Provided by: bit-babbler_0.9_amd64 bug

NAME

       bbctl - query and control tool for BitBabbler hardware RNG devices

SYNOPSIS

       bbctl [options]

DESCRIPTION

       The  bbctl program can be used to issue command requests to the control socket of software
       controlling a BitBabbler device (such as the seedd(1) daemon).

OPTIONS

       The following options are available:

       -s, --scan
              Scan for active devices.  This will report the  device  identifiers  which  can  be
              queried from the owner of the control socket.

       -i, --device-id=id
              Act  on only the specified device.  If no devices are explicitly specified then the
              default is to act upon all of them.  This option may be passed  multiple  times  to
              act  on some subset of the available devices.  The id must be an identifier name as
              reported by bbctl --scan, you cannot use device logical or physical addresses here.

       -b, --bin-freq
              Report the 8-bit symbol frequencies.

       -B, --bin-freq16
              Report the 16-bit symbol frequencies.

           --bin-count
              Report the 8-bit symbol counts.  Similar to --bin-freq except the bins are reported
              in symbol order instead of sorted by frequency.

           --bin-count16
              Report  the  16-bit  symbol  counts.   Similar  to --bin-freq16 except the bins are
              reported in symbol order instead of sorted by frequency.

           --first=n
              Show only the first n results.  Useful when you don't want to actually see  all  65
              thousand  entries for the 16-bit bins.  The default (if neither this nor the --last
              option are specified) is to report everything in  its  full  glory.   Don't  say  I
              didn't warn you.

           --last=n
              Show  only  the  last n results.  Useful when you don't want to actually see all 65
              thousand entries for the 16-bit bins.  If used together with  the  --first  option,
              then both the requested head and tail of the results will be shown.

       -r, --bit-runs
              Report on runs of consecutive bits.

       -S, --stats
              Report general QA statistics.

       -c, --control-socket=path
              The  filesystem  path  for the service control socket to query.  This can belong to
              any process that supports the BitBabbler control socket interface and for which the
              user running bbctl has permission to connect to.

              An  address of the form tcp:host:port may be used if the control socket is bound to
              a TCP port rather than a unix domain socket path.  The  host  part  can  be  a  DNS
              hostname  or  address  literal.   If  an  IPv6 address literal is used it should be
              enclosed in square brackets (e.g. tcp:[::1]:2020 to bind to port 2020 on the  local
              IPv6  interface).   The  port can be a port number or a service name (as defined in
              /etc/services  or  other  system  name-service  databases  which  are  queried   by
              getaddrinfo(3)).

       -V, --log-verbosity=n
              Change the logging verbosity of the control socket owner.

           --waitfor=device:passbytes:retry:timeout
              This  option  will  make  bbctl  wait before exiting until the seedd(1) QA checking
              reports that at least passbytes of good entropy have been obtained from  the  given
              device.   It will check for that every retry milliseconds, waiting for a maximum of
              timeout milliseconds before failing.

              The device is a QA test identifier as reported by --scan, and must be provided,  as
              must  the  expected  passbytes  count.   The  retry  time  is  optional, and if not
              specified it will default to 1000 milliseconds.   If  the  timeout  is  0  (or  not
              explicitly  passed),  then  this  will wait for an unbounded amount of time for the
              requested condition to occur.

              The passbytes, retry, and timeout parameters may be suffixed with an SI  multiplier
              (e.g. k, M, G) as a convenience, so a timeout of 30k would wait for 30 seconds.

              This  option  may  be  passed  multiple times to wait for multiple devices, and the
              given conditions for each of them will be tested for in the  order  that  they  are
              specified on the command line.  i.e. Later conditions will not be tested for at all
              until all prior ones have been met, and the timeout clock for each test only begins
              after the previous test has successfully completed.

              When  all  required conditions pass, bbctl will report success with an exit code of
              0.  If a timeout is exceeded, or any other error occurs which means the test cannot
              be  successfully completed (like passing a device which does not exist, or querying
              a --control-socket which no process provides), then a non-zero exit  code  will  be
              returned.

              This  option  mostly  exists  to  make  it  possible to delay or even prevent other
              services from starting until a sufficient amount of entropy has  been  obtained  to
              feel  comfortable  that they can operate securely or as intended.  See the notes on
              BOOT SEQUENCING in seedd(1) for more details on that.  It may  be  used  for  other
              purposes  too, but note that passbytes is an absolute measure of the number of good
              bytes seen since seedd was started, it is not relative  to  the  number  that  were
              obtained prior to executing this request.

       -v, --verbose
              Make more noise about what is going on internally.  It may be passed multiple times
              to get swamped with even more information.

       -?, --help
              Show a shorter version of all of this, which may fit on a single page.

           --version
              Report the bbctl release version.

FILES

       /run/bit-babbler/seedd.socket
              The default --control-socket path if not explicitly specified.  This may  be  under
              /var/run  on  platforms  which don't (yet) provide a /run top level directory (or a
              TCP socket on platforms which don't support unix domain sockets).   It  is  set  at
              compile time by SEEDD_CONTROL_SOCKET.

SEE ALSO

       seedd(1).

AUTHOR

       seedd  was  written  by Ron <ron@debian.org>.  You can send bug reports, feature requests,
       praise and complaints to support@bitbabbler.org.

                                         January 24, 2018                                BBCTL(1)