| .TH SG_DD "8" "August 2022" "sg3_utils\-1.48" SG3_UTILS |
| .SH NAME |
| sg_dd \- copy data to and from files and devices, especially SCSI |
| devices |
| .SH SYNOPSIS |
| .B sg_dd |
| [\fIbs=BS\fR] [\fIconv=CONV\fR] [\fIcount=COUNT\fR] [\fIibs=BS\fR] |
| [\fIif=IFILE\fR] [\fIiflag=FLAGS\fR] [\fIobs=BS\fR] [\fIof=OFILE\fR] |
| [\fIoflag=FLAGS\fR] [\fIseek=SEEK\fR] [\fIskip=SKIP\fR] [\fI\-\-help\fR] |
| [\fI\-\-verbose\fR] [\fI\-\-version\fR] |
| .PP |
| [\fIblk_sgio=\fR{0|1}] [\fIbpt=BPT\fR] [\fIcdbsz=\fR{6|10|12|16}] |
| [\fIcdl=CDL\fR] [\fIcoe=\fR{0|1|2|3}] [\fIcoe_limit=CL\fR] |
| [\fIdio=\fR{0|1}] [\fIodir=\fR{0|1}] [\fIof2=OFILE2\fR] |
| [\fIretries=RETR\fR] [\fIsync=\fR{0|1}] [\fItime=\fR{0|1}[,TO]] |
| [\fIverbose=VERB\fR] [\fI\-\-dry\-run\fR] [\fI\-\-progress\fR] |
| [\fI\-\-verify\fR] |
| .SH DESCRIPTION |
| .\" Add any additional description here |
| .PP |
| Copy data to and from any files. Specialized for "files" that are Linux SCSI |
| generic (sg) devices, raw devices or other devices that support the SG_IO |
| ioctl (which are only found in the lk 2.6 series). Similar syntax and |
| semantics to |
| .B dd(1) |
| command. |
| .PP |
| The first group in the synopsis above are "standard" Unix |
| .B dd(1) |
| operands. The second group are extra options added by this utility. |
| Both groups are defined below. |
| .PP |
| When the \fI\-\-verify\fR option is given, then the read side is the |
| same but the on the write side, the WRITE SCSI command is replaced by |
| the VERIFY SCSI command. If any VERIFY commands yields a sense key of |
| MISCOMPARE then the verify operation will stop. The \fI\-\-verify\fR |
| option can only be used when \fIOFILE\fR is either a sg device or |
| a block device with oflag=sgio also given. When the \fI\-\-verify\fR |
| option is used, this utility works in a similar fashion to the Unix |
| cmp(1) command. |
| .PP |
| This utility is only supported on Linux whereas most other utilities in the |
| sg3_utils package have been ported to other operating systems. A utility |
| called "ddpt" has similar syntax and functionality to sg_dd. ddpt drops some |
| Linux specific features while adding some other generic features. This allows |
| ddpt to be ported to other operating systems. |
| .SH OPTIONS |
| .TP |
| \fBblk_sgio\fR={0|1} |
| when set to 0, block devices (e.g. /dev/sda) are treated like normal |
| files (i.e. |
| .B read(2) |
| and |
| .B write(2) |
| are used for IO). When set to 1, block devices are assumed to accept the |
| SG_IO ioctl and SCSI commands are issued for IO. This is only supported |
| for 2.6 series kernels. Note that ATAPI devices (e.g. cd/dvd players) use |
| the SCSI command set but ATA disks do not (unless there is a protocol |
| conversion as often occurs in the USB mass storage class). If the input |
| or output device is a block device partition (e.g. /dev/sda3) then setting |
| this option causes the partition information to be ignored (since access |
| is directly to the underlying device). Default is 0. See the 'sgio' flag. |
| .TP |
| \fBbpt\fR=\fIBPT\fR |
| each IO transaction will be made using \fIBPT\fR blocks (or less if near |
| the end of the copy). Default is 128 for logical block sizes less that 2048 |
| bytes, otherwise the default is 32. So for bs=512 the reads and writes |
| will each convey 64 KiB of data by default (less if near the end of the |
| transfer or memory restrictions). When cd/dvd drives are accessed, the |
| logical block size is typically 2048 bytes and bpt defaults to 32 which |
| again implies 64 KiB transfers. The block layer when the blk_sgio=1 option |
| is used has relatively low upper limits for transfer sizes (compared |
| to sg device nodes, see /sys/block/<dev_name>/queue/max_sectors_kb ). |
| .TP |
| \fBbs\fR=\fIBS\fR |
| where \fIBS\fR |
| .B must |
| be the logical block size of the physical device (if either the input or |
