.TH SG_DD "8" "February 2002" "sg3_utils-0.98" SG3_UTILS .SH NAME sg_dd \- copies data to and from sg and raw devices .SH SYNOPSIS .B sg_dd [\fIOPTION\fR]... .SH DESCRIPTION .\" Add any additional description here .PP Copy data to and from Linux SCSI generic (sg) and raw devices. Similar syntax and semantics to .B dd(1) but does not perform any conversions. .TP bpt=BLOCKS each IO transaction will be made using this number of blocks (or less if near the end of count). Default is 128. .TP bs=BYTES this .B must be the block size of the physical device. Note that this differs from .B dd(1) which permits "bs" to be an integral multiple. Default is 512 which is usually correct for disks but incorrect for cdroms (which normally have 2048 byte blocks). .TP cdbsz=6 | 10 | 12 | 16 size of SCSI READ and/or WRITE commands issued on sg device names. Default is 10 byte SCSI command blocks .TP count=BLOCKS copy this number of blocks. Default is minimum number that sg devices return from READ CAPACITY (if that works) or 0 .TP dio=0 | 1 default is 0 which selects indirect IO. 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 /proc/scsi/sg/allow_dio has the value of 0 then a warning is issued (and indirect IO is performed) .TP gen=0 | 1 the default action (when "gen=0") is to require that either "if" or "of" is a sg or raw device name. To remove this restriction set "gen=1" .TP ibs=BYTES if given must be the same as bs .TP if=FILE read from FILE instead of stdin. A file name of - is taken to be stdin .TP obs=BYTES if given must be the same as bs .TP of=FILE write to FILE instead of stdout. A file name of - is taken to be stdout .TP seek=BLOCKS skip BLOCKS bs-sized blocks at start of output .TP skip=BLOCKS skip BLOCKS bs-sized blocks at start of input .TP time=0 | 1 when 1, times transfer and does throughput calculation, outputting the results (to stderr) at completion. When 0 (default) doesn't perform timing .TP --version outputs version number information and exits .PP Either the input file or the output file must be a sg or raw device, unless "gen=1". 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 "cat /proc/scsi/scsi", or sg_map before use. .PP The count is only deduced for sg devices (minimum > 0 if both input and output are sg devices) otherwise it defaults to 0. This is for safety! Raw device partition information can often be found with .B fdisk(8) [the "-ul" argument is useful in this respect]. .PP BYTES and BLOCKS may be followed by the following multiplicative suffixes: c C *1; b B *512; k *1,024; K *1,000; m *1,048,576; M *1,000,000; g *1,073,741,824; and G *1,000,000,000 .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 > /proc/scsi/sg/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. .SH EXAMPLES .PP Looks quite similar in usage to dd: .PP sg_dd if=/dev/sg0 of=t bs=512 count=1M .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 of=t bs=512 count=1000000 .PP although dd's speed may improve if bs was larger and count was suitably reduced. Using a raw device to do something similar on a IDE disk: .PP raw /dev/raw/raw1 /dev/hda .br sg_dd if=/dev/raw/raw1 of=t bs=512 count=1M .PP To copy a SCSI disk partition to an IDE 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. .PP To time a streaming read of the first 1 GB on a disk this command 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 26.020794 secs, 41.26 MB/sec". The "MB/sec" in this case is 1,000,000 bytes per second. .SH NOTE For sg devices this command issues READ_10 and WRITE_10 SCSI commands which are appropriate for disks and CDROM players. Those commands are not formatted correctly for tape devices so sg_dd should not be used on tape devices. .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 AUTHORS Written by Doug Gilbert and Peter Allworth. .SH "REPORTING BUGS" Report bugs to . .SH COPYRIGHT Copyright \(co 2000-2002 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" A POSIX threads version of this command called .B sgp_dd is in the sg3_utils package. The lmbench package contains .B lmdd which is also interesting. .B raw(8), dd(1)