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Introduction ------------ sdparm is a utility for listing and potentially changing SCSI disk parameters. More generally it can be used on any device that uses a SCSI command set. Apart form SCSI disks, examples of devices that use SCSI command sets are ATAPI CD/DVD drives, SCSI and ATAPI tape drives and SCSI enclosures. This utility was originally written for Linux. It has been ported to FreeBSD, Solaris, Tru64, and Windows. Relationship to sg3_utils ------------------------- This package shares code with sg3_utils (version 1.33). With the subversion revision control system this is done by having sdparm's "include/" and "lib/" subdirectories pointing to the correspondingly named directories in the sg3_utils package using the "svn:externals" property. These two "external" directories include more files than sdparm uses. The excess files include "lib/Makefile.am" and "lib/Makefile.in". The "Makefile.am" in sdparm's "src/" directory does the main part of the build. When the tarball is generated for this utility, various files are "exported" out of the subversion repository and "svn:externals" redirection is no longer visible (but the unused files are visible). The sdparm executable may or may not be built depending on the libsgutils (shared) library. Currently the ./configure rules are looking for a library called libsgutils2.a or libsgutils2.so . In Debian those libraries are found only in the libsgutils2-dev package, not the libsgutils2 package. If one of those libraries is detected then sdparm will be built depending on libsgutils (check 'ldd sdparm'). If neither of those libraries is detected at build time, then the sdparm executable built will compile and link the relevant code from its "include/" and "lib/" subdirectories. Documentation ------------- The utility outputs a usage message when the "--help" (or '-h' or '-?') option is given. Many syntax errors also result in the usage message being printed. There is also a man page which is in section 8 (administration and privileged commands). It can be accessed with "man sdparm" once this package is installed. Prior to installation the man page can be viewed from this package's main directory with "man doc/sdparm.8". There is a web page about this utility at http://sg.danny.cz/sg/sdparm.html . Build infrastructure -------------------- This packages uses the automake and autoconf tools. The generating files (scripts) are configure.ac, Makefile.am, src/Makefile.am and autogen.sh . The autogen.sh script only needs to be executed if one of the other generating files in the above list is changed. There is a rpm "spec" file in the main directory: sdparm.spec . There are Debian build files in the "debian" directory and a script called build_debian.sh in the main directory. If build_debian.sh fails due to compatibility level. Amongst other things debian builds are sensitive to the value in the debian/compat file. If it contains "7" then it works on lenny and gives warning on squeeze (but fails on the earlier etch). The ./configure script contains two extra options: '--disable-linuxbsg' and '--disable-scsistrings'. The former drops Linux bsg driver support which should no longer be necessary. The latter option drops asc/ascq and command name strings (defined by SCSI) in an attempt to reduce the size of the executable. License ------- This utility is covered by a FreeBSD license. The intention of the author is that both open source and commercial entities can re-use this code. Naturally credit and improvement/bug feedback are encouraged. The part of this code that others may be able to re-use is the information in the tables in sdparm_data.c , sg_lib.c and sg_lib_data.c . This is information garnered from SCSI drafts and standards at http://www.t10.org (plus some information from the ATA drafts and standards at http://www.t13.org ). Vendor specific mode page information is found in the sdparm_data_vendor.c file and is derived from vendor product manuals. Notes ----- Generic information about building this package (i.e. './configure ; make; make install') can be found in the INSTALL file. The contents of the COPYING file is a FreeBSD license (rather than the GPL v2 found in the usual template). Linux port ---------- The utility can be used on any device that supports the SG_IO ioctl. In the Linux 2.4 series that is only the scsi generic (i.e. /dev/sg* ) device nodes. In the Linux 2.6 series the supported device nodes has expanded to all other SCSI device nodes (e.g. /dev/sd* and /dev/sr*) plus block devices such as /dev/hdc when the associated device is a DVD drive. The man page and sg.danny.cz/sg/sdparm.html web page examples use Linux device node names. FreeBSD port ------------ Virtually all of sdparm's features work with FreeBSD. SCSI commands are routed through the CAM pass through interface. The author tested sdparm with FreeBSD version 5.3 and found SCSI disks worked with the "da" device (e.g. 