| output files are accessed via SCSI commands). Note that this differs from |
| .B dd(1) |
| which permits \fIBS\fR to be an integral multiple. Default is 512 which |
| is usually correct for disks but incorrect for cdroms (which normally |
| have 2048 byte blocks). For this utility the maximum size of each individual |
| IO operation is \fIBS\fR * \fIBPT\fR bytes. |
| .TP |
| \fBcdbsz\fR={6|10|12|16} |
| size of SCSI READ and/or WRITE commands issued on sg device |
| names (or block devices when 'iflag=sgio' and/or 'oflag=sgio' is given). |
| Default is 10 byte SCSI command blocks (unless calculations indicate |
| that a 4 byte block number may be exceeded or \fIBPT\fR is greater than |
| 16 bits (65535), in which case it defaults to 16 byte SCSI commands). |
| .TP |
| \fBcdl\fR=\fICDL\fR |
| allows setting of command duration limits. \fICDL\fR is either a single value |
| or two values separated by a comma. If one value is given, it applies to both |
| \fIIFILE\fR and \fIOFILE\fR (if they are pass\-through devices). If two |
| values are given, the first applies to \fIIFILE\fR while the second applies |
| to \fIOFILE\fR. The value may be from 0 to 7 where 0 is the default and means |
| there are no command duration limits. Command duration limits are only |
| supported by 16 byte READ and WRITE commands (plus READ(32), WRITE(32) and |
| the WRITE SCATTERED command, bit they are used by this utility). If the |
| cdbsz operand is not given and would have a value less than 16, then if |
| \fICDL\fR is greater than 0, the cdbsz is increased to 16. |
| .br |
| Command duration limits can be accesses and changed in the Command duration |
| limit A and B mode pages, plus the Command duration limit T2A and T2B mode |
| pages. The sdparm utility may be used to access and change these mode pages. |
| .TP |
| \fBcoe\fR={0|1|2|3} |
| set to 1 or more for continue on error ('coe'). Only applies to errors on sg |
| devices or block devices with the 'sgio' flag set. Thus errors on other |
| files will stop sg_dd. Default is 0 which implies stop on any error. See |
| the 'coe' flag for more information. |
| .TP |
| \fBcoe_limit\fR=\fICL\fR |
| where \fICL\fR is the maximum number of consecutive bad blocks stepped |
| over (due to "coe>0") on reads before the copy terminates. This only |
| applies when \fIIFILE\fR is accessed via the SG_IO ioctl. The default |
| is 0 which is interpreted as no limit. This option is meant to stop |
| the copy soon after unrecorded media is detected while still |
| offering "continue on error" capability. |
| .TP |
| \fBconv\fR=\fBsparse\fR |
| see the CONVERSIONS section below. |
| .TP |
| \fBcount\fR=\fICOUNT\fR |
| copy \fICOUNT\fR blocks from \fIIFILE\fR to \fIOFILE\fR. Default is the |
| minimum (of \fIIFILE\fR and \fIOFILE\fR) number of blocks that sg devices |
| report from SCSI READ CAPACITY commands or that block devices (or their |
| partitions) report. Normal files are not probed for their size. If |
| \fIskip=SKIP\fR or \fIseek=SEEK\fR are given and the count is derived (i.e. |
| not explicitly given) then the derived count is scaled back so that the |
| copy will not overrun the device. If the file name is a block device |
| partition and \fICOUNT\fR is not given then the size of the partition |
| rather than the size of the whole device is used. If \fICOUNT\fR is not |
| given (or \fIcount=\-1\fR) and cannot be derived then an error message is |
| issued and no copy takes place. |
| .TP |
| \fBdio\fR={0|1} |
| default is 0 which selects indirect (buffered) IO on sg devices. Value of 1 |
| attempts direct IO which, if not available, falls back to indirect IO and |
| notes this at completion. If direct IO is selected and |
| /sys/module/sg/parameters/allow_dio has the value of 0 then a warning is |
| issued (and indirect IO is performed). For finer grain control |
