Provided by: dc3dd_7.2.646-1_amd64 bug

NAME

       dc3dd - convert and copy a file

DESCRIPTION

       ------ usage: ------

              dc3dd [OPTION 1] [OPTION 2] ... [OPTION N]

              *or*

              dc3dd [HELP OPTION]

              where  each  OPTION is selected from the basic or advanced options listed below, or
              HELP OPTION is selected from the help options listed below.

       -------------- basic options: --------------

       if=DEVICE or FILE
              Read input from a device or a file (see note #1 below for how to read from standard
              input).  This  option can only be used once and cannot be combined with ifs=, pat=,
              or tpat=.

       ifs=BASE.FMT
              Read input from a set of files  with  base  name  BASE  and  sequential  file  name
              extensions  conforming  to  the  format specifier FMT (see note #4 below for how to
              specify FMT). This option can only be used once and cannot be  combined  with  if=,
              pat=, or tpat=.

       of=FILE or DEVICE
              Write  output  to  a file or device (see note #2 below for how to write to standard
              output). This option can be used more than once (see  note  #3  below  for  how  to
              generate multiple outputs).

       hof=FILE or DEVICE
              Write  output  to  a file or device, hash the output bytes, and verify by comparing
              the output hash(es) to the input hash(es). This option can be used more  than  once
              (see note #3 below for how to generate multiple outputs).

       ofs=BASE.FMT
              Write  output  to  a  set  of  files  with  base name BASE and sequential file name
              extensions generated from the format specifier FMT (see note #4 below  for  how  to
              specify  FMT). This option can be used more than once (see note #3 below for how to
              generate multiple outputs). Specify the maximum size of each file in the set  using
              ofsz=.

       hofs=BASE.FMT
              Write  output  to  a  set  of  files  with  base name BASE and sequential file name
              extensions generated from the format specifier FMT (see note #4 below  for  how  to
              specify  FMT). Hash the output files and verify by comparing the output hash(es) to
              the input hash(es). This option can be used more than once (see note #3  below  for
              how to generate multiple outputs). Specify the maximum size of each file in the set
              using ofsz=.

       ofsz=BYTES
              Set the maximum size of each file in the sets of  files  specified  using  ofs=  or
              hofs=  to  BYTES (see note #5 below). A default value for this option may be set at
              compile time using -DDEFAULT_OUTPUT_FILE_SIZE followed  by  the  desired  value  in
              BYTES.

       hash=ALGORITHM
              Compute  an  ALGORITHM  hash  of  the input and also of any outputs specified using
              hof=, hofs=, or fhod=, where ALGORITHM is one of md5, sha1, sha256, or sha512. This
              option may be used once for each supported ALGORITHM. Alternatively, hashing can be
              activated     at     compile     time      using      one      or      more      of
              -DDEFAULT_HASH_MD5,-DDEFAULT_HASH_SHA1,          -DDEFAULT_HASH_SHA256,         and
              -DDEFAULT_HASH_SHA512.

       log=FILE
              Log I/O statistcs, diagnostics, and total hashes of input and output  to  FILE.  If
              hlog= is not specified, piecewise hashes of multiple file input and output are also
              logged to FILE. This option can be used more than once to generate multiple logs.

       hlog=FILE
              Log total hashes and piecewise hashes to FILE.  This option can be used  more  than
              once to generate multiple logs.

       mlog=FILE
              Create hash log that is easier for machine to read

       ----------------- advanced options: -----------------

       fhod=DEVICE
              The  same  as hof=DEVICE, with additional hashing of the entire output DEVICE. This
              option can be used more than once (see note #3 below for how to  generate  multiple
              outputs).

       rec=off
              By  default,  zeros  are  written to the output(s) in place of bad sectors when the
              input is a device.  Use this option to cause the program to instead exit when a bad
              sector is encountered.

       wipe=DEVICE
              Wipe DEVICE by writing zeros (default) or a pattern specified by pat= or tpat=.

       hwipe=DEVICE
              Wipe  DEVICE  by  writing  zeros (default) or a pattern specified by pat= or tpat=.
              Verify DEVICE after writing it by hashing it and  comparing  the  hash(es)  to  the
              input hash(es).

       pat=HEX
              Use pattern as input, writing HEX to every byte of the output. This option can only
              be used once and cannot be combined with if=, ifs=, or tpat=.

