xref: /freebsd/sbin/camcontrol/camcontrol.8 (revision aa0a1e58)
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2.\" Copyright (c) 1998, 1999, 2000, 2002, 2005, 2006, 2007 Kenneth D. Merry.
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28.\" $FreeBSD$
29.\"
30.Dd November 30, 2010
31.Dt CAMCONTROL 8
32.Os
33.Sh NAME
34.Nm camcontrol
35.Nd CAM control program
36.Sh SYNOPSIS
37.Nm
38.Aq Ar command
39.Op device id
40.Op generic args
41.Op command args
42.Nm
43.Ic devlist
44.Op Fl v
45.Nm
46.Ic periphlist
47.Op device id
48.Op Fl n Ar dev_name
49.Op Fl u Ar unit_number
50.Nm
51.Ic tur
52.Op device id
53.Op generic args
54.Nm
55.Ic inquiry
56.Op device id
57.Op generic args
58.Op Fl D
59.Op Fl S
60.Op Fl R
61.Nm
62.Ic identify
63.Op device id
64.Op generic args
65.Op Fl v
66.Nm
67.Ic reportluns
68.Op device id
69.Op generic args
70.Op Fl c
71.Op Fl l
72.Op Fl r Ar reporttype
73.Nm
74.Ic readcap
75.Op device id
76.Op generic args
77.Op Fl b
78.Op Fl h
79.Op Fl H
80.Op Fl N
81.Op Fl q
82.Op Fl s
83.Nm
84.Ic start
85.Op device id
86.Op generic args
87.Nm
88.Ic stop
89.Op device id
90.Op generic args
91.Nm
92.Ic load
93.Op device id
94.Op generic args
95.Nm
96.Ic eject
97.Op device id
98.Op generic args
99.Nm
100.Ic rescan
101.Aq all | bus Ns Op :target:lun
102.Nm
103.Ic reset
104.Aq all | bus Ns Op :target:lun
105.Nm
106.Ic defects
107.Op device id
108.Op generic args
109.Aq Fl f Ar format
110.Op Fl P
111.Op Fl G
112.Nm
113.Ic modepage
114.Op device id
115.Op generic args
116.Aq Fl m Ar page | Fl l
117.Op Fl P Ar pgctl
118.Op Fl b | Fl e
119.Op Fl d
120.Nm
121.Ic cmd
122.Op device id
123.Op generic args
124.Aq Fl a Ar cmd Op args
125.Aq Fl c Ar cmd Op args
126.Op Fl d
127.Op Fl f
128.Op Fl i Ar len Ar fmt
129.Bk -words
130.Op Fl o Ar len Ar fmt Op args
131.Op Fl r Ar fmt
132.Ek
133.Nm
134.Ic smpcmd
135.Op device id
136.Op generic args
137.Aq Fl r Ar len Ar fmt Op args
138.Aq Fl R Ar len Ar fmt Op args
139.Nm
140.Ic smprg
141.Op device id
142.Op generic args
143.Op Fl l
144.Nm
145.Ic smppc
146.Op device id
147.Op generic args
148.Aq Fl p Ar phy
149.Op Fl l
150.Op Fl o Ar operation
151.Op Fl d Ar name
152.Op Fl m Ar rate
153.Op Fl M Ar rate
154.Op Fl T Ar pp_timeout
155.Op Fl a Ar enable|disable
156.Op Fl A Ar enable|disable
157.Op Fl s Ar enable|disable
158.Op Fl S Ar enable|disable
159.Nm
160.Ic smpphylist
161.Op device id
162.Op generic args
163.Op Fl l
164.Op Fl q
165.Nm
166.Ic smpmaninfo
167.Op device id
168.Op generic args
169.Op Fl l
170.Nm
171.Ic debug
172.Op Fl I
173.Op Fl P
174.Op Fl T
175.Op Fl S
176.Op Fl X
177.Op Fl c
178.Aq all|off|bus Ns Op :target Ns Op :lun
179.Nm
180.Ic tags
181.Op device id
182.Op generic args
183.Op Fl N Ar tags
184.Op Fl q
185.Op Fl v
186.Nm
187.Ic negotiate
188.Op device id
189.Op generic args
190.Op Fl c
191.Op Fl D Ar enable|disable
192.Op Fl M Ar mode
193.Op Fl O Ar offset
194.Op Fl q
195.Op Fl R Ar syncrate
196.Op Fl T Ar enable|disable
197.Op Fl U
198.Op Fl W Ar bus_width
199.Op Fl v
200.Nm
201.Ic format
202.Op device id
203.Op generic args
204.Op Fl q
205.Op Fl r
206.Op Fl w
207.Op Fl y
208.Nm
209.Ic idle
210.Op device id
211.Op generic args
212.Op Fl t Ar time
213.Nm
214.Ic standby
215.Op device id
216.Op generic args
217.Op Fl t Ar time
218.Nm
219.Ic sleep
220.Op device id
221.Op generic args
222.Nm
223.Ic help
224.Sh DESCRIPTION
225The
226.Nm
227utility is designed to provide a way for users to access and control the
228.Fx
229CAM subsystem.