| use 'iflag=dio' or 'oflag=dio'. |
| .TP |
| \fBibs\fR=\fIBS\fR |
| if given must be the same as \fIBS\fR given to 'bs=' option. |
| .TP |
| \fBif\fR=\fIIFILE\fR |
| read from \fIIFILE\fR instead of stdin. If \fIIFILE\fR is '\-' then stdin |
| is read. Starts reading at the beginning of \fIIFILE\fR unless \fISKIP\fR |
| is given. |
| .TP |
| \fBiflag\fR=\fIFLAGS\fR |
| where \fIFLAGS\fR is a comma separated list of one or more flags outlined |
| below. These flags are associated with \fIIFILE\fR and are ignored when |
| \fIIFILE\fR is stdin. |
| .TP |
| \fBobs\fR=\fIBS\fR |
| if given must be the same as \fIBS\fR given to 'bs=' option. |
| .TP |
| \fBodir\fR={0|1} |
| when set to one opens block devices (e.g. /dev/sda) with the O_DIRECT |
| flag. User memory buffers are aligned to the page size when set. The |
| default is 0 (i.e. the O_DIRECT flag is not used). Has no effect on sg, |
| normal or raw files. If blk_sgio is also set then both are honoured: |
| block devices are opened with the O_DIRECT flag and SCSI commands are |
| issued via the SG_IO ioctl. |
| .TP |
| \fBof\fR=\fIOFILE\fR |
| write to \fIOFILE\fR instead of stdout. If \fIOFILE\fR is '\-' then writes |
| to stdout. If \fIOFILE\fR is /dev/null then no actual writes are performed. |
| If \fIOFILE\fR is '.' (period) then it is treated the same way as |
| /dev/null (this is a shorthand notation). If \fIOFILE\fR exists then it |
| is _not_ truncated; it is overwritten from the start of \fIOFILE\fR |
| unless 'oflag=append' or \fISEEK\fR is given. |
| .TP |
| \fBof2\fR=\fIOFILE2\fR |
| write output to \fIOFILE2\fR. The default action is not to do this additional |
| write (i.e. when this option is not given). \fIOFILE2\fR is assumed to be |
| a normal file or a fifo (i.e. a named pipe). \fIOFILE2\fR is opened for |
| writing, created if necessary, and closed at the end of the transfer. If |
| \fIOFILE2\fR is a fifo (named pipe) then some other command should be |
| consuming that data (e.g. 'md5sum OFILE2'), otherwise this utility will block. |
| .TP |
| \fBoflag\fR=\fIFLAGS\fR |
| where \fIFLAGS\fR is a comma separated list of one or more flags outlined |
| below. These flags are associated with \fIOFILE\fR and are ignored when |
| \fIOFILE\fR is /dev/null, '.' (period), or stdout. |
| .TP |
| \fBretries\fR=\fIRETR\fR |
| sometimes retries at the host are useful, for example when there is a |
| transport error. When \fIRETR\fR is greater than zero then SCSI READs and |
| WRITEs are retried on error, \fIRETR\fR times. Default value is zero. |
| .TP |
| \fBseek\fR=\fISEEK\fR |
| start writing \fISEEK\fR bs\-sized blocks from the start of \fIOFILE\fR. |
| Default is block 0 (i.e. start of file). |
| .TP |
| \fBskip\fR=\fISKIP\fR |
| start reading \fISKIP\fR bs\-sized blocks from the start of \fIIFILE\fR. |
| Default is block 0 (i.e. start of file). |
| .TP |
| \fBsync\fR={0|1} |
| when 1, does SYNCHRONIZE CACHE command on \fIOFILE\fR at the end of the |
| transfer. Only active when \fIOFILE\fR is a sg device file name or a block |
| device and 'blk_sgio=1' is given. |
| .TP |
| \fBtime\fR={0|1}[,\fITO\fR] |
| when 1, times transfer and does throughput calculation, outputting the |
| results (to stderr) at completion. When 0 (default) doesn't perform timing. |
| .br |
| If that value is followed by a comma, then \fITO\fR is the command timeout |
| in seconds for SCSI READ, WRITE or VERIFY commands issued by this utility. |
| The default is 60 seconds. |
| .TP |
| \fBverbose\fR=\fIVERB\fR |
| as \fIVERB\fR increases so does the amount of debug output sent to stderr. |
| Default value is zero which yields the minimum amount of debug output. |
| A value of 1 reports extra information that is not repetitive. A value |
| 2 reports cdbs and responses for SCSI commands that are not repetitive |
| (i.e. other that READ and WRITE). Error processing is not considered |
