Provided by: sg3-utils_1.44-1ubuntu2_amd64 bug

NAME

       sg3_utils - a package of utilities for sending SCSI commands

SYNOPSIS

       sg_*  [--dry-run]  [--enumerate]  [--help]  [--hex]  [--in=FN]  [--maxlen=LEN]  [--raw]  [--timeout=SECS]
       [--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. The sg_raw utility can be used to send an arbitrary SCSI command (supplied  on  the
       command line) to the given DEVICE.

       sg_decode_sense can be used to decode SCSI sense data given on the command line or in a file. sg_raw -vvv
       will output the T10 name of a given SCSI CDB which is most often 16 bytes or less in length.

       SCSI  draft standards can be found at http://www.t10.org . The standards themselves can be purchased from
       ANSI and other standards organizations.  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. The highest
       level (i.e. most abstract) document is the SCSI Architecture Model (SAM) with SAM-5 being the most recent
       standard (ANSI INCITS 515-2016) with the most recent draft being SAM-6 revision  4  .  SCSI  commands  in
       common  with  all  device  types  can  be found in SCSI Primary Commands (SPC) of which SPC-4 is the most
       recent standard (ANSI INCITS 513-2015). The most recent SPC draft is  SPC-5  revision  19.  Block  device
       specific  commands  (e.g.  as  used  by  disks)  are in SBC, those for tape drives in SSC, those for SCSI
       enclosures in SES 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 corresponding ATA equivalents (and that is an imperfect mapping in some cases).
       The relevant standard is called SCSI to ATA Translation (SAT, SAT-2  and  SAT-3)  are  now  standards  at
       INCITS(ANSI)  and ISO while SAT-4 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 operation. The reader is referred to
       the "mt" utility.

       There are two generations of command line option usage. The newer utilities (written since July 2004) use
       the getopt_long() function to parse command line  options.  With  that  function,  each  option  has  two
       representations:  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,  including  as  sg_inq,  sg_logs,  sg_modes,  sg_opcode,  sg_rbuff,    sg_readcap,
       sg_senddiag, sg_start and sg_turs had individual command line processing 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 verbosity).

       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.  The getopt_long() is a GNU extension (i.e.  not
       yet  POSIX  certified)  but  more recent command line utilities tend to use it. 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 documents 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 commands. 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.

ENVIRONMENT VARIABLES

       The SG3_UTILS_OLD_OPTS environment variable is explained in the previous section. It is only for backward
       compatibility of the command line options for older utilities.

       The SG3_UTILS_DSENSE environment variable may be set to  a  number.  If  that  number  is  non-zero  then
       descriptor  sense  is  set  in  the  SNTL (the small SCSI to NVMe Translation Layer within the underlying
       library).

       Several   utilities   have   their   own   environment   variable   setting   (e.g.     sg_persist    has
       SG_PERSIST_IN_RDONLY). See individual utility man pages for more information.

LINUX DEVICE NAMING

       Most  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 it has become more common  for  many  other  disks
       (including  SATA  disks  and  USB  storage  devices)  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  lsscsi  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.

       Very little has changed in Linux device naming in the Linux kernel 3 and 4 series.

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"
       identifier  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  cannot  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
       utilities 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 recognized by Windows are not usually given a volume name. However Vista does show a volume name
       for a disk which has no partitions recognized 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
       corresponding  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 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 number following "t" is  the  target  number  (from  the  SCSI  parallel
       interface  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.

NVME SUPPORT

       NVMe  (or NVM Express) is a relatively new storage transport and command set. The level of abstraction of
       the NVMe command set is somewhat lower the SCSI command sets, closer to the level of abstraction  of  ATA
       (and  SATA) command sets. NVMe claims to be designed with flash and modern "solid state" storage in mind,
       something unheard of when SCSI was originally developed in the 1980s.

       The SCSI command sets' advantage is the length of time they have been in place  and  the  existing  tools
       (like  these)  to  support  it.  Plus  SCSI  command  sets level of abstraction is both and advantage and
       disadvantage. Recently the NVME-MI (Management Interface) designers decide  to  use  the  SCSI  Enclosure
       Services  (SES-3) standard "as is" with the addition of two tunnelling NVME-MI commands: SES Send and SES
       Receive.  This  means  after  the  OS  interface  differences  are  taken  into  account,   the   sg_ses,
       sg_ses_microcode  and sg_senddiag utilities can be used on a NVMe device that supports a newer version of
       NVME-MI.