230.Pp
231The
232.Nm
233utility
234can cause a loss of data and/or system crashes if used improperly.
235Even
236expert users are encouraged to exercise caution when using this command.
237Novice users should stay away from this utility.
238.Pp
239The
240.Nm
241utility has a number of primary functions, many of which support an optional
242device identifier.
243A device identifier can take one of three forms:
244.Bl -tag -width 14n
245.It deviceUNIT
246Specify a device name and unit number combination, like "da5" or "cd3".
247.It bus:target
248Specify a bus number and target id.
249The bus number can be determined from
250the output of
251.Dq camcontrol devlist .
252The lun defaults to 0.
253.It bus:target:lun
254Specify the bus, target and lun for a device.
255(e.g.\& 1:2:0)
256.El
257.Pp
258The device identifier, if it is specified,
259.Em must
260come immediately after the function name, and before any generic or
261function-specific arguments.
262Note that the
263.Fl n
264and
265.Fl u
266arguments described below will override any device name or unit number
267specified beforehand.
268The
269.Fl n
270and
271.Fl u
272arguments will
273.Em not
274override a specified bus:target or bus:target:lun, however.
275.Pp
276Most of the
277.Nm
278primary functions support these generic arguments:
279.Bl -tag -width 14n
280.It Fl C Ar count
281SCSI command retry count.
282In order for this to work, error recovery
283.Pq Fl E
284must be turned on.
285.It Fl E
286Instruct the kernel to perform generic SCSI error recovery for the given
287command.
288This is needed in order for the retry count
289.Pq Fl C
290to be honored.
291Other than retrying commands, the generic error recovery in
292the code will generally attempt to spin up drives that are not spinning.
293It may take some other actions, depending upon the sense code returned from
294the command.
295.It Fl n Ar dev_name
296Specify the device type to operate on, e.g.\& "da", "cd".
297.It Fl t Ar timeout
298SCSI command timeout in seconds.
299This overrides the default timeout for
300any given command.
301.It Fl u Ar unit_number
302Specify the device unit number, e.g.\& "1", "5".
303.It Fl v
304Be verbose, print out sense information for failed SCSI commands.
305.El
306.Pp
307Primary command functions:
308.Bl -tag -width periphlist
309.It Ic devlist
310List all physical devices (logical units) attached to the CAM subsystem.
311This also includes a list of peripheral drivers attached to each device.
312With the
313.Fl v
314argument, SCSI bus number, adapter name and unit numbers are printed as
315well.
316.It Ic periphlist
317List all peripheral drivers attached to a given physical device (logical
318unit).
319.It Ic tur
320Send the SCSI test unit ready (0x00) command to the given device.
321The
322.Nm
323utility will report whether the device is ready or not.
324.It Ic inquiry
325Send a SCSI inquiry command (0x12) to a device.
326By default,
327.Nm
328will print out the standard inquiry data, device serial number, and
329transfer rate information.
330The user can specify that only certain types of
331inquiry data be printed:
332.Bl -tag -width 4n
333.It Fl D
334Get the standard inquiry data.
335.It Fl S
336Print out the serial number.
337If this flag is the only one specified,
338.Nm
339will not print out "Serial Number" before the value returned by the drive.
340This is to aid in script writing.
341.It Fl R
342Print out transfer rate information.
343.El
344.It Ic identify
345Send a ATA identify command (0xec) to a device.
346.It Ic reportluns
347Send the SCSI REPORT LUNS (0xA0) command to the given device.
348By default,
349.Nm
350will print out the list of logical units (LUNs) supported by the target device.
351There are a couple of options to modify the output:
352.Bl -tag -width 14n
353.It Fl c
354Just print out a count of LUNs, not the actual LUN numbers.
355.It Fl l
356Just print out the LUNs, and don't print out the count.
357.It Fl r Ar reporttype
358Specify the type of report to request from the target:
359.Bl -tag -width 012345678
360.It default
361Return the default report.
362This is the
363.Nm
364default.
365Most targets will support this report if they support the REPORT LUNS
366command.
367.It wellknown
368Return only well known LUNs.
369.It all
370Return all available LUNs.
371.El
372.El
373.Pp
374.Nm
375will try to print out LUN numbers in a reasonable format.
376It can understand the peripheral, flat, LUN and extended LUN formats.
