
       error.

       The device names within the /dev directory are typically symbolic links
       to much longer topological names in the /device directory.  In  Solaris
       cd/dvd/bd  drives  seem  to be treated as disks and so are found in the
       /dev/rdsk directory. Tape drives appear in the /dev/rmt directory.

       There is also a sgen (SCSI generic) driver which by  default  does  not
       attach  to  any  device.  See the /kernel/drv/sgen.conf file to control
       what is attached. Any attached device will have a device  name  of  the
       form /dev/scsi/c5t4d3 .

       Listing available SCSI devices in Solaris seems to be a challenge. "Use
       the 'format' command" advice works but seems a very  dangerous  way  to
       list devices. [It does prompt again before doing any damage.] 'devfsadm
       -Cv' cleans out the clutter in the /dev/rdsk  directory,  only  leaving
       what is "live". The "cfgadm -v" command looks promising.

EXIT STATUS
       To  aid  scripts  that  call these utilities, the exit status is set to
       indicate success (0) or failure (1 or more).  Note  that  some  of  the
       lower  values  correspond to the SCSI sense key values. The exit status
       values are:

       0      success

       1      syntax error. Either illegal command line options, options  with
              bad arguments or a combination of options that is not permitted.

       2      the  DEVICE  reports  that  it  is  not  ready for the operation
              requested. The device may be in the process  of  becoming  ready
              (e.g.   spinning  up  but  not at speed) so the utility may work
              after a wait.

       3      the DEVICE reports a  medium  or  hardware  error  (or  a  blank
              check).  For  example  an attempt to read a corrupted block on a
              disk will yield this value.

       5      the DEVICE reports an "illegal request" with an additional sense
              code  other than "invalid command operation code". This is often
              a supported command with a field set requesting  an  unsupported
              capability.  For  commands that require a "service action" field
              this value can indicate  that  the  command  with  that  service
              action value is not supported.

       6      the  DEVICE  reports  a "unit attention" condition. This usually
              indicates that something unrelated to the requested command  has
              occurred  (e.g.  a  device reset) potentially before the current
              SCSI command was sent. The requested command has not  been  exe-
              cuted  by  the  device.  Note that unit attention conditions are
              usually only reported once by a device.

       9      the DEVICE reports an illegal request with an  additional  sense
              code  of  "invalid  command  operation code" which means that it
              doesn't support the requested command.

       11     the DEVICE reports an aborted command.  In  some  cases  aborted
              commands  can  be  retried  immediately  (e.g.  if the transport
              aborted the command due to congestion).

       15     the utility is unable to open, close or use  the  given  DEVICE.
              The  given  file name could be incorrect or there may be permis-
              sion problems. Adding the '-v' option may give more information.

       20     the DEVICE reports it has a check condition but "no  sense"  and
              non-zero information in its additional sense codes. Some polling
              commands (e.g. REQUEST SENSE) can receive this response.

       21     the DEVICE reports a "recovered error".  The  requested  command
              was  successful.  Most  likely a utility will report a recovered
              error to stderr and continue, probably leaving the utility  with
              an exit status of 0 .

       33     the command sent to DEVICE has timed out.

       97     the response to a SCSI command failed sanity checks.

       98     the  DEVICE  reports  it  has  a  check  condition but the error
              doesn't fit into any of the above categories.

       99     any errors that can't be categorized into values  1  to  98  may
              yield  this  value. This includes transport and operating system
              errors after the command has been sent to the device.

       Most of the error conditions reported  above  will  be  repeatable  (an
       example  of  one that is not is "unit attention") so the utility can be
       run again with the '-v' option (or several) to obtain more information.

COMMON OPTIONS
       Arguments to long options are mandatory for short options as  well.  In
       the  short  form an argument to an option uses zero or more spaces as a
       separator (i.e. the short form does not use "=" as a separator).

       If an option takes a numeric argument then that argument is assumed  to
       be  decimal  unless  otherwise  indicated  (e.g. with a leading "0x", a
       trailing "h" or as noted in the usage message).

       Some options are used uniformally in most  of  the  utilities  in  this
       package.  Those  options  are  listed  below.  Note that there are some
       exceptions.

       -h, -?, --help
              output the usage message then exit. In a few older utilities the
              '-h' option requests hexadecimal output. In these cases the '-?'
              option will output the usage message then exit.

       -H, --hex
              for SCSI commands that yield a non-trivial response,  print  out
              that response in ASCII hexadecimal.

       -m, --maxlen=LEN
              several  important  SCSI  commands (e.g. INQUIRY and MODE SENSE)
              have response lengths that vary depending on many factors,  only
              some  of  which  these  utilities take into account. The maximum
              response  length  is  typically  specified  in  the  'allocation
              length' field of the cdb. In the absence of this option, several
              utilities use a default allocation length (sometimes recommended
              in  the SCSI draft standards) or a "double fetch" strategy.  See
              sg_logs(8) for its description of  a  "double  fetch"  strategy.
              These  techniques  are  imperfect  and in the presence of faulty
              SCSI targets can cause problems  (e.g.  some  USB  mass  storage
              devices  freeze  if  they  receive  an INQUIRY allocation length
              other than 36). Also use of this  option  disables  any  "double
              fetch" strategy that may have otherwise been used.

