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Man page of SG_FORMAT
SG_FORMAT
Section: SG3_UTILS (8)
Updated: September 2018
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NAME
sg_format - format, resize a SCSI disk or format a tape
SYNOPSIS
sg_format
[--cmplst={0|1}] [--count=COUNT] [--dcrt]
[--dry-run] [--early] [--ffmt=FFMT]
[--fmtpinfo=FPI] [--format] [--help]
[--ip-def] [--long] [--mode=MP] [--pfu=PFU]
[--pie=PIE] [--pinfo] [--poll=PT] [--quick]
[--resize] [--rto_req] [--security] [--six]
[--size=LB_SZ] [--tape=FM] [--timeout=SECS]
[--verbose] [--verify] [--version] [--wait]
DEVICE
DESCRIPTION
Not all SCSI direct access devices need to be formatted and some have vendor
specific formatting procedures. SCSI disks with rotating media are probably
the largest group that do support a 'standard' format operation. They are
typically factory formatted to a block size of 512 bytes with the largest
number of blocks that the manufacturer recommends. The manufacturer's
recommendation typically leaves aside a certain number of tracks, spread
across the media, for reassignment of blocks to logical block addresses
during the life of the disk.
This utility can format modern SCSI disks and potentially change their block
size (if permitted) and the block count (i.e. number of accessible blocks on
the media also known as "resizing"). Resizing a disk to less than the
manufacturer's recommended block count is sometimes called "short
stroking" (see NOTES section). Resizing the block count while not changing
the block size may not require a format operation. The SBC-2 standard (see
www.t10.org) has obsoleted the "format device" mode page. Many of the low
level details found in that mode page are now left up to the discretion of
the manufacturer. There is a Format Status log page which reports on the
previous successful format operation(s).
When this utility is used without options (i.e. it is only given a
DEVICE argument) it prints out the existing block size and block count
derived from two sources. These two sources are a block descriptor in the
response to a MODE SENSE command and the response to a READ CAPACITY command.
The reason for this double check is to detect a "format corrupt" state (see
the NOTES section). This usage will not modify the disk.
When this utility is used with the "--format" (or "-F") option it will
attempt to format the given DEVICE. In the absence of the --quick
option there is a 15 second pause during which time the user is invited
thrice (5 seconds apart) to abort sg_format. This occurs just prior the SCSI
FORMAT UNIT command being issued. See the NOTES section for more information.
Protection information (PI) is optional and is made up of one or more
protection intervals, each made up of 8 bytes associated with a logical
block. When PI is active each logical block will have 1, 2, 4, 8, etc
protection intervals (i.e. a power of two), interleaved with (and following)
the user data to which they refer. Four protection types are defined with
protection type 0 being no protection intervals. See the PROTECTION
INFORMATION section below for more information.
When the --tape=FM option is given then the SCSI FORMAT MEDIUM
command is sent to the DEVICE. FORMAT MEDIUM is defined in the SSC
documents at T10 and prepares a volume for use. That may include
partitioning the medium. See the section below on TAPE for more information.
OPTIONS
Arguments to long options are mandatory for short options as well.
The options are arranged in alphabetical order based on the long
option name.
- -C, --cmplst={0|1}
-
sets the CMPLST ("complete list") bit in the FORMAT UNIT cdb to 0 or 1.
If the value is 0 then the existing GLIST (grown list) is taken into account.
If the value is 1 then the existing GLIST is ignored. CMPLST defaults to 1
apart from when the --ffmt=FFMT option's value is non-zero in which
case CMPLST defaults to 0. See the LISTS section below. In most cases this
bit should be left at its default value.
- -c, --count=COUNT
-
where COUNT is the number of blocks to be formatted or media to be
resized to. Can be used with either --format or --resize.
With --format this option need not be given in which case it is
assumed to be zero.
With --format the interpretation of COUNT is:
(COUNT > 0) : only format the first COUNT blocks and READ
CAPACITY will report COUNT blocks after format
(COUNT = 0) and block size unchanged : use existing block count
(COUNT = 0) and block size changed : recommended maximum block
count for new block size
(COUNT = -1) : use recommended maximum block count
(COUNT < -1) : illegal
With --resize this option must be given and COUNT has this
interpretation:
(COUNT > 0) : after resize READ CAPACITY will report COUNT
blocks
(COUNT = 0) : after resize READ CAPACITY will report 0 blocks
(COUNT = -1) : after resize READ CAPACITY will report its
maximum number of blocks
(COUNT < -1) : illegal
In both cases if the given COUNT exceeds the maximum number of
blocks (for the block size) then the disk reports an error.