377.It Ic readcap
378Send the SCSI READ CAPACITY command to the given device and display
379the results.
380If the device is larger than 2TB, the SCSI READ CAPACITY (16) service
381action will be sent to obtain the full size of the device.
382By default,
383.Nm
384will print out the last logical block of the device, and the blocksize of
385the device in bytes.
386To modify the output format, use the following options:
387.Bl -tag -width 5n
388.It Fl b
389Just print out the blocksize, not the last block or device size.
390This cannot be used with
391.Fl N
392or
393.Fl s .
394.It Fl h
395Print out the device size in human readable (base 2, 1K == 1024) format.
396This implies
397.Fl N
398and cannot be used with
399.Fl q
400or
401.Fl b .
402.It Fl H
403Print out the device size in human readable (base 10, 1K == 1000) format.
404.It Fl N
405Print out the number of blocks in the device instead of the last logical
406block.
407.It Fl q
408Quiet, print out the numbers only (separated by a comma if
409.Fl b
410or
411.Fl s
412are not specified).
413.It Fl s
414Print out the last logical block or the size of the device only, and omit
415the blocksize.
416.El
417.It Ic start
418Send the SCSI Start/Stop Unit (0x1B) command to the given device with the
419start bit set.
420.It Ic stop
421Send the SCSI Start/Stop Unit (0x1B) command to the given device with the
422start bit cleared.
423.It Ic load
424Send the SCSI Start/Stop Unit (0x1B) command to the given device with the
425start bit set and the load/eject bit set.
426.It Ic eject
427Send the SCSI Start/Stop Unit (0x1B) command to the given device with the
428start bit cleared and the load/eject bit set.
429.It Ic rescan
430Tell the kernel to scan all busses in the system (with the
431.Ar all
432argument), the given bus (XPT_SCAN_BUS), or bus:target:lun
433(XPT_SCAN_LUN) for new devices or devices that have gone away.
434The user
435may specify a scan of all busses, a single bus, or a lun.
436Scanning all luns
437on a target is not supported.
438.It Ic reset
439Tell the kernel to reset all busses in the system (with the
440.Ar all
441argument) or the given bus (XPT_RESET_BUS) by issuing a SCSI bus
442reset for that bus, or to reset the given bus:target:lun
443(XPT_RESET_DEV), typically by issuing a BUS DEVICE RESET message after
444connecting to that device.
445Note that this can have a destructive impact
446on the system.
447.It Ic defects
448Send the SCSI READ DEFECT DATA (10) command (0x37) to the given device, and
449print out any combination of: the total number of defects, the primary
450defect list (PLIST), and the grown defect list (GLIST).
451.Bl -tag -width 11n
452.It Fl f Ar format
453The three format options are:
454.Em block ,
455to print out the list as logical blocks,
456.Em bfi ,
457to print out the list in bytes from index format, and
458.Em phys ,
459to print out the list in physical sector format.
460The format argument is
461required.
462Most drives support the physical sector format.
463Some drives
464support the logical block format.
465Many drives, if they do not support the
466requested format, return the data in an alternate format, along with sense
467information indicating that the requested data format is not supported.
468The
469.Nm
470utility
471attempts to detect this, and print out whatever format the drive returns.
472If the drive uses a non-standard sense code to report that it does not
473support the requested format,
474.Nm
475will probably see the error as a failure to complete the request.
476.It Fl G
477Print out the grown defect list.
478This is a list of bad blocks that have
479been remapped since the disk left the factory.
480.It Fl P
481Print out the primary defect list.
482.El
483.Pp
484If neither
485.Fl P
486nor
487.Fl G
488is specified,
489.Nm
490will print out the number of defects given in the READ DEFECT DATA header
491returned from the drive.
492.It Ic modepage
493Allows the user to display and optionally edit a SCSI mode page.
494The mode
495page formats are located in
496.Pa /usr/share/misc/scsi_modes .
497This can be overridden by specifying a different file in the
498.Ev SCSI_MODES
499environment variable.
500The
501.Ic modepage
502command takes several arguments:
503.Bl -tag -width 12n
504.It Fl d
505Disable block descriptors for mode sense.
506.It Fl b
507Displays mode page data in binary format.
508.It Fl e
509This flag allows the user to edit values in the mode page.
510The user may
511either edit mode page values with the text editor pointed to by his
512.Ev EDITOR
513environment variable, or supply mode page values via standard input, using
514the same format that
515.Nm
516uses to display mode page values.
517The editor will be invoked if
518.Nm
519detects that standard input is terminal.
520.It Fl l
521Lists all available mode pages.
522.It Fl m Ar mode_page
523This specifies the number of the mode page the user would like to view
524and/or edit.
525This argument is mandatory unless
526.Fl l
527is specified.
