Go to main content

マニュアルページ セクション 8: システム管理コマンド

印刷ビューの終了

更新: 2018年8月8日
 
 

sg_senddiag (8)

名前

sg_senddiag - performs a SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC command

形式

sg_senddiag    [--doff]    [--extdur]    [--help]    [--hex]   [--list]
[--maxlen=LEN] [--page=PG]  [--pf]  [--raw=H,H...]  [--raw=-]  [--self-
test=ST] [--test] [--uoff] [--verbose] [--version] DEVICE

sg_senddiag  [-doff]  [-e]  [-h] [-H] [-l] [-pf] [-raw=H,H...] [-raw=-]
[-s=ST] [-t] [-uoff] [-v] [-V] [-?] DEVICE

説明

SG_SENDDIAG(8)                     SG3_UTILS                    SG_SENDDIAG(8)



NAME
       sg_senddiag - performs a SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC command

SYNOPSIS
       sg_senddiag    [--doff]    [--extdur]    [--help]    [--hex]   [--list]
       [--maxlen=LEN] [--page=PG]  [--pf]  [--raw=H,H...]  [--raw=-]  [--self-
       test=ST] [--test] [--uoff] [--verbose] [--version] DEVICE

       sg_senddiag  [-doff]  [-e]  [-h] [-H] [-l] [-pf] [-raw=H,H...] [-raw=-]
       [-s=ST] [-t] [-uoff] [-v] [-V] [-?] DEVICE

DESCRIPTION
       This utility sends a SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC command to the DEVICE. It can
       issue  self-tests,  find  supported  diagnostic pages or send arbitrary
       diagnostic pages.

       When the --list option and a DEVICE are given then the utility sends  a
       SCSI  RECEIVE  DIAGNOSTIC  RESULTS  command to fetch the response (i.e.
       the page numbers of supported diagnostic pages).

       When the --list option is given without a DEVICE then a list  of  diag-
       nostic page names and their numbers, known by this utility, are listed.

       This  utility supports two command line syntax-es, the preferred one is
       shown first in the synopsis and explained in this section. A later sec-
       tion  on  the  old  command  line  syntax  outlines the second group of
       options.

OPTIONS
       Arguments to long options are mandatory for short options as well.

       -d, --doff
              set the Device Offline (DevOffL) bit (default  is  clear).  Only
              significant when --test option is set for the default self-test.
              When set other operations on any logical units controlled by the
              this  device  server  (target) may be affected (delayed) while a
              default self-test is underway.

       -e, --extdur
              outputs the expected extended self-test duration.  The  duration
              is given in seconds (and minutes in parentheses). This figure is
              obtained from mode page 0xa (i.e. the control mode page).

       -h, --help
              print usage message then exit.

       -H, --hex
              outputs response from RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS in  hex  rather
              than  decode it.  Only the Supported Diagnostic Pages diagnostic
              page (i.e. page_code=0) is decoded; other pages (e.g. those used
              by SES) are output in hex.
              If  --hex is used once, the hex output has a relative address at
              the start of each line. If --hex is used twice,  then  ASCII  is
              shown  to  the right of each line of hex. If --hex is used three
              time or more, only the hex is output,  in  two  character  pairs
              (i.e.  a byte) space separated and up to 16 bytes per line. This
              latter form, if placed in a file or  piped  through  to  another
              invocation, is suitable for the --raw=- option.

       -l, --list
              when  a  DEVICE  is also given lists the names of all diagnostic
              pages supported by this device. The request is sent via  a  SEND
              DIAGNOSTIC  command  (with the "pF" bit set) and the response is
              fetched by a RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS command.  When  used  in
              the  absence of a --list argument then a list of diagnostic page
              names and their numbers, known by this utility, are listed.

       -m, --maxlen=LEN
              where LEN is the value placed in the parameter list length field
              of  a  SEND DIAGNOSTIC command or in the allocation length field
              of a RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS command. This only  occurs  when
              the  other  options imply there will be data sent or received by
              the command. The default value is 4096 bytes. LEN cannot  exceed
              65535 or 0xffff in hexadecimal.

       -O, --old
              switch to older style options.

       -P, --page=PG
              where  PG  is  the  RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS command page code
              field.  If this option is given the PCV bit in that  command  is
              set.  When  this option is given then no SEND DIAGNOSTIC command
              is sent (unlike --list).  If  PG  is  0  then  the  response  is
              decoded  as if it is the SPC Supported Diagnostic pages diagnos-
              tic page. Other PG values (i.e. 1 to 255) have  their  responses
              output in hex.