See NOTES section below.
- -D, --dcrt
-
this option sets the DCRT bit in the FORMAT UNIT command's parameter list
header. It will "disable certification". Certification verifies that blocks
are usable during the format process. Using this option may speed the format.
The default action of this utility (i.e. when this option is not given) is
to clear the DCRT bit thereby requesting "media certification". When the DCRT
bit is set, the FOV bit must also be set hence sg_format does that.
- -d, --dry-run
-
this option will parse the command line, do all the preparation but bypass
the actual FORMAT UNIT or FORMAT MEDIUM commands. Also if the options would
cause the logical block size to change, then the MODE SELECT command that
would do that is also bypassed when the dry run option is given.
- -e, --early
-
during a format operation, The default action of this utility is to poll the
disk every 60 seconds (or every 10 seconds if FFMT is non-zero) to
determine the progress of the format operation until it is finished. When this
option is given this utility will exit "early", that is as soon as the format
operation has commenced. Then the user can monitor the progress of the ongoing
format operation with other utilities (e.g. sg_turs(8) or sg_requests(8)).
This option and --wait are mutually exclusive.
- -t, --ffmt=FFMT
-
FFMT (fast format) is placed in a field of the same name in the FORMAT
UNIT cdb. The field was introduced in SBC-4 revision 10. The default value
is 0 which implies the former action which is typically to overwrite all
blocks on the DEVICE. That can take a long time (e.g. with hard disks
over 10 TB in size that can be days). With FFMT set that time may be
reduced to minutes. So it is worth trying if it is available.
FFMT has values 1 and 2 for fast format with 3 being reserved
currently. These two values include this description: "The device server
initializes the medium ... without overwriting the medium (i.e. resources
for managing medium access are initialized and the medium is not written)".
The difference between 1 and 2 concerns read operations on LBAs to which no
data has been written to, after the fast format. When FFMT is 1 the
read operation should return "unspecified logical block data" and complete
without error. When FFMT is 2 the read operation may yield check
condition status with a sense key set to hardware error, medium error or
command aborted. See SBC-4 revision 15 section 4.35 for more details.
- -f, --fmtpinfo=FPI
-
sets the FMTPINFO field in the FORMAT UNIT cdb to a value between 0 and 3.
The default value is 0. The FMTPINFO field from SBC-3 revision 16 is a 2
bit field (bits 7 and 6 of byte 1 in the cdb). Prior to that revision it was
a single bit field (bit 7 of byte 1 in the cdb) and there was an accompanying
bit called RTO_REQ (bit 6 of byte 1 in the cdb). The deprecated
options "--pinfo" and "--rto-req" represent the older usage. This
option should be used in their place. See the PROTECTION INFORMATION section
below for more information.
- -F, --format
-
issue a SCSI FORMAT UNIT command.
This will destroy all the data held on the media.
This option is required to change the block size of a disk. In the absence
of the --quick option, the user is given a 15 second count down to
ponder the wisdom of doing this, during which time control-C (amongst other
Unix commands) can be used to kill this process before it does any damage.
When used three times (or more) the preliminary MODE SENSE and SELECT
commands are bypassed, leaving only the initial INQUIRY and FORMAT UNIT
commands. This is for emergency use (e.g. when the MODE SENSE/SELECT
commands are not working) and cannot change the logical block size.
See NOTES section for implementation details and EXAMPLES section for typical
use.
- -h, --help
-
print out the usage information then exit.
- -I, --ip-def
-
sets the default Initialization Pattern. Some disks (SSDs) use this to flag
that a format should fully provision (i.e. associate a physical block with
every logical block). The same disks (SSDs) might thin provision if this
option is not given. If this option is given then the --security
option cannot be given. Also accepts --ip_def for this option.
- -l, --long
-
the default action of this utility is to assume 32 bit logical block
addresses. With 512 byte block size this permits more than 2
terabytes (almost 2 ** 41 bytes) on a single disk. This option selects
commands and parameters that allow for 64 bit logical block addresses.