| repetitive. Values of 3 and 4 yield output for all SCSI commands (and |
| Unix read() and write() calls) so there can be a lot of output. |
| This only occurs for scsi generic (sg) devices and block devices when |
| the 'blk_sgio=1' option is set. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-d\fR, \fB\-\-dry\-run\fR |
| does all the command line parsing and preparation but bypasses the actual |
| copy or read. That preparation may include opening \fIIFILE\fR or |
| \fIOFILE\fR to determine their lengths. This option may be useful for |
| testing the syntax of complex command line invocations in advance of |
| executing them. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-h\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR |
| outputs usage message and exits. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-p\fR, \fB\-\-progress\fR |
| this option causes a progress report to be output every two minutes until |
| the copy is complete. After the copy is complete a line with "completed" |
| is printed to distinguish the final report from the prior progress reports. |
| When used twice the progress report is every minute, when used three times |
| the progress report is every 30 seconds. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-v\fR, \fB\-\-verbose\fR |
| when used once, this is equivalent to \fIverbose=1\fR. When used |
| twice (e.g. "\-vv") this is equivalent to \fIverbose=2\fR, etc. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-x\fR, \fB\-\-verify\fR |
| do a verify operation (like Unix command cmp(1)) rather than a copy. Cannot |
| be used with "oflag=sparse". \fIof=OFILE\fR must be given and \fIOFILE\fR |
| must be an sg device or a block device with "oflag=sgio" also given. Uses the |
| SCSI VERIFY command with the BYTCHK field set to 1. The VERIFY command is |
| used instead of WRITE when this option is given. There is no VERIFY(6) |
| command. Stops on the first miscompare unless \fIoflag=coe\fR is given. |
| .TP |
| \fB\-V\fR, \fB\-\-version\fR |
| outputs version number information and exits. |
| .SH CONVERSIONS |
| One or more conversions can be given to the "conv=" option. If more than one |
| is given, they should be comma separated. sg_dd does not perform the |
| traditional dd conversions (e.g. ASCII to EBCDIC). Recently added |
| conversions overlap somewhat with the flags so some conversions are |
| now supported by sg_dd. |
| .TP |
| nocreat |
| this conversion has the same effect as "oflag=nocreat", namely: \fIOFILE\fR |
| must exist, it will not be created. |
| .TP |
| noerror |
| this conversion is very close to "iflag=coe" and is treated as such. See |
| the "coe" flag. Note that an error on \fIOFILE\fR will stop the copy. |
| .TP |
| notrunc |
| this conversion is accepted for compatibility with dd and ignored since |
| the default action of this utility is not to truncate \fIOFILE\fR. |
| .TP |
| null |
| has no affect, just a placeholder. |
| .TP |
| sparse |
| FreeBSD supports "conv=sparse" so the same syntax is supported in sg_dd. |
| See "sparse" in the FLAGS sections for more information. |
| .TP |
| sync |
| is ignored by sg_dd. With dd it means supply zero fill (rather than skip) |
| and is typically used like this "conv=noerror,sync" to have the same |
| functionality as sg_dd's "iflag=coe". |
| .SH FLAGS |
| Here is a list of flags and their meanings: |
| .TP |
| 00 |
| this flag is only active with \fIiflag=\fR and when given replaces |
| \fIif=IFILE\fR. If both are given an error is generated. The input will |
| be a stream of zeros, similar to using "if=/dev/zero" alone (but a little |
| quicker), apart from the following case. |
| .br |
| If 'iflag=00,ff' is given then the block address (lower 32 bits, in 4 |
| bytes, big endian) is placed, multiple times, in each block. The block |
| address takes into account the \fIskip=SKIP\fR setting. The |