528.It Fl P Ar pgctl
529This allows the user to specify the page control field.
530Possible values are:
531.Bl -tag -width xxx -compact
532.It 0
533Current values
534.It 1
535Changeable values
536.It 2
537Default values
538.It 3
539Saved values
540.El
541.El
542.It Ic cmd
543Allows the user to send an arbitrary ATA or SCSI CDB to any device.
544The
545.Ic cmd
546function requires the
547.Fl c
548argument to specify SCSI CDB or the
549.Fl a
550argument to specify ATA Command Block registers values.
551Other arguments are optional, depending on
552the command type.
553The command and data specification syntax is documented
554in
555.Xr cam_cdbparse 3 .
556NOTE: If the CDB specified causes data to be transferred to or from the
557SCSI device in question, you MUST specify either
558.Fl i
559or
560.Fl o .
561.Bl -tag -width 17n
562.It Fl a Ar cmd Op args
563This specifies the content of 12 ATA Command Block registers (command,
564features, lba_low, lba_mid, lba_high, device, lba_low_exp, lba_mid_exp.
565lba_high_exp, features_exp, sector_count, sector_count_exp).
566.It Fl c Ar cmd Op args
567This specifies the SCSI CDB.
568SCSI CDBs may be 6, 10, 12 or 16 bytes.
569.It Fl d
570Specifies DMA protocol to be used for ATA command.
571.It Fl f
572Specifies FPDMA (NCQ) protocol to be used for ATA command.
573.It Fl i Ar len Ar fmt
574This specifies the amount of data to read, and how it should be displayed.
575If the format is
576.Sq - ,
577.Ar len
578bytes of data will be read from the device and written to standard output.
579.It Fl o Ar len Ar fmt Op args
580This specifies the amount of data to be written to a device, and the data
581that is to be written.
582If the format is
583.Sq - ,
584.Ar len
585bytes of data will be read from standard input and written to the device.
586.It Fl r Ar fmt
587This specifies that 11 result ATA Command Block registers should be displayed
588(status, error, lba_low, lba_mid, lba_high, device, lba_low_exp, lba_mid_exp,
589lba_high_exp, sector_count, sector_count_exp), and how.
590If the format is
591.Sq - ,
59211 result registers will be written to standard output in hex.
593.El
594.It Ic smpcmd
595Allows the user to send an arbitrary Serial
596Management Protocol (SMP) command to a device.
597The
598.Ic smpcmd
599function requires the
600.Fl r
601argument to specify the SMP request to be sent, and the
602.Fl R
603argument to specify the format of the SMP response.
604The syntax for the SMP request and response arguments is documented in
605.Xr cam_cdbparse 3 .
606.Pp
607Note that SAS adapters that support SMP passthrough (at least the currently
608known adapters) do not accept CRC bytes from the user in the request and do
609not pass CRC bytes back to the user in the response.
610Therefore users should not include the CRC bytes in the length of the
611request and not expect CRC bytes to be returned in the response.
612.Bl -tag -width 17n
613.It Fl r Ar len Ar fmt Op args
614This specifies the size of the SMP request, without the CRC bytes, and the
615SMP request format.  If the format is
616.Sq - ,
617.Ar len
618bytes of data will be read from standard input and written as the SMP
619request.
620.It Fl R Ar len Ar fmt Op args
621This specifies the size of the buffer allocated for the SMP response, and
622the SMP response format.
623If the format is
624.Sq - ,
625.Ar len
626bytes of data will be allocated for the response and the response will be
627written to standard output.
628.El
629.It Ic smprg
630Allows the user to send the Serial Management Protocol (SMP) Report General
631command to a device.
632.Nm
633will display the data returned by the Report General command.
634If the SMP target supports the long response format, the additional data
635will be requested and displayed automatically.
636.Bl -tag -width 8n
637.It Fl l
638Request the long response format only.
639Not all SMP targets support the long response format.
640This option causes
641.Nm
642to skip sending the initial report general request without the long bit set
643and only issue a report general request with the long bit set.
644.El
645.It Ic smppc
646Allows the user to issue the Serial Management Protocol (SMP) PHY Control
647command to a device.
648This function should be used with some caution, as it can render devices
649inaccessible, and could potentially cause data corruption as well.
650The
651.Fl p
652argument is required to specify the PHY to operate on.
653.Bl -tag -width 17n
654.It Fl p Ar phy
655Specify the PHY to operate on.
656This argument is required.
657.It Fl l
658Request the long request/response format.
659Not all SMP targets support the long response format.
660For the PHY Control command, this currently only affects whether the
661request length is set to a value other than 0.
662.It Fl o Ar operation
663Specify a PHY control operation.