Specifically this option sets the "longlba" flag in the MODE SENSE (10)
command and uses READ CAPACITY (16) rather than READ CAPACITY (10). If this
option is not given and READ CAPACITY (10) or MODE SELECT detects a disk
the needs more than 32 bits to represent its logical blocks then it is
set internally. This option does not set the LONGLIST bit in the FORMAT UNIT
command. The LONGLIST bit is set as required depending other
parameters (e.g. when '--pie=PIE' is greater than zero).
- -M, --mode=MP
-
MP is a mode page number (0 to 62 inclusive) that will be used for
reading and perhaps changing the device logical block size. The default
is 1 which is the Read-Write Error Recovery mode page.
Preferably the chosen (or default) mode page should be saveable (i.e.
accept the SP bit set in the MODE SELECT command used when the logical
block size is being changed). Recent version of this utility will retry a
MODE SELECT if the SP=1 variant fails with a sense key of ILLEGAL REQUEST.
That retry will use the same MODE SELECT command but with SP=0 .
- -P, --pfu=PFU
-
sets the "Protection Field Usage" field in the parameter block associated
with a FORMAT UNIT command to PFU. The default value is 0, the only
other defined value currently is 1. See the PROTECTION INFORMATION section
below for more information.
- -q, --pie=PIE
-
sets the "Protection Interval Exponent" field in the parameter block
associated with a FORMAT UNIT command to PIE. The default value is 0.
PIE can only be non-zero with protection types 2 and 3.
The value of 0 is typical for 512 byte blocks; with 4096 byte blocks a value
of 3 may be appropriate (i.e. 8 protection intervals interleaved with 4096
bytes of user data). A device may not support any non-zero values. This
field first appeared in SBC-3 revision 18.
- -p, --pinfo
-
this option is deprecated, use the --fmtpinfo=FPI option instead.
If used, then it sets bit 7 of byte 1 in the FORMAT UNIT cdb and that
is equivalent to setting --fmtpinfo=2. [So if --pinfo is
used (plus --fmtpinfo=FPI and --pfu=PFU are not given or
their arguments are 0) then protection type 1 is selected.]
- -x, --poll=PT
-
where PT is the type of poll used. If PT is 0 then a TEST UNIT
READY command is used, otherwise a REQUEST SENSE command is used. The
default is currently 0 but this will change to 1 in the near future. See
the NOTES sections below.
- -Q, --quick
-
the default action (i.e. when the option is not given) is to give the user
15 seconds to reconsider doing a format operation on the DEVICE.
When this option is given that step (i.e. the 15 second warning period)
is skipped.
- -r, --resize
-
rather than format the disk, it can be resized. This means changing the
number of blocks on the device reported by the READ CAPACITY command.
This option should be used with the --count=COUNT option.
The contents of all logical blocks on the media remain unchanged when
this option is used. This means that any resize operation can be
reversed. This option cannot be used together with either --format
or a --size=LB_SZ whose argument is different to the existing block
size.
- -R, --rto_req
-
The option is deprecated, use the --fmtpinfo=FPI option instead.
If used, then it sets bit 6 of byte 1 in the FORMAT UNIT cdb.
- -S, --security
-
sets the "Security Initialization" (SI) bit in the FORMAT UNIT command's
initialization pattern descriptor within the parameter list. According
to SBC-3 the default initialization pattern "shall be written using a
security erasure write technique". See the NOTES section on the SCSI
SANITIZE command. If this option is given then the --ip_def option
cannot be given.
- -6, --six
-
Use 6 byte variants of MODE SENSE and MODE SELECT. The default action
is to use the 10 byte variants. Some MO drives need this option set
when doing a format.
- -s, --size=LB_SZ
-
where LB_SZ is the logical block size (i.e. number of user bytes in each
block) to format the device to. The default value is whatever is currently
reported by the block descriptor in a MODE SENSE command. If the block size
given by this option is different from the current value then a MODE SELECT
command is used to change it prior to the FORMAT UNIT command being
started (as recommended in the SBC standards). Some SCSI disks have 512 byte
logical blocks by default and allow an alternate logical block size of 4096
bytes. If the given size in unacceptable to the disk, most likely an "Invalid
field in parameter list" message will appear in sense data (requires the
use of '-v' to decode sense data).
Note that formatting a disk to add or remove protection information is not
regarded as a change to its logical block size so this option should not
be used.
- -T, --tape=FM
-
will send a FORMAT MEDIUM command to the DEVICE with its FORMAT field
set to FM. This option is used to prepare a tape (i.e. the "medium")
in a tape drive for use. Values for FM include 0 to do the "default"
format; 1 to partition a volume and 2 to do a default format then partition.