       The NVME-MI SES Send and SES Receive  commands  correspond  to  the  SCSI  SEND  DIAGNOSTIC  and  RECEIVE
       DIAGNOSTIC  RESULTS  commands  respectively.   There  are  however  a  few other commands that need to be
       translated,  the  most  important  of  which  is  the  SCSI  INQUIRY  command  to   the   NVMe   Identify
       controller/namespace.  Version  1.43  of  these  utilities contain a small SNTL (SCSI to NVMe Translation
       Layer) to take care of these details.

       As a side effect of this "juggling" if the sg_inq utility is used (without the --page= option) on a  NVMe
       DEVICE  then  the  actual  NVMe  Identifier (controller and possibly namespace) responses are decoded and
       output. However if 'sg_inq --page=sinq <device>' is given for the same DEVICE  then  parts  of  the  NVMe
       Identify  controller  and  namespace response are translated to a SCSI standard INQUIRY response which is
       then decoded and output.

       Apart from the special case with the sg_inq, all other utilities in the package assume they  are  talking
       to a SCSI device and decode any response accordingly. One easy way for users to see the underlying device
       is  a  NVMe  device  is  the  standard  INQUIRY  response Vendor Identification field of "NVMe    " (an 8
       character long string with 4 spaces to the right).

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 listed below can be given to the sg_decode_sense utility (which is found  in  this
       package) as follows:
         sg_decode_sense --err=<exit_status>
       and a short explanatory string will be output to stdout.

       The exit status values are:

       0      success. Also used for some utilities that wish to return a boolean value for the "true" case (and
              that no error has occurred). The false case is conveyed by exit status 36.

       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. In Linux the DEVICE may be temporarily blocked while error recovery is taking place.

       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 executed by the device. Note that unit
              attention conditions are usually only reported once by a device.

       7      the DEVICE reports a "data protect" sense key. This implies some mechanism has blocked writes  (or
              possibly all access to the media).

       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.

       10     the DEVICE reports a "copy aborted". This implies another command or device problem has stopped  a
              copy operation. The EXTENDED COPY family of commands (including WRITE USING TOKEN) may return this
              sense key.

       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).

       14     the DEVICE reports a miscompare sense key. VERIFY and COMPARE AND WRITE commands may report this.

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

       17     a SCSI "Illegal request" sense code received with a flag indicating the Info field is valid.  This
              is often a LBA but its meaning is command specific.

       18     the  DEVICE  reports a medium or hardware error (or a blank check) with a flag indicating the Info
              field is valid. This is often a LBA (of the first encountered error) but its  meaning  is  command
              specific.

       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.
              There may be useful information in the sense data such as a progress indication.

       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 .

       22     the DEVICE reports that the current command or its parameters imply a logical block address  (LBA)
              that  is  out  of range. This happens surprisingly often when trying to access the last block on a
              storage device; either a classic "off by one" logic error or a misreading  of  the  response  from
              READ CAPACITY(10 or 16) in which the address of the last block rather than the number of blocks on
              the  DEVICE is returned. Since LBAs are origin zero they range from 0 to n-1 where n is the number
              of blocks on the DEVICE, so the LBA of the last block is one less than the total number of blocks.

       24     the DEVICE reports a SCSI status of "reservation conflict". This means access to the  DEVICE  with
              the  current  command  has  been blocked because another machine (HBA or SCSI "initiator") holds a
              reservation on this DEVICE. On modern SCSI systems this is related to the use  of  the  PERSISTENT
              RESERVATION family of commands.

       25     the  DEVICE  reports  a  SCSI status of "condition met". Currently only the PRE-FETCH command (see
              SBC-4) yields this status.

       26     the DEVICE reports a SCSI status of "busy". SAM-6 defines this  status  as  the  logical  unit  is
              temporarily unable to process a command. It is recommended to re-issue the command.

       27     the DEVICE reports a SCSI status of "task set full".

       28     the  DEVICE  reports  a  SCSI  status  of "ACA active". ACA is "auto contingent allegiance" and is
              seldom used.

       29     the DEVICE reports a SCSI status of "task aborted". SAM-5 says: "This status shall be returned  if
              a command is aborted by a command or task management function on another I_T nexus and the Control
              mode page TAS bit is set to one".

       31     error involving two or more command line options. They may be contradicting, select an unsupported
              mode, or a required option (given the context) is missing.

       32     there  is  a logic error in the utility. It corresponds to code comments like "shouldn't/can't get
              here". Perhaps the author should be informed.