664Only one
665.Fl o
666operation may be specified.
667The operation may be specified numerically (in decimal, hexadecimal, or octal)
668or one of the following operation names may be specified:
669.Bl -tag -width 16n
670.It nop
671No operation.
672It is not necessary to specify this argument.
673.It linkreset
674Send the LINK RESET command to the phy.
675.It hardreset
676Send the HARD RESET command to the phy.
677.It disable
678Send the DISABLE command to the phy.
679Note that the LINK RESET or HARD RESET commands should re-enable the phy.
680.It clearerrlog
681Send the CLEAR ERROR LOG command.
682This clears the error log counters for the specified phy.
683.It clearaffiliation
684Send the CLEAR AFFILIATION command.
685This clears the affiliation from the STP initiator port with the same SAS
686address as the SMP initiator that requests the clear operation.
687.It sataportsel
688Send the TRANSMIT SATA PORT SELECTION SIGNAL command to the phy.
689This will cause a SATA port selector to use the given phy as its active phy
690and make the other phy inactive.
691.It clearitnl
692Send the CLEAR STP I_T NEXUS LOSS command to the PHY.
693.It setdevname
694Send the SET ATTACHED DEVICE NAME command to the PHY.
695This requires the
696.Fl d
697argument to specify the device name.
698.El
699.It Fl d Ar name
700Specify the attached device name.
701This option is needed with the
702.Fl o Ar setdevname
703phy operation.
704The name is a 64-bit number, and can be specified in decimal, hexadecimal
705or octal format.
706.It Fl m Ar rate
707Set the minimum physical link rate for the phy.
708This is a numeric argument.
709Currently known link rates are:
710.Bl -tag -width 5n
711.It 0x0
712Do not change current value.
713.It 0x8
7141.5 Gbps
715.It 0x9
7163 Gbps
717.It 0xa
7186 Gbps
719.El
720.Pp
721Other values may be specified for newer physical link rates.
722.It Fl M Ar rate
723Set the maximum physical link rate for the phy.
724This is a numeric argument.
725See the
726.Fl m
727argument description for known link rate arguments.
728.It Fl T Ar pp_timeout
729Set the partial pathway timeout value, in microseconds.
730See the
731.Tn ANSI
732.Tn SAS
733Protcol Layer (SPL)
734specification for more information on this field.
735.It Fl a Ar enable|disable
736Enable or disable SATA slumber phy power conditions.
737.It Fl A Ar enable|disable
738Enable or disable SATA partial power conditions.
739.It Fl s Ar enable|disable
740Enable or disable SAS slumber phy power conditions.
741.It Fl S Ar enable|disable
742Enable or disable SAS partial phy power conditions.
743.El
744.It Ic smpphylist
745List phys attached to a SAS expander, the address of the end device
746attached to the phy, and the inquiry data for that device and peripheral
747devices attached to that device.
748The inquiry data and peripheral devices are displayed if available.
749.Bl -tag -width 5n
750.It Fl l
751Turn on the long response format for the underlying SMP commands used for
752this command.
753.It Fl q
754Only print out phys that are attached to a device in the CAM EDT (Existing
755Device Table).
756.El
757.It Ic smpmaninfo
758Send the SMP Report Manufacturer Information command to the device and
759display the response.
760.Bl -tag -width 5n
761.It Fl l
762Turn on the long response format for the underlying SMP commands used for
763this command.
764.El
765.It Ic debug
766Turn on CAM debugging printfs in the kernel.
767This requires options CAMDEBUG
768in your kernel config file.
769WARNING: enabling debugging printfs currently
770causes an EXTREME number of kernel printfs.
771You may have difficulty
772turning off the debugging printfs once they start, since the kernel will be
773busy printing messages and unable to service other requests quickly.
774The
775.Ic debug
776function takes a number of arguments:
777.Bl -tag -width 18n
778.It Fl I
779Enable CAM_DEBUG_INFO printfs.
780.It Fl P
781Enable CAM_DEBUG_PERIPH printfs.
782.It Fl T
783Enable CAM_DEBUG_TRACE printfs.
784.It Fl S
785Enable CAM_DEBUG_SUBTRACE printfs.
786.It Fl X
787Enable CAM_DEBUG_XPT printfs.
788.It Fl c
789Enable CAM_DEBUG_CDB printfs.
790This will cause the kernel to print out the
791SCSI CDBs sent to the specified device(s).
792.It all
793Enable debugging for all devices.
794.It off
795Turn off debugging for all devices
796.It bus Ns Op :target Ns Op :lun
797Turn on debugging for the given bus, target or lun.
798If the lun or target
799and lun are not specified, they are wildcarded.
800(i.e., just specifying a
801bus turns on debugging printfs for all devices on that bus.)