| .B sgp_dd |
| utility has a \fI\-\-chkaddr\fR option that complements this option. |
| .TP |
| append |
| causes the O_APPEND flag to be added to the open of \fIOFILE\fR. For regular |
| files this will lead to data appended to the end of any existing data. Cannot |
| be used together with the \fIseek=SEEK\fR option as they conflict. The default |
| action of this utility is to overwrite any existing data from the beginning |
| of the file or, if \fISEEK\fR is given, starting at block \fISEEK\fR. Note |
| that attempting to 'append' to a device file (e.g. a disk) will usually be |
| ignored or may cause an error to be reported. |
| .TP |
| coe |
| continue on error. Only active for sg devices and block devices that have |
| the 'sgio' flag set. 'iflag=coe oflag=coe' and 'coe=1' are equivalent. Use |
| this flag twice (e.g. 'iflag=coe,coe') to have the same action as the 'coe=2'. |
| A medium, hardware or blank check error while reading will re\-read blocks |
| prior to the bad block, then try to recover the bad block, supplying zeros |
| if that fails, and finally re\-read the blocks after the bad block. A medium, |
| hardware or blank check error while writing is noted and ignored. A miscompare |
| sense key during a VERIFY command (i.e. \fI\-\-verify\fR given) is noted and |
| ignored when 'oflag=coe'. The recovery of the bad block when reading uses the |
| SCSI READ LONG command if 'coe' given twice or more (also with the command |
| line option 'coe=2'). Further, the READ LONG will set its CORRCT bit if 'coe' |
| given thrice. SCSI disks may automatically try and remap faulty sectors (see |
| the AWRE and ARRE in the read write error recovery mode page (the sdparm |
| utility can access and possibly change these attributes)). Errors occurring on |
| other files types will stop sg_dd. Error messages are sent to stderr. This |
| flag is similar to 'conv=noerror,sync' in the |
| .B dd(1) |
| utility. See note about READ LONG below. |
| .TP |
| dio |
| request the sg device node associated with this flag does direct IO. If direct |
| IO is not available, falls back to indirect IO and notes this at completion. |
| If direct IO is selected and /sys/module/sg/parameters/allow_dio has the |
| value of 0 then a warning is issued (and indirect IO is performed). |
| .TP |
| direct |
| causes the O_DIRECT flag to be added to the open of \fIIFILE\fR and/or |
| \fIOFILE\fR. This flag requires some memory alignment on IO. Hence user |
| memory buffers are aligned to the page size. Has no effect on sg, normal |
| or raw files. If 'iflag=sgio' and/or 'oflag=sgio' is also set then both |
| are honoured: block devices are opened with the O_DIRECT flag and SCSI |
| commands are issued via the SG_IO ioctl. |
| .TP |
| dpo |
| set the DPO bit (disable page out) in SCSI READ and WRITE commands. Not |
| supported for 6 byte cdb variants of READ and WRITE. Indicates that data is |
| unlikely to be required to stay in device (e.g. disk) cache. May speed media |
| copy and/or cause a media copy to have less impact on other device users. |
| .TP |
| dsync |
| causes the O_SYNC flag to be added to the open of \fIIFILE\fR and/or |
| \fIOFILE\fR. The 'd' is prepended to lower confusion with the 'sync=0|1' |
| option which has another action (i.e. a synchronisation to media at the |
| end of the transfer). |
| .TP |
| excl |
| causes the O_EXCL flag to be added to the open of \fIIFILE\fR and/or |
| \fIOFILE\fR. |
| .TP |
| ff |
| this flag is only active with \fIiflag=\fR and when given replaces |
| \fIif=IFILE\fR. If both are given an error is generated. The input will be |
| a stream of 0xff bytes (or all bits set), apart from the following case. |
| .br |
| If 'iflag=00,ff' is given then the block address (lower 32 bits, in 4 |
| bytes, big endian) is placed, multiple times, in each block. The block |