       33     the command sent to DEVICE has timed out.

       36     no error has occurred plus the utility wants to convey a boolean value of false. The corresponding
              true value is conveyed by a 0 exit status.

       40     the command sent to DEVICE has received an "aborted command" sense key with  an  additional  sense
              code  of  0x10.  This  group  is  related to problems with protection information (PI or DIF). For
              example this error may occur when reading a block on a drive that has never been  written  (or  is
              unmapped) if that drive was formatted with type 1, 2 or 3 protection.

       41     the  command  sent  to DEVICE has received an "aborted command" sense key with an additional sense
              code of 0x10 (as with error code) plus a flag indicating the Info field is valid.

       48     this is an internal message indicating a NVMe status field (SF) is other than zero after a command
              has been executed (i.e. something went wrong).  Work in this area is currently experimental.

       49     low level driver reports a response's residual count (i.e. number of bytes  actually  received  by
              HBA is 'requested_bytes - residual_count') that is

       50     OS  system  calls  that fail often return a small integer number to help. In Unix these are called
              "errno" values where 0 implies no error. These error codes set aside 51 to 96  for  mapping  these
              errno  values  but  that  may not be sufficient. Higher errno values that cannot be mapped are all
              mapped to this value (i.e. 50).
              Note that an errno value of 0 is mapped to error code 0.

       50 + <os_error_number>
              OS system calls that fail often return a small integer number to help indicate what the error  is.
              For  example in Unix the inability of a system call to allocate memory returns (in 'errno') ENOMEM
              which often is associated with the integer 12. So 62 (i.e. '50 + 12') may be returned by a utility
              in this case. It is also possible that a utility in this package reports 50+ENOMEM when  it  can't
              allocate  memory,  not  necessarily  from  an OS system call. In recent versions of Linux the file
              showing the mapping between symbolic constants (e.g. ENOMEM) and the corresponding integer  is  in
              the kernel source code file: include/uapi/asm-generic/errno-base.h
              Note  that errno values that are greater than or equal to 47 cannot fit in range provided. Instead
              they are all mapped to 50 as discussed in the previous entry.

       97     a SCSI command response 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.

       100-125
              these error codes are used by the ddpt utility which uses the sg3_utils library. They  are  mainly
              specialized error codes associated with offloaded copies.

       126    the  utility was found but could not be executed. That might occur if the executable does not have
              execute permissions.

       127    This is the exit status for utility not found. That might occur when a script calls a  utility  in
              this  package but the PATH environment variable has not been properly set up, so the script cannot
              find the executable.

       128 + <signum>
              If a signal kills a utility then the exit status is 128 plus the signal number. For example  if  a
              segmentation  fault occurs then a utility is typically killed by SIGSEGV which according to 'man 7
              signal' has an associated signal number of 11; so the exit status will be 139 .

       255    the utility tried to yield an exit status of 255 or larger. That should not happen; given here for
              completeness.

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

       -d, --dry-run
              utilities  that  can  cause lots of user data to be lost or overwritten sometimes have a --dry-run
              option. Device modifying actions are typically bypassed (or skipped) to implement a policy of  "do
              no  harm".   This  allows complex command line invocations to be tested before the action required
              (e.g. format a disk) is performed. The --dry-run option  has  become  a  common  feature  of  many
              command line utilities (e.g.  the Unix 'patch' command), not just those from this package.
              Note that most hyphenated option names in this package also can be given with an underscore rather
              than a hyphen (e.g.  --dry_run).

       -e, --enumerate
              some utilities (e.g. sg_ses and sg_vpd) store a lot of information in internal tables. This option
              will  output  that information in some readable form (e.g. sorted by an acronym or by page number)
              then exit. Note that with this option DEVICE is ignored (as are most other options) and no SCSI IO
              takes place, so the invoker does not need any elevated permissions.

       -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.
              To  produce  hexadecimal that can be parsed by other utilities (e.g. without a relative address to
              the left and without trailing ASCII) use this option three or four times.