802.El
803.It Ic tags
804Show or set the number of "tagged openings" or simultaneous transactions
805we attempt to queue to a particular device.
806By default, the
807.Ic tags
808command, with no command-specific arguments (i.e., only generic arguments)
809prints out the "soft" maximum number of transactions that can be queued to
810the device in question.
811For more detailed information, use the
812.Fl v
813argument described below.
814.Bl -tag -width 7n
815.It Fl N Ar tags
816Set the number of tags for the given device.
817This must be between the
818minimum and maximum number set in the kernel quirk table.
819The default for
820most devices that support tagged queueing is a minimum of 2 and a maximum
821of 255.
822The minimum and maximum values for a given device may be
823determined by using the
824.Fl v
825switch.
826The meaning of the
827.Fl v
828switch for this
829.Nm
830subcommand is described below.
831.It Fl q
832Be quiet, and do not report the number of tags.
833This is generally used when
834setting the number of tags.
835.It Fl v
836The verbose flag has special functionality for the
837.Em tags
838argument.
839It causes
840.Nm
841to print out the tagged queueing related fields of the XPT_GDEV_TYPE CCB:
842.Bl -tag -width 13n
843.It dev_openings
844This is the amount of capacity for transactions queued to a given device.
845.It dev_active
846This is the number of transactions currently queued to a device.
847.It devq_openings
848This is the kernel queue space for transactions.
849This count usually mirrors
850dev_openings except during error recovery operations when
851the device queue is frozen (device is not allowed to receive
852commands), the number of dev_openings is reduced, or transaction
853replay is occurring.
854.It devq_queued
855This is the number of transactions waiting in the kernel queue for capacity
856on the device.
857This number is usually zero unless error recovery is in
858progress.
859.It held
860The held count is the number of CCBs held by peripheral drivers that have
861either just been completed or are about to be released to the transport
862layer for service by a device.
863Held CCBs reserve capacity on a given
864device.
865.It mintags
866This is the current "hard" minimum number of transactions that can be
867queued to a device at once.
868The
869.Ar dev_openings
870value above cannot go below this number.
871The default value for
872.Ar mintags
873is 2, although it may be set higher or lower for various devices.
874.It maxtags
875This is the "hard" maximum number of transactions that can be queued to a
876device at one time.
877The
878.Ar dev_openings
879value cannot go above this number.
880The default value for
881.Ar maxtags
882is 255, although it may be set higher or lower for various devices.
883.El
884.El
885.It Ic negotiate
886Show or negotiate various communication parameters.
887Some controllers may
888not support setting or changing some of these values.
889For instance, the
890Adaptec 174x controllers do not support changing a device's sync rate or
891offset.
892The
893.Nm
894utility
895will not attempt to set the parameter if the controller indicates that it
896does not support setting the parameter.
897To find out what the controller
898supports, use the
899.Fl v
900flag.
901The meaning of the
902.Fl v
903flag for the
904.Ic negotiate
905command is described below.
906Also, some controller drivers do not support
907setting negotiation parameters, even if the underlying controller supports
908negotiation changes.
909Some controllers, such as the Advansys wide
910controllers, support enabling and disabling synchronous negotiation for
911a device, but do not support setting the synchronous negotiation rate.
912.Bl -tag -width 17n
913.It Fl a
914Attempt to make the negotiation settings take effect immediately by sending
915a Test Unit Ready command to the device.
916.It Fl c
917Show or set current negotiation settings.
918This is the default.
919.It Fl D Ar enable|disable
920Enable or disable disconnection.
921.It Fl M Ar mode
922Set ATA mode.
923.It Fl O Ar offset
924Set the command delay offset.
925.It Fl q
926Be quiet, do not print anything.
927This is generally useful when you want to
928set a parameter, but do not want any status information.
929.It Fl R Ar syncrate
930Change the synchronization rate for a device.
931The sync rate is a floating
932point value specified in MHz.
933So, for instance,
934.Sq 20.000
935is a legal value, as is
936.Sq 20 .
937.It Fl T Ar enable|disable
938Enable or disable tagged queueing for a device.
939.It Fl U
940Show or set user negotiation settings.
941The default is to show or set
942current negotiation settings.
943.It Fl v
944The verbose switch has special meaning for the
945.Ic negotiate
946subcommand.
947It causes
948.Nm
949to print out the contents of a Path Inquiry (XPT_PATH_INQ) CCB sent to the
950controller driver.
951.It Fl W Ar bus_width
952Specify the bus width to negotiate with a device.
953The bus width is
954specified in bits.
955The only useful values to specify are 8, 16, and 32
956bits.
957The controller must support the bus width in question in order for
958the setting to take effect.