       -r, --raw
              for SCSI commands that yield a non-trivial response, output that
              response in binary to stdout. If any error messages  or  warning
              are  produced  they  are  usually sent to stderr. Some utilities
              that consume data to send to the device along with the SCSI com-
              mand,  use  this option to provide that data or indicate that it
              can be read from stdin.

       -v, --verbose
              increase the level of verbosity, (i.e.  debug  output).  Can  be
              used  multiple  times  to  further increase verbosity. The addi-
              tional output is usually sent to stderr.

       -V, --version
              print the version string and then exit. Each utility has its own
              version number and date of last code change.

NUMERIC ARGUMENTS
       Many  utilities  have command line options that take numeric arguments.
       These numeric arguments can be  large  values  (e.g.  a  logical  block
       address  (LBA)  on  a  disk)  and  can  be inconvenient to enter in the
       default decimal representation. So various  other  representations  are
       permitted.

       Multiplicative suffixes are accepted. They are one, two or three letter
       strings appended directly after the number to which they apply:

          c C         *1
          w W         *2
          b B         *512
          k K KiB     *1024
          KB          *1000
          m M MiB     *1048576
          MB          *1000000
          g G GiB     *(2^30)
          GB          *(10^9)
          t T TiB     *(2^40)
          TB          *(10^12)
          p P PiB     *(2^50)
          PB          *(10^15)

       An example is "2k" for 2048. The large tera and peta suffixes are  only
       available for numeric arguments that might require 64 bits to represent
       internally.

       A suffix of the form "x<n>" multiplies the leading number  by  <n>.  An
       example  is "2x33" for "66". The leading number cannot be "0" (zero) as
       that would be interpreted as a hexadecimal number (see below).

       These multiplicative suffixes are  compatible  with  GNU's  dd  command
       (since 2002) which claims compliance with SI and with IEC 60027-2.

       Alternatively  numerical  arguments  can be given in hexadecimal. There
       are two syntaxes. The number can be preceded by either "0x" or "0X"  as
       found in the C programming language. The second hexadecimal representa-
       tion is a trailing "h" or "H" as found in (storage) standards. When hex
       numbers  are given, multipliers cannot be used. For example the decimal
       value "256" can be given as "0x100" or "100h".

SCRIPTS, EXAMPLES and UTILS
       There are several Bourne shell scripts in  the  'scripts'  subdirectory
       that  invoke  compiled  utilities  (e.g. sg_readcap). The scripts start
       with 'scsi_' rather than 'sg_'. One purpose of these scripts is to call
       the same utility (e.g. sg_readcap) on multiple disks. Most of the basic
       compiled utilities only allow one device as an argument. Some distribu-
       tions install these scripts in a visible directory (e.g. /usr/src/bin).
       Some of these scripts have man page entries. See the README file in the
       'scripts' subdirectory.

       There  is  some  example C code plus examples of complex invocations in
       the 'examples' subdirectory. There is also a README file. The example C
       may  be  a  simpler  example of how to use a SCSI pass-through in Linux
       than the main utilities (found in the 'src' subdirectory). This is  due
       to  the  fewer  abstraction  layers (e.g. they don't worry the MinGW in
       Windows may open a file in text rather than binary mode).

       Some utilities that the author has found useful have been placed in the
       'utils' subdirectory.

WEB SITE
       There     is    a    web    page    discussing    this    package    at
       http://sg.danny.cz/sg/sg3_utils.html . The device naming used  by  this
       package   on  various  operating  system  is  discussed  in  the  page:
       http://sg.danny.cz/sg/device_name.html .

AUTHORS
       Written by Douglas Gilbert. Some utilities have been  contributed,  see
       the CREDITS file and individual source files (in the 'src' directory).

REPORTING BUGS
       Report bugs to <dgilbert at interlog dot com>.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 1999-2012 Douglas Gilbert
       Some utilities are distributed under a GPL version 2 license while oth-
       ers, usually more recent ones, are under a FreeBSD license.  The  files
       that are common to almost all utilities and thus contain the most reus-
       able    code,    namely     sg_lib.[hc],     sg_cmds_basic.[hc]     and
       sg_cmds_extra.[hc]  are  under a FreeBSD license. There is NO warranty;
       not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       +---------------+--------------------------+
       |ATTRIBUTE TYPE |     ATTRIBUTE VALUE      |
       +---------------+--------------------------+
       |Availability   | system/storage/sg3_utils |
       +---------------+--------------------------+
       |Stability      | Uncommitted              |
       +---------------+--------------------------+
SEE ALSO
       sdparm(sdparm), ddpt(ddpt), lsscsi(lsscsi), dmesg(1), mt(1)



NOTES
       This    software    was    built    from    source     available     at
       https://java.net/projects/solaris-userland.    The  original  community
       source was downloaded from  http://sg.danny.cz/sg/p/sg3_utils-1.33.tgz

       Further information about this software can be found on the open source
       community website at http://sg.danny.cz/sg/sg3_utils.html.



sg3_utils-1.32                   January 2012                     SG3_UTILS(8)