       -p, --pf
              set Page Format (PF) bit. By default it is clear (i.e. 0) unless
              the list --list option is given in which case  the  Page  Format
              bit is set (as required by SPC-3).

       -r, --raw=H,H...
              string  of  comma  separated  hex  numbers  each of which should
              resolve to a byte value (i.e. 0 to  ff  inclusive).  A  (single)
              space separated string of hex bytes is also allowed but the list
              needs to be in quotes. This sequence forms a diagnostic page  to
              be sent with the SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC command. Mostly likely the
              --pf option should also be given.

       -r, --raw=-
              reads sequence of bytes from stdin. The sequence may  be  comma,
              space,  tab  or linefeed (newline) separated. If a line contains
              "#" then the remaining characters on that line are ignored. Oth-
              erwise  each  non  separator  character should resolve to a byte
              value (i.e. 0 to ff inclusive). This sequence forms a diagnostic
              page  to  be  sent with the SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC command. Mostly
              likely the --pf option should also be given.

       -s, --selftest=ST
              where ST is the self-test code. The default value is 0 which  is
              inactive. Some other values:
                1 : background short self-test
                2 : background extended self-test
                4 : aborts a (background) self-test that is in progress
                5 : foreground short self-test
                6 : foreground extended self-test
              This  option  is mutually exclusive with default self-test (i.e.
              can't have (ST > 0) and --test).

       -t, --test
              sets the _default_ Self Test (SelfTest) bit. By default this  is
              clear  (0).   The  --selftest=ST  option  should  not  be active
              together with this option. Both the --doff and/or --uoff options
              can be used with this option.

       -u, --uoff
              set  the  Unit  Offline  (UnitOffL) bit (default is clear). Only
              significant when --test option is set for the default self-test.
              When  set  other operations on this logical unit may be affected
              (delayed) while a default self-test is  underway.  Some  devices
              (e.g. Fujitsu disks) do more tests when this bit is set.

       -v, --verbose
              increase level of verbosity. Can be used multiple times.

       -V, --version
              print out version string then exit.


ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(7) for descriptions of the following attributes:


       +---------------+--------------------------+
       |ATTRIBUTE TYPE |     ATTRIBUTE VALUE      |
       +---------------+--------------------------+
       |Availability   | system/storage/sg3_utils |
       +---------------+--------------------------+
       |Stability      | Pass-through uncommitted |
       +---------------+--------------------------+
NOTES
       All devices should support the default self-test. The 'short' self-test
       codes should complete in 2 minutes or less.  The  'extended'  self-test
       codes'  maximum duration is vendor specific (e.g. a little over 10 min-
       utes with the author's disks).  The  foreground  self-test  codes  wait
       until  they  are  completed while the background self-test codes return
       immediately. The results of both foreground  and  background  self-test
       codes  are placed in the 'self-test results' log page (see sg_logs(8)).
       The SCSI command timeout for this utility is set to 60 minutes to allow
       for slow foreground extended self-tests.

       If  the  DEVICE  is  a  disk then no file systems residing on that disk
       should be mounted during a foreground self-test.  The  reason  is  that
       other  SCSI  commands may become queued behind the foreground self-test
       and timeout.

       When the --raw=H,H... option is given then  self-tests  should  not  be
       selected. However the --pf (i.e. "page format") option should be given.
       The length of the diagnostic page to be sent is derived from the number
       of  bytes  given  to  the --raw=H,H... option. The diagnostic page code
       (number) should be the first byte of the sequence (i.e. as dictated  by
       SPC-3 diagnostic page format). See the EXAMPLES section below.

       Arbitrary  diagnostic  pages  can  be  read (in hex) with the sg_ses(8)
       utility (not only those defined in SES-2).

       If the utility is used with no options  (e.g.  "sg_senddiag  /dev/sg1")
       Then a degenerate SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC command is sent with zero in all
       its fields apart from the opcode. Some devices report this as an  error
       while  others  ignore  it. It is not entirely clear from SPC-3 if it is
       invalid to send such a command.

       In the 2.4 series of Linux kernels the DEVICE must be  a  SCSI  generic
       (sg)  device.  In the 2.6 series block devices (e.g. SCSI disks and DVD
       drives) can also be specified.