959.El
960.Pp
961In general, sync rate and offset settings will not take effect for a
962device until a command has been sent to the device.
963The
964.Fl a
965switch above will automatically send a Test Unit Ready to the device so
966negotiation parameters will take effect.
967.It Ic format
968Issue the
969.Tn SCSI
970FORMAT UNIT command to the named device.
971.Pp
972.Em WARNING! WARNING! WARNING!
973.Pp
974Low level formatting a disk will destroy ALL data on the disk.
975Use
976extreme caution when issuing this command.
977Many users low-level format
978disks that do not really need to be low-level formatted.
979There are
980relatively few scenarios that call for low-level formatting a disk.
981One reason for
982low-level formatting a disk is to initialize the disk after changing
983its physical sector size.
984Another reason for low-level formatting a disk
985is to revive the disk if you are getting "medium format corrupted" errors
986from the disk in response to read and write requests.
987.Pp
988Some disks take longer than others to format.
989Users should specify a
990timeout long enough to allow the format to complete.
991The default format
992timeout is 3 hours, which should be long enough for most disks.
993Some hard
994disks will complete a format operation in a very short period of time
995(on the order of 5 minutes or less).
996This is often because the drive
997does not really support the FORMAT UNIT command -- it just accepts the
998command, waits a few minutes and then returns it.
999.Pp
1000The
1001.Sq format
1002subcommand takes several arguments that modify its default behavior.
1003The
1004.Fl q
1005and
1006.Fl y
1007arguments can be useful for scripts.
1008.Bl -tag -width 6n
1009.It Fl q
1010Be quiet, do not print any status messages.
1011This option will not disable
1012the questions, however.
1013To disable questions, use the
1014.Fl y
1015argument, below.
1016.It Fl r
1017Run in
1018.Dq report only
1019mode.
1020This will report status on a format that is already running on the drive.
1021.It Fl w
1022Issue a non-immediate format command.
1023By default,
1024.Nm
1025issues the FORMAT UNIT command with the immediate bit set.
1026This tells the
1027device to immediately return the format command, before the format has
1028actually completed.
1029Then,
1030.Nm
1031gathers
1032.Tn SCSI
1033sense information from the device every second to determine how far along
1034in the format process it is.
1035If the
1036.Fl w
1037argument is specified,
1038.Nm
1039will issue a non-immediate format command, and will be unable to print any
1040information to let the user know what percentage of the disk has been
1041formatted.
1042.It Fl y
1043Do not ask any questions.
1044By default,
1045.Nm
1046will ask the user if he/she really wants to format the disk in question,
1047and also if the default format command timeout is acceptable.
1048The user
1049will not be asked about the timeout if a timeout is specified on the
1050command line.
1051.El
1052.It Ic idle
1053Put ATA device into IDLE state. Optional parameter
1054.Pq Fl t
1055specifies automatic standby timer value in seconds. Value 0 disables timer.
1056.It Ic standby
1057Put ATA device into STANDBY state. Optional parameter
1058.Pq Fl t
1059specifies automatic standby timer value in seconds. Value 0 disables timer.
1060.It Ic sleep
1061Put ATA device into SLEEP state. Note that the only way get device out of
1062this state may be reset.
1063.It Ic help
1064Print out verbose usage information.
1065.El
1066.Sh ENVIRONMENT
1067The
1068.Ev SCSI_MODES
1069variable allows the user to specify an alternate mode page format file.
1070.Pp
1071The
1072.Ev EDITOR
1073variable determines which text editor
1074.Nm
1075starts when editing mode pages.
1076.Sh FILES
1077.Bl -tag -width /usr/share/misc/scsi_modes -compact
1078.It Pa /usr/share/misc/scsi_modes
1079is the SCSI mode format database.
1080.It Pa /dev/xpt0
1081is the transport layer device.
1082.It Pa /dev/pass*
1083are the CAM application passthrough devices.
1084.El
1085.Sh EXAMPLES
1086.Dl camcontrol eject -n cd -u 1 -v
1087.Pp
1088Eject the CD from cd1, and print SCSI sense information if the command
1089fails.
1090.Pp
1091.Dl camcontrol tur da0
1092.Pp
1093Send the SCSI test unit ready command to da0.
1094The
1095.Nm
1096utility will report whether the disk is ready, but will not display sense
1097information if the command fails since the
1098.Fl v
1099switch was not specified.
1100.Bd -literal -offset indent
1101camcontrol tur da1 -E -C 4 -t 50 -v
1102.Ed
1103.Pp
1104Send a test unit ready command to da1.
1105Enable kernel error recovery.
1106Specify a retry count of 4, and a timeout of 50 seconds.
1107Enable sense
1108printing (with the
1109.Fl v
1110flag) if the command fails.