| address takes into account the \fIskip=SKIP\fR setting. |
| .TP |
| flock |
| after opening the associated file (i.e. \fIIFILE\fR and/or \fIOFILE\fR) |
| an attempt is made to get an advisory exclusive lock with the flock() |
| system call. The flock arguments are "FLOCK_EX | FLOCK_NB" which will |
| cause the lock to be taken if available else a "temporarily unavailable" |
| error is generated. An exit status of 90 is produced in the latter case |
| and no copy is done. |
| .TP |
| fua |
| causes the FUA (force unit access) bit to be set in SCSI READ and/or WRITE |
| commands. This only has an effect with sg devices or block devices |
| that have the 'sgio' flag set. The 6 byte variants of the SCSI READ and |
| WRITE commands do not support the FUA bit. |
| .TP |
| nocache |
| use posix_fadvise() to advise corresponding file there is no need to fill |
| the file buffer with recently read or written blocks. |
| .TP |
| nocreat |
| this flag is only active in \fIoflag=FLAGS\fR. If present then \fIOFILE\fR |
| will be opened if it exists. If \fIOFILE\fR doesn't exist then an error |
| is generated. Without this flag a regular (empty) file named \fIOFILE\fR |
| will be created (and then filled). For production quality scripts where |
| \fIOFILE\fR is a device node (e.g. '/dev/sdc') this flag is recommended. |
| It guards against the remote possibility of 'dev/sdc' disappearing |
| temporarily (e.g. a USB memory key removed) resulting in a large regular |
| file called '/dev/sdc' being created. |
| .TP |
| null |
| has no affect, just a placeholder. |
| .TP |
| random |
| this flag is only active with \fIiflag=\fR and when given replaces |
| \fIif=IFILE\fR. If both are given an error is generated. The input will |
| be a stream of pseudo random bytes. The Linux getrandom(2) system call is |
| used to create a seed and there after mrand48(3) is used to generate a |
| pseudo random sequence, 4 bytes at a time. The quality of the randomness |
| can be viewed with the ent(1) utility. This is not a high quality random |
| number generator, it is built for speed, not quality. One application is |
| checking the correctness of the copy and verify operations of this utility. |
| .TP |
| sgio |
| causes block devices to be accessed via the SG_IO ioctl rather than |
| standard UNIX read() and write() commands. When the SG_IO ioctl is |
| used the SCSI READ and WRITE commands are used directly to move |
| data. sg devices always use the SG_IO ioctl. This flag offers finer |
| grain control compared to the otherwise identical 'blk_sgio=1' option. |
| .TP |
| sparse |
| after each \fIBS\fR * \fIBPT\fR byte segment is read from the input, |
| it is checked for being all zeros. If so, nothing is written to the output |
| file unless this is the last segment of the transfer. This flag is only |
| active with the oflag option. It cannot be used when the output is not |
| seekable (e.g. stdout). It is ignored if the output file is /dev/null . |
| Note that this utility does not remove the \fIOFILE\fR prior to starting |
| to write to it. Hence it may be advantageous to manually remove the |
| \fIOFILE\fR if it is large prior to using oflag=sparse. The last segment |
| is always written so regular files will show the same length and so |
| programs like md5sum and sha1sum will generate the same value regardless |
| of whether oflag=sparse is given or not. This option may be used when the |
| \fIOFILE\fR is a raw device but is probably only useful if the device is |
| known to contain zeros (e.g. a SCSI disk after a FORMAT command). |
| .SH RETIRED OPTIONS |
| Here are some retired options that are still present: |
| .TP |
| append=0 | 1 |
| when set, equivalent to 'oflag=append'. When clear the action is |
| to overwrite the existing file (if it exists); this is the default. |
| See the 'append' flag. |
| .TP |
| fua=0 | 1 | 2 | 3 |