       -i, --in=FN
              many SCSI commands fetch a significant amount of data  (returned  in  the  data-in  buffer)  which
              several of these utilities decode (e.g. sg_vpd and sg_logs). To separate the two steps of fetching
              the  data  from  a  SCSI  device  and then decoding it, this option has been added. The first step
              (fetching the data) can be done using the --hex or --raw option and redirecting the  command  line
              output  to  a  file  (often done with ">" in Unix based operating systems). The difference between
              --hex and --raw is that the former produces output in ASCII hexadecimal while --raw  produces  its
              output in "raw" binary.
              The  second  step (i.e. decoding the SCSI response data now held in a file) can be done using this
              --in=FN option where the file name is FN. If "-" is used for FN then stdin is assumed, again  this
              allows  for command line redirection (or piping). That file (or stdin) is assumed to contain ASCII
              hexadecimal unless the --raw option is also given in which case it is assumed to be binary. Notice
              that the meaning of the --raw option is "flipped" when used with --in=FN  to  act  on  the  input,
              typically it acts on the output data.
              Since  the  structure  of  the  data  returned by SCSI commands varies considerably then the usage
              information or the manpage of the utility being used should be checked. In some  cases  --hex  may
              need  to be used multiple times (and is more conveniently given as '-HH' or '-HHH). In other cases
              the name of this option is --inhex=FN.

       -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 so as to not interfere
              with the output from this option.
              Some utilities that consume data to send to the DEVICE along  with  the  SCSI  command,  use  this
              option.  Alternatively the --in=FN option causes DEVICE to be ignored and the response data (to be
              decoded) fetched from a file named FN. In these cases this option may indicate  that  binary  data
              can be read from stdin or from a nominated file (e.g. FN).

       -t, --timeout=SECS
              utilities  that  issue  potentially long-running SCSI commands often have a --timeout=SECS option.
              This typically instructs the operating system to abort the  SCSI  command  in  question  once  the
              timeout  expires.  Aborting  SCSI commands is typically a messy business and in the case of format
              like commands may leave the device in a "format  corrupt"  state  requiring  another  long-running
              re-initialization command to be sent. The argument, SECS, is usually in seconds and the short form
              of the option may be something other than -t since the timeout option was typically added later as
              storage  devices  grew  in  size and initialization commands took longer. Since many utilities had
              relatively long internal command timeouts before this option was introduced,  the  actual  command
              timeout given to the operating systems is the higher of the internal timeout and SECS.
              Many  long  running  SCSI commands have an IMMED bit which causes the command to finish relatively
              quickly but the initialization process to continue. In such cases the REQUEST SENSE command can be
              used to monitor progress with its progress indication  field  (see  the  sg_requests  and  sg_turs
              utilities).   Utilities  that  send  such  SCSI  command either have an --immed option or a --wait
              option which is the logical inverse of the "immediate" action.

       -v, --verbose
              increase the level of verbosity, (i.e. debug output).  Can  be  used  multiple  times  to  further
              increase verbosity. The additional output caused by this option is almost always 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 kB       *1000
          m M MiB     *1048576
          MB mB       *1000000
          g G GiB     *(2^30)
          GB 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
       representation 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".

MICROCODE AND FIRMWARE

       There are two standardized methods for downloading microcode (i.e. device firmware) to a SCSI device. The
       more  general way is with the SCSI WRITE BUFFER command, see the sg_write_buffer utility. SCSI enclosures
       have their  own  method  based  on  the  Download  microcode  control/status  diagnostic  page,  see  the
       sg_ses_microcode utility.

SCRIPTS, EXAMPLES and UTILS

       There  are  several bash shell scripts in the 'scripts' subdirectory that invoke compiled utilities (e.g.
       sg_readcap). Several of 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 devices. Most of the basic compiled utilities only
       allow one device as an argument. Some distributions install these scripts in  a  more  visible  directory
       (e.g.  /usr/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 systems is discussed at: http://sg.danny.cz/sg/device_name.html
       . There is a git code mirror at https://github.com/hreinecke/sg3_utils . The  principle  code  repository
       uses  subversion  and  is  on  the  author's equipment. The author keeps track of this via the subversion
       revision number which is an ascending integer (currently at 774 for this package). The github mirror gets
       updated periodically from the author's repository. Depending on the time of update, the  above  Downloads
       section at sg.danny.cz may be more up to date than the github mirror.

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 © 1999-2018 Douglas Gilbert
       Some utilities are distributed under a GPL version 2 license while others, usually more recent ones,  are
       under  a  FreeBSD  license.  The  files that are common to almost all utilities and thus contain the most
       reusable 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.

SEE ALSO

       sdparm(sdparm), ddpt(ddpt), lsscsi(lsscsi), dmesg(1), mt(1)

sg3_utils-1.44                                   September 2018                                     SG3_UTILS(8)