1111Since error recovery is turned on, the
1112disk will be spun up if it is not currently spinning.
1113The
1114.Nm
1115utility will report whether the disk is ready.
1116.Bd -literal -offset indent
1117camcontrol cmd -n cd -u 1 -v -c "3C 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0e 00" \e
1118	-i 0xe "s1 i3 i1 i1 i1 i1 i1 i1 i1 i1 i1 i1"
1119.Ed
1120.Pp
1121Issue a READ BUFFER command (0x3C) to cd1.
1122Display the buffer size of cd1,
1123and display the first 10 bytes from the cache on cd1.
1124Display SCSI sense
1125information if the command fails.
1126.Bd -literal -offset indent
1127camcontrol cmd -n cd -u 1 -v -c "3B 00 00 00 00 00 00 00 0e 00" \e
1128	-o 14 "00 00 00 00 1 2 3 4 5 6 v v v v" 7 8 9 8
1129.Ed
1130.Pp
1131Issue a WRITE BUFFER (0x3B) command to cd1.
1132Write out 10 bytes of data,
1133not including the (reserved) 4 byte header.
1134Print out sense information if
1135the command fails.
1136Be very careful with this command, improper use may
1137cause data corruption.
1138.Bd -literal -offset indent
1139camcontrol modepage da3 -m 1 -e -P 3
1140.Ed
1141.Pp
1142Edit mode page 1 (the Read-Write Error Recover page) for da3, and save the
1143settings on the drive.
1144Mode page 1 contains a disk drive's auto read and
1145write reallocation settings, among other things.
1146.Pp
1147.Dl camcontrol rescan all
1148.Pp
1149Rescan all SCSI busses in the system for devices that have been added,
1150removed or changed.
1151.Pp
1152.Dl camcontrol rescan 0
1153.Pp
1154Rescan SCSI bus 0 for devices that have been added, removed or changed.
1155.Pp
1156.Dl camcontrol rescan 0:1:0
1157.Pp
1158Rescan SCSI bus 0, target 1, lun 0 to see if it has been added, removed, or
1159changed.
1160.Pp
1161.Dl camcontrol tags da5 -N 24
1162.Pp
1163Set the number of concurrent transactions for da5 to 24.
1164.Bd -literal -offset indent
1165camcontrol negotiate -n da -u 4 -T disable
1166.Ed
1167.Pp
1168Disable tagged queueing for da4.
1169.Bd -literal -offset indent
1170camcontrol negotiate -n da -u 3 -R 20.000 -O 15 -a
1171.Ed
1172.Pp
1173Negotiate a sync rate of 20MHz and an offset of 15 with da3.
1174Then send a
1175Test Unit Ready command to make the settings take effect.
1176.Pp
1177.Bd -literal -offset indent
1178camcontrol smpcmd ses0 -v -r 4 "40 0 00 0" -R 1020 "s9 i1"
1179.Ed
1180.Pp
1181Send the SMP REPORT GENERAL command to ses0, and display the number of PHYs
1182it contains.
1183Display SMP errors if the command fails.
1184.Sh SEE ALSO
1185.Xr cam 3 ,
1186.Xr cam_cdbparse 3 ,
1187.Xr cam 4 ,
1188.Xr pass 4 ,
1189.Xr xpt 4
1190.Sh HISTORY
1191The
1192.Nm
1193utility first appeared in
1194.Fx 3.0 .
1195.Pp
1196The mode page editing code and arbitrary SCSI command code are based upon
1197code in the old
1198.Xr scsi 8
1199utility and
1200.Xr scsi 3
1201library, written by Julian Elischer and Peter Dufault.
1202The
1203.Xr scsi 8
1204program first appeared in
1205.Bx 386 0.1.2.4 ,
1206and first appeared in
1207.Fx
1208in
1209.Fx 2.0.5 .
1210.Sh AUTHORS
1211.An Kenneth Merry Aq ken@FreeBSD.org
1212.Sh BUGS
1213The code that parses the generic command line arguments does not know that
1214some of the subcommands take multiple arguments.
1215So if, for instance, you
1216tried something like this:
1217.Bd -literal -offset indent
1218camcontrol cmd -n da -u 1 -c "00 00 00 00 00 v" 0x00 -v
1219.Ed
1220.Pp
1221The sense information from the test unit ready command would not get
1222printed out, since the first
1223.Xr getopt 3
1224call in
1225.Nm
1226bails out when it sees the second argument to
1227.Fl c
1228(0x00),
1229above.
1230Fixing this behavior would take some gross code, or changes to the
1231.Xr getopt 3
1232interface.
1233The best way to circumvent this problem is to always make sure
1234to specify generic
1235.Nm
1236arguments before any command-specific arguments.
1237