| force unit access bit. When 3, fua is set on both \fIIFILE\fR and |
| \fIOFILE\fR; when 2, fua is set on \fIIFILE\fR;, when 1, fua is set on |
| \fIOFILE\fR; when 0 (default), fua is cleared on both. See the 'fua' flag. |
| .SH NOTES |
| Block devices (e.g. /dev/sda and /dev/hda) can be given for \fIIFILE\fR. |
| If neither '\-iflag=direct', 'iflag=sgio' nor 'blk_sgio=1' is given then |
| normal block IO involving buffering and caching is performed. If |
| only '\-iflag=direct' is given then the buffering and caching is |
| bypassed (this is applicable to both SCSI devices and ATA disks). |
| If 'iflag=sgio' or 'blk_sgio=1' is given then the SG_IO ioctl is used on |
| the given file causing SCSI commands to be sent to the device and that also |
| bypasses most of the actions performed by the block layer (this is only |
| applicable to SCSI devices, not ATA disks). The same applies for block |
| devices given for \fIOFILE\fR. |
| .PP |
| Various numeric arguments (e.g. \fISKIP\fR) may include multiplicative |
| suffixes or be given in hexadecimal. See the "NUMERIC ARGUMENTS" section |
| in the sg3_utils(8) man page. |
| .PP |
| The \fICOUNT\fR, \fISKIP\fR and \fISEEK\fR arguments can take 64 bit |
| values (i.e. very big numbers). Other values are limited to what can fit in |
| a signed 32 bit number. |
| .PP |
| Data usually gets to the user space in a 2 stage process: first the |
| SCSI adapter DMAs into kernel buffers and then the sg driver copies |
| this data into user memory (write operations reverse this sequence). |
| This is called "indirect IO" and there is a 'dio' option to |
| select "direct IO" which will DMA directly into user memory. Due to some |
| issues "direct IO" is disabled in the sg driver and needs a |
| configuration change to activate it. This is typically done |
| with 'echo 1 > /sys/module/sg/parameters/allow_dio'. |
| .PP |
| All informative, warning and error output is sent to stderr so that |
| dd's output file can be stdout and remain unpolluted. If no options |
| are given, then the usage message is output and nothing else happens. |
| .PP |
| Even if READ LONG succeeds on a "bad" block when 'coe=2' (or 'coe=3') |
| is given, the recovered data may not be useful. There are no guarantees |
| that the user data will appear "as is" in the first 512 bytes. |
| .PP |
| A raw device must be bound to a block device prior to using sg_dd. |
| See |
| .B raw(8) |
| for more information about binding raw devices. To be safe, the sg device |
| mapping to SCSI block devices should be checked with sg_map before use. |
| .PP |
| Disk partition information can often be found with |
| .B fdisk(8) |
| [the "\-ul" argument is useful in this respect]. |
| .PP |
| For sg devices (and block devices when blk_sgio=1 is given) this utility |
| issues SCSI READ and WRITE (SBC) commands which are appropriate for disks and |
| reading from CD/DVD/HD\-DVD/BD drives. Those commands |
| are not formatted correctly for tape devices so sg_dd should not be used on |
| tape devices. If the largest block address of the requested transfer |
| exceeds a 32 bit block number (i.e 0xffff) then a warning is issued and |
| the sg device is accessed via SCSI READ(16) and WRITE(16) commands. |
| .PP |
| The attributes of a block device (partition) are ignored when 'blk_sgio=1' |
| is used. Hence the whole device is read (rather than just the second |
| partition) by this invocation: |
| .PP |
| sg_dd if=/dev/sdb2 blk_sgio=1 of=t bs=512 |
| .SH EXAMPLES |
| .PP |
| Looks quite similar in usage to dd: |
| .PP |
| sg_dd if=/dev/sg0 of=t bs=512 count=1MB |
| .PP |
| This will copy 1 million 512 byte blocks from the device associated with |
| /dev/sg0 (which should have 512 byte blocks) to a file called t. |
| Assuming /dev/sda and /dev/sg0 are the same device then the above is |
| equivalent to: |
| .PP |
