NetBSD/sbin/scsictl/scsictl.8

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.\" $NetBSD: scsictl.8,v 1.25 2008/04/30 13:10:53 martin Exp $
.\"
.\" Copyright (c) 1998, 2002 The NetBSD Foundation, Inc.
.\" All rights reserved.
.\"
.\" This code is derived from software contributed to The NetBSD Foundation
.\" by Jason R. Thorpe of the Numerical Aerospace Simulation Facility,
.\" NASA Ames Research Center.
.\"
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.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
.\" are met:
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.\" notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
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.\" TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR
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.\" CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF
.\" SUBSTITUTE GOODS OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS
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2007-01-23 23:34:17 +03:00
.Dd January 22, 2007
.Dt SCSICTL 8
2001-06-05 15:22:41 +04:00
.Os
.Sh NAME
.Nm scsictl
.Nd a program to manipulate SCSI devices and busses
.Sh SYNOPSIS
.Nm
.Ar device
.Ar command
.Oo
.Ar arg Oo ...
.Oc
.Oc
.Sh DESCRIPTION
.Nm
allows a user or system administrator to issue commands to and otherwise
control SCSI devices and busses.
It is used by specifying a device or bus to manipulate,
the command to perform, and any arguments the command may require.
.Nm
determines if the specified device is an actual device or a SCSI bus
automatically, and selects the appropriate command set.
.Pp
For commands which
.Nm
issues a SCSI command to the device directly, any returned sense information
will be decoded by
.Nm
and displayed to the standard output.
.Sh DEVICE COMMANDS
The following commands are supported for SCSI devices:
.Pp
.Nm defects
.Op primary
.Op grown
.Op block|byte|physical
.Pp
Read the primary and/or grown defect lists from the specified device
in block, byte from index, or physical sector format.
The default is to return both the primary and grown defect lists
in physical sector format.
This command is only supported on direct access devices.
.Pp
.Nm format
.Oo blocksize
.Oo immediate
.Oc
.Oc
.Pp
(Low level) format the named device.
If the optional
.Li blocksize
parameter is provided, the device geometry will be modified to
use the specified
.Li blocksize .
If this parameter is different form the Current or Default Mode Page 3
parameters, the device will update Mode Page 3 at the successful
completion of the Format.
Device geometry may change as a result of using a new device
.Li blocksize .
When the optional
.Li blocksize
parameter is specified, the Defect List on the drive will revert to
the original primary defect list created at the time of manufacture
if available.
The drive will usually recertify itself during the Format
and add any other defective blocks to the new Defect List.
Some disks may not support the ability to change the blocksize and
may enter a Degraded Mode when fed a Format command of this type.
If this happens the standard recovery for the drive requires issuing
a correct Format command, i.e. one without the blocksize parameter.
.Pp
When the
.Li immediate
parameter is also specified, the disk is instructed to return from the
format command right away.
It continues to format, and every ten seconds
.Nm
issues a TEST UNIT READY command to check the associated sense data.
This associated sense data has a progress indicator which indicates
how far the format is progressing.
Note well that most SCSI disk drives prior to
a few years ago do not support this option.
.Pp
.Nm identify
.Pp
Identify the specified device, displaying the device's SCSI
bus, target, and lun, as well as the device's vendor, product,
and revision strings.
.Pp
.Nm reassign
.Ar blkno
.Oo blkno Oo ...
.Oc
.Oc
.Pp
Issues a
.Li REASSIGN BLOCKS
command to the device, adding the specified blocks to the
grown defect list.
This command is only supported on direct access devices.
.Pp
.Nm release
.Pp
Send a
.Dq RELEASE
command to the device to release a reservation on it.
.Pp
.Nm reserve
.Pp
Send a
.Dq RESERVE
command to the device to place a reservation on it.
.Pp
.Nm reset
.Pp
Reset the device.
This command is only supported for devices which support the
.Li SCIOCRESET
ioctl.
.Pp
.Nm start
.Pp
Send a
.Dq START
command to the device.
This is useful typically only for disk devices.
.Pp
.Nm stop
.Pp
Send a
.Dq STOP
command to the device.
This is useful typically only for disk devices.
.Pp
.Nm tur
.Pp
Send a
.Dq TEST UNIT READY
command to the device.
This is useful for generating current device status.
.Pp
.Nm getcache
.Pp
Returns basic cache parameters for the device.
.Pp
.Nm setcache
.Ar none|r|w|rw
.Op Ar save
.Pp
Set basic cache parameters for the device.
The cache may be disabled
.Pq none ,
the read cache enabled
.Pq r ,
the write cache enabled
.Pq w ,
or both read and write cache enabled
.Pq rw .
If the drive's cache parameters are savable, specifying
.Ar save
after the cache enable state will cause the parameters to be saved in
non-volatile storage.
.Pp
.Nm flushcache
.Pp
Explicitly flushes the write cache.
.Pp
.Nm setspeed
.Ar speed
.Pp
Set the highest speed that the optical drive should use for reading
data.
The units are multiples of a single speed CDROM (150 KB/s).
Specify 0 to use the drive's fastest speed.
.Sh BUS COMMANDS
The following commands are supported for SCSI busses:
.Pp
.Nm reset
.Pp
Reset the SCSI bus.
This command is only supported if the host adapter supports the
.Li SCBUSIORESET
ioctl.
.Pp
.Nm scan
.Ar target
.Ar lun
.Pp
Scan the SCSI bus for devices.
This is useful if a device was not connected or powered
on when the system was booted.
The
.Ar target
and
.Ar lun
arguments specify which SCSI target and lun on the bus is to be scanned.
Either may be wildcarded by specifying the keyword
.Dq any
or
.Dq all .
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.Pp
.Nm detach
.Ar target
.Ar lun
.Pp
Detach the specified device from the bus.
Useful if a device is powered down after use.
The
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.Ar target
and
.Ar lun
arguments have the same meaning as for the
.Nm scan
command, and may also be wildcarded.
.Sh NOTES
When scanning the SCSI bus, information about newly recognized devices
is printed to console.
No information is printed for already probed devices.
.Sh FILES
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.Pa /dev/scsibus*
- for commands operating on SCSI busses
.Sh SEE ALSO
.Xr ioctl 2 ,
.Xr cd 4 ,
.Xr ch 4 ,
.Xr sd 4 ,
.Xr se 4 ,
.Xr ss 4 ,
.Xr st 4 ,
.Xr uk 4 ,
.Xr atactl 8 ,
.Xr dkctl 8
.Sh HISTORY
The
.Nm
command first appeared in
.Nx 1.4 .
.Sh AUTHORS
The
.Nm
command was written by Jason R. Thorpe of the Numerical Aerospace Simulation
Facility, NASA Ames Research Center.