       To access SCSI enclosures see the sg_ses(8) utility.  sg_ses  uses  the
       SCSI  SEND  DIAGNOSTIC  and RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS commands as out-
       lined in the SES-2 (draft) standard.

EXIT STATUS
       The exit status of sg_senddiag is 0 when it  is  successful.  Otherwise
       see the sg3_utils(8) man page.

OLDER COMMAND LINE OPTIONS
       The  options  in  this  section  were  the only ones available prior to
       sg3_utils version 1.23 . In sg3_utils  version  1.23  and  later  these
       older  options can be selected by either setting the SG3_UTILS_OLD_OPTS
       environment variable or using '--old' (or '-O) as the first option.

       -doff  set the Device Offline (DevOffL) bit (default  is  clear).  Only
              significant  when  -t  option  is set for the default self-test.
              Equivalent to --doff in the main description.

       -e     outputs the expected extended self-test duration. Equivalent  to
              --extdur in the main description.

       -h     outputs  response  from RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS in hex rather
              than decode it.

       -H     outputs response from RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS in  hex  rather
              than decode it.

       -l     when  a  DEVICE  is also given lists the names of all diagnostic
              pages supported by this device. The request is sent via  a  SEND
              DIAGNOSTIC  command  (with the "pf" bit set) and the response is
              fetched by a RECEIVE DIAGNOSTIC RESULTS command.  When  used  in
              the  absence of a DEVICE argument then a list of diagnostic page
              names and their numbers, known by this utility, are listed.

       -N     switch to the newer style options.

       -pf    set Page Format (PF) bit. By default it is clear (i.e. 0) unless
              the  -l option is given in which case the Page Format bit is set
              (as required by SPC-3).

       -raw=H,H...
              string of comma separated  hex  numbers  each  of  which  should
              resolve  to a byte value (i.e. 0 to ff inclusive). This sequence
              forms a diagnostic page to be sent with the SCSI SEND DIAGNOSTIC
              command. Mostly likely the -pf option should also be given.

       -raw=- reads  sequence  of bytes from stdin. The sequence may be comma,
              space, tab or linefeed (newline) separated. If a  line  contains
              "#" then the remaining characters on that line are ignored. Oth-
              erwise each non separator character should  resolve  to  a  byte
              value (i.e. 0 to ff inclusive). This sequence forms a diagnostic
              page to be sent with the SCSI SEND  DIAGNOSTIC  command.  Mostly
              likely the -pf option should also be given.

       -s=ST  where  ST is the self-test code. The default value is 0 which is
              inactive. A value of 1 selects a background short  self-test;  2
              selects  a background extended self-test; 5 selects a foreground
              short self-test; 6 selects a foreground extended test.  A  value
              of  4  will  abort a (background) self-test that is in progress.
              This option is mutually exclusive with default  self-test  (i.e.
              -t).

       -t     sets  the _default_ Self Test (SelfTest) bit. By default this is
              clear (0).  The -s=ST option should not be active together  with
              this  option.   Both  the -doff and/or -uoff options can be used
              with this option.

       -uoff  set the Unit Offline (UnitOffL) bit (default is clear).  Equiva-
              lent to --uoff in the main description.

       -v     increase level of verbosity. Can be used multiple times.

       -V     print out version string then exit.

       -?     output usage message. Ignore all other parameters.

EXAMPLES
       The examples sub-directory in the sg3_utils packages contains two exam-
       ple scripts that turn on the CJTPAT (jitter pattern) on some SAS  disks
       (one script for each phy). One possible invocation for phy 1 is:

         sg_senddiag --pf --raw=- /dev/sg2 < sdiag_sas_p1_cjtpat.txt

       There  is also an example script that turns on the IDLE pattern. Once a
       test pattern has been started it can be turned off by resetting the phy
       or with the STOP phy pattern function:

         sg_senddiag --pf --raw=- /dev/sg2 < sdiag_sas_p1_stop.txt

AUTHOR
       Written by Douglas Gilbert

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

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2003-2015 Douglas Gilbert
       This  software is distributed under the GPL version 2. There is NO war-
       ranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR  A  PARTICULAR  PUR-
       POSE.

SEE ALSO
       sg_ses(8), sg_logs(8), smartmontools(see net)


       This     software     was    built    from    source    available    at
       https://github.com/oracle/solaris-userland.   The  original   community
       source was downloaded from  http://sg.danny.cz/sg/p/sg3_utils-1.42.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-1.41                    April 2015                    SG_SENDDIAG(8)