| dd if=/dev/sda iflag=direct of=t bs=512 count=1000000 |
| .PP |
| although dd's speed may improve if bs was larger and count was suitably |
| reduced. The use of the 'iflag=direct' option bypasses the buffering and |
| caching that is usually done on a block device. |
| .PP |
| Using a raw device to do something similar on a ATA disk: |
| .PP |
| raw /dev/raw/raw1 /dev/hda |
| .br |
| sg_dd if=/dev/raw/raw1 of=t bs=512 count=1MB |
| .PP |
| To copy a SCSI disk partition to an ATA disk partition: |
| .PP |
| raw /dev/raw/raw2 /dev/hda3 |
| .br |
| sg_dd if=/dev/sg0 skip=10123456 of=/dev/raw/raw2 bs=512 |
| .PP |
| This assumes a valid partition is found on the SCSI disk at the given |
| skip block address (past the 5 GB point of that disk) and that |
| the partition goes to the end of the SCSI disk. An explicit count |
| is probably a safer option. The partition is copied to /dev/hda3 which |
| is an offset into the ATA disk /dev/hda . The exact number of blocks |
| read from /dev/sg0 are written to /dev/hda (i.e. no padding). |
| .PP |
| To time a streaming read of the first 1 GB (2 ** 30 bytes) on a disk |
| this utility could be used: |
| .PP |
| sg_dd if=/dev/sg0 of=/dev/null bs=512 count=2m time=1 |
| .PP |
| On completion this will output a line like: |
| "time to transfer data was 18.779506 secs, 57.18 MB/sec". The "MB/sec" |
| in this case is 1,000,000 bytes per second. |
| .PP |
| The 'of2=' option can be used to copy data and take a md5sum of it |
| without needing to re\-read the data: |
| .PP |
| mkfifo fif |
| .br |
| md5sum fif & |
| .br |
| sg_dd if=/dev/sg3 iflag=coe of=sg3.img oflag=sparse of2=fif bs=512 |
| .PP |
| This will image /dev/sg3 (e.g. an unmounted disk) and place the contents |
| in the (sparse) file sg3.img . Without re\-reading the data it will also |
| perform a md5sum calculation on the image. |
| .SH SIGNALS |
| The signal handling has been borrowed from dd: SIGINT, SIGQUIT and |
| SIGPIPE output the number of remaining blocks to be transferred and |
| the records in + out counts; then they have their default action. |
| SIGUSR1 causes the same information to be output yet the copy continues. |
| All output caused by signals is sent to stderr. |
| .SH EXIT STATUS |
| The exit status of sg_dd is 0 when it is successful. Otherwise see |
| the sg3_utils(8) man page. Since this utility works at a higher level |
| than individual commands, and there are 'coe' and 'retries' flags, |
| individual SCSI command failures do not necessary cause the process |
| to exit. |
| .PP |
| An additional exit status of 90 is generated if the flock flag is given |
| and some other process holds the advisory exclusive lock. |
| .SH AUTHORS |
| Written by Douglas Gilbert and Peter Allworth. |
| .SH "REPORTING BUGS" |
| Report bugs to <dgilbert at interlog dot com>. |
| .SH COPYRIGHT |
| Copyright \(co 2000\-2022 Douglas Gilbert |
| .br |
| This software is distributed under the GPL version 2. There is NO |
| warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. |
| .SH "SEE ALSO" |
| cmp(1) |
| .PP |
| There is a web page discussing sg_dd at https://sg.danny.cz/sg/sg_dd.html |
| .PP |
| A POSIX threads version of this utility called |
| .B sgp_dd |
| is in the sg3_utils package. Another version from that package is called |
| .B sgm_dd |
| and it uses memory mapped IO to speed transfers from sg devices. |
| .PP |
| The lmbench package contains |
| .B lmdd |
| which is also interesting. For moving data to and from tapes see |
| .B dt |
| which is found at https://www.scsifaq.org/RMiller_Tools/index.html |
| .PP |
| To change mode parameters that effect a SCSI device's caching and error |
| recovery see |
| .B sdparm(sdparm) |
| .PP |
| To verify the data on the media or to verify it against some other |
| copy of the data see |
| .B sg_verify(sg3_utils) |
| .PP |
| See also |
| .B raw(8), dd(1), ddrescue(GNU), ddpt |