'sdparm /dev/da0'). SCSI tape drives can be accessed via the "sa" device via /dev nodes starting with "esa", "nsa" and "sa". To access cd/dvd drives, the kernel needs to be build with the "atapicam" device after which access is via the "cd" device. Other SCSI devices are "ses" (for enclosure services), "ch" (media changer (for tapes)), and "pr" for processor device type (e.g. SAF-TE devices). All these device may also be accessed via the "pass" device. To see the mapping between the "pass" device name and the corresponding higher level device node try "camcontrol devlist". The traditional './configure ; make ; make install' sequence from the top level of the unpacked tarball will work on FreeBSD. But the man pages will be placed under the /usr/local/share/man directory which unfortunately is not on the standard manpath. One solution is to add this path by creating a file with a name like local_share.conf in the /usr/local/etc/man.d/ directory and placing this line in it: MANPATH /usr/local/share/man FreeBSD 9.0 has a "ports" entry for sdparm under the /usr/ports/sysutils directory. It points to version 1.06 of sdparm. It could be used as a template to point to more recent versions. sdparm can be built into a Debian package for kFreeBSD using the ./build_debian.sh script in the top level directory. This has been tested with Debian 6.0 release. Solaris port ------------ The uscsi pass-through mechanism is used and is only available on SCSI devices. There seems to be no corresponding ATA pass through and recent SATA disks do not seem to have a SAT layer in front of them (within Solaris). If SAT is present (perhaps externally or within a HBA) then that would allow SATA disks to accept SCSI commands including the SCSI ATA PASS THROUGH commands. 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 - 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 sdparm needs. So in openSolaris something of the form: sdparm /dev/rdsk/c5t4d3p0 should work. If it doesn't add a '-vvv' option. If that is attempted on the /dev/dsk/c5t4d3p0 variant an inappropriate ioctl for device error will result. 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 players 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. Tru64 (osf) port ---------------- Any feedback on this platform welcome. Win32 port ---------- This port supports Windows NT, 2000, 2003++, XP, Vista and Windows 7 (i.e. not 95, 98, ME or earlier). It uses the Microsoft SCSI Pass Through "Direct" (SPTD) rather than ASPI32 which requires a dll from Adaptec. The source can be built in a cygwin environment and can run in a cygwin bash shell. It can also run in a DOS shell if the cygwin1.dll is put in an appropriate place. Alternatively the source can be built with the MinGW compiler using its MSYS shell. This removes the dependence on the cygwin1.dll file. The device naming schemes attempt to follow what DOS does, with a few short cuts. If volume "D:" is an ATAPI DVD drive then the actual file opened is "\\.\D:". All device nodes of interest to sdparm have a leading "\\.\" so if the user doesn't supply it, sdparm will. Thus 'sdparm d:' should work. Note that volume names map to Windows partitions so there can be multiple volume names per disk. SCSI devices (or those that use a SCSI command set) can also be accessed via their "class" driver. These have names like "PhysicalDrive<n>", "CDROM<n>" and "TAPE<n>" where <n> is a number starting at 0. Since "PhysicalDrive" is tedious to type, a shortened form "PD" is accepted. So if "PD3" is a SCSI disk (or a SATA disk behind a SAT layer) then 'sdparm pd3' should work. Finally there is a lower level "SCSI<n>:" interface that addresses a SCSI adapter. The device needs further sub-addressing in the form of a bus number (also called a PathId), a target identifier and a lun (logical unit number). sdparm uses this notation: "SCSI<n>:<bus>,<target>,<lun>". The trailing ",<lun>" may be omitted in which case a lun of 0 is assumed. Once a device has been "claimed" by an upper level "class" driver the OS will not allow it to be accessed via the "SCSI<n>:" interface. Hence this is only needed for special devices (e.g. with processor or SES peripheral device type) that are not claimed by the class drivers. The '--wscan' (or '-w') option has been added to show the mapping between a class driver device name and its associated volume name(s). Here are some examples: $ sdparm -w PD0 [C] FUJITSU MHY2160BH 0000 PD1 [DF] WD 2500BEV External 1.05 WD-WXE90 CDROM0 [E] MATSHITA DVD/CDRW UJDA775 CB03 Now request bus types as well. $ sdparm -ww PD0 [C] <Ata > FUJITSU MHY2160BH 0000 PD1 [DF] <Usb > WD 2500BEV External 1.05 WD-WXE90 CDROM0 [E] <Atapi> MATSHITA DVD/CDRW UJDA775 CB03 Now request a SCSI adapter scan as well. $ sdparm -www PD0 [C] <Ata > FUJITSU MHY2160BH 0000 PD1 [DF] <Usb > WD 2500BEV External 1.05 WD-WXE90 CDROM0 [E] <Atapi> MATSHITA DVD/CDRW UJDA775 CB03 SCSI0:0,0,0 claimed=1 pdt=0h FUJITSU MHY2160BH 0000 SCSI1:0,0,0 claimed=1 pdt=5h MATSHITA DVD/CDRW UJDA775 CB03 And finally here is a more interesting example showing disks with no Windows (2000) volumes, a tape drive and a wierd unclaimed SCSI pseudo device with BCC (Bridge Controller Commands) peripheral device type. $ sdparm -www PD0 [C] <Ata > ST380011A 8.01 PD1 <Scsi > SEAGATE ST373455SS 2189 PD2 <Scsi > ATA ST3160812AS D PD3 <Scsi > SEAGATE ST336754SS 0003 CDROM0 [F] <Atapi> HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-4163B A103 TAPE0 <Scsi > SONY SDT-7000 0192 SCSI0:0,0,0 claimed=1 pdt=0h dubious ST380011 A 8.01 SCSI1:0,0,0 claimed=1 pdt=5h HL-DT-ST DVDRAM GSA-4163B A103 SCSI2:0,6,0 claimed=1 pdt=1h SONY SDT-7000 0192 SCSI5:0,17,0 claimed=1 pdt=0h SEAGATE ST373455SS 2189 SCSI5:0,19,0 claimed=1 pdt=0h ATA ST3160812AS D SCSI5:0,21,0 claimed=1 pdt=0h SEAGATE ST336754SS 0003 SCSI5:0,112,0 claimed=0 pdt=10h LSI PSEUDO DEVICE 2.34 Douglas Gilbert 6th June 2013
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