       tpat=TEXT
              Use text pattern as input, writing the string TEXT repeatedly to the  output.  This
              option can only be used once and cannot be combined with if=, ifs=, or pat=.

       cnt=SECTORS
              Read  only  SECTORS input sectors. Must be used with pat= or tpat= if not using the
              pattern with wipe= or hwipe= to wipe a device.

       iskip=SECTORS
              Skip SECTORS sectors at start of the input device or file.

       oskip=SECTORS
              Skip SECTORS sectors at start of the output file. Specifying  oskip=  automatically
              sets app=on.

       app=on Do  not overwrite an output file specified with of= if it already exists, appending
              output instead.

       ssz=BYTES
              Unconditionally use BYTES (see note #5 below) bytes for sector size. If ssz= is not
              specified,  sector  size is determined by probing the device; if the probe fails or
              the target is not a device, a sector size of 512 bytes is assumed.

       bufsz=BYTES
              Set the size of the internal byte buffers  to  BYTES  (see  note  #5  below).  This
              effectively  sets  the  maximum number of bytes that may be read at a time from the
              input. BYTES must be a multiple of  sector  size.  Use  this  option  to  fine-tune
              performance.

       verb=on
              Activate verbose reporting, where sectors in/out are reported for each file in sets
              of files specified using ifs=, ofs=, or hofs=.   Alternatively,  verbose  reporting
              may be activated at compile time using -DDEFAULT_VERBOSE_REPORTING.

       nwspc=on
              Activate  compact reporting, where the use of white space to divide log output into
              logical sections is suppressed. Alternatively, compact reporting may  be  activated
              at compile time using -DDEFAULT_COMPACT_REPORTING.

       b10=on Activate  base  10  bytes  reporting, where the progress display reports 1000 bytes
              instead of 1024 bytes as 1 KB.  Alternatively,  base  10  bytes  reporting  may  be
              activated at compile time using -DDEFAULT_BASE_TEN_BYTES_REPORTING.

       corruptoutput=on
              For  verification  testing  and  demonstration purposes, corrupt the output file(s)
              with extra bytes so a hash mismatch is guaranteed.

       ------------- help options: -------------

       --help display this help and exit

       --version
              output version information and exit

       --flags
              display compile-time flags and exit

       ------ notes: ------

       1. To read from stdin, do not specify if=, ifs=, pat=, or tpat=.  2. To write  to  stdout,
       do not specify of=, hof=, ofs=, hofs=, fhod=,

              wipe=, or hwipe=.

       3. To write to multiple outputs specify more than one of of=, hof=, ofs=,

              hofs=, or fhod=, in any combination.

       4. FMT is a pattern for a sequence of file extensions that can be numerical

              starting  at zero, numerical starting at one, or alphabetical. Specify FMT by using
              a series of zeros, ones, or  a's,  respectively.  The  number  of  characters  used
              indicates  the  desired  length of the extensions.  For example, a FMT specifier of
              0000 indicates four character numerical extensions starting with 0000.

   5. BYTES may be followed by the following multiplicative suffixes:
              c (1), w (2), b (512), kB (1000), K  (1024),  MB  (1000*1000),  M  (1024*1024),  GB
              (1000*1000*1000), G (1024*1024*1024), and so on for T, P, E, Z, and Y.

       6. Consider using cnt=, iskip= and oskip= to work around

              unreadable sectors if error recovery fails.

       7. Sending an interrupt (e.g., CTRL+C) to dc3dd will cause

              the  program to report the work completed at the time the interrupt is received and
              then exit.

       dc3dd completed at 2016-11-24 23:21:22 +0000

AUTHOR

       Written by Paul Rubin, David  MacKenzie,  Stuart  Kemp,  Jesse  Kornblum,  Andrew  Medico,
       Richard Cordovano, and Justin Lowe.

REPORTING BUGS

       Report bugs to <dc3dd@dc3.mil>.

COPYRIGHT

       Copyright  ©  2008  Free  Software  Foundation, Inc.  License GPLv3+: GNU GPL version 3 or
       later <http://gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>
       This is free software: you are free to change and redistribute it.  There is NO  WARRANTY,
       to the extent permitted by law.

SEE ALSO

       The full documentation for dc3dd is maintained as a Texinfo manual.  If the info and dc3dd
       programs are properly installed at your site, the command

              info dc3dd

       should give you access to the complete manual.