- -m, --timeout=SECS
-
where SECS is the FORMAT UNIT or FORMAT MEDIUM command timeout in
seconds. SECS will only be used if it exceeds the internal timeout
which is 20 seconds if the IMMED bit is set and 72000 seconds (20 hours)
or higher if the IMMED bit is not set. If the disk size exceeds 4 TB then
the timeout value is increased to 144000 seconds (40 hours). And if it is
greater than 8 TB then the timeout value is increased to 288000 seconds (80
hours). If the timeout is exceeded then the operating system will typically
abort the command. Aborting a command may escalate to a LUN reset (or
worse). A timeout may also leave the disk or tape format operation
incomplete. And that may result in the disk or tape being in a "format
corrupt" state requiring another format to remedy the situation. So for
various reasons timeouts are best avoided.
- -v, --verbose
-
increase the level of verbosity, (i.e. debug output). "-vvv" gives
a lot more debug output.
- -y, --verify
-
set the VERIFY bit in the FORMAT MEDIUM cdb. The default is that the VERIFY
bit is clear. This option is only appropriate for tapes.
- -V, --version
-
print the version string and then exit.
- -w, --wait
-
the default format action is to set the "IMMED" bit in the FORMAT UNIT
command's (short) parameter header. If this option (i.e. --wait) is
given then the "IMMED" bit is not set. If --wait is given then the
FORMAT UNIT or FORMAT MEDIUM command waits until the format operation
completes before returning its response. This can be many hours on large
disks. See the --timeout=SECS option.
LISTS
The SBC-3 draft (revision 20) defines PLIST, CLIST, DLIST and GLIST in
section 4.10 on "Medium defects". Briefly, the PLIST is the "primary"
list of manufacturer detected defects, the CLIST ("certification" list)
contains those detected during the format operation, the DLIST is a list of
defects that can be given to the format operation. The GLIST is the grown
list which starts in the format process as CLIST+DLIST and can "grow" later
due to automatic reallocation (see the ARRE and AWRE bits in the
Read-Write Error Recovery mode page (see sdparm(8))) and use of the
SCSI REASSIGN BLOCKS command (see sg_reassign(8)).
By the SBC-3 standard (following draft revision 36) the CLIST and DLIST
had been removed, leaving PLIST and GLIST. Only PLIST and GLIST are found
in the SBC-4 drafts.
The CMPLST bit (controlled by the --cmplst=0|1 option) determines
whether the existing GLIST, when the format operation is invoked,
is taken into account. The sg_format utility sets the FOV bit to zero
which causes DPRY=0, so the PLIST is taken into account, and DCRT=0, so
the CLIST is generated and used during the format process.
The sg_format utility does not permit a user to provide a defect
list (i.e. DLIST).
PROTECTION INFORMATION
Protection Information (PI) is additional information held with logical
blocks so that an application and/or host bus adapter can check the
correctness of those logical blocks. PI is placed in one or more
protection intervals interleaved in each logical block. Each protection
interval follows the user data to which it refers. A protection interval
contains 8 bytes made up of a 2 byte "logical block guard" (CRC), a 2
byte "logical block application guard", and a 4 byte "logical block
reference tag". Devices with 512 byte logical block size typically have
one protection interval appended, making its logical block data 520 bytes
long. Devices with 4096 byte logical block size often have 8 protection
intervals spread across its logical block data for a total size of 4160
bytes. Note that for all other purposes the logical block size is considered
to be 512 and 4096 bytes respectively.
The SBC-3 standard have added several "protection types" to the PI
introduced in the SBC-2 standard. SBC-3 defines 4 protection types (types
0 to 3) with protection type 0 meaning no PI is maintained. While a device
may support one or more protection types, it can only be formatted with 1
of the 4. To change a device's protection type, it must be re-formatted.
For more information see the Protection Information in section 4.22 of
draft SBC-4 revision 15.
A device that supports PI information (i.e. supports one or more protection
types 1, 2 and 3) sets the "PROTECT" bit in its standard INQUIRY response. It
also sets the SPT field in the EXTENDED INQUIRY VPD page response to indicate
which protection types it supports. Given PROTECT=1 then SPT=0 implies the
device supports PI type 1 only, SPT=1 implies the device supports PI types 1
and 2, and various other non-obvious mappings up to SPT=7 which implies
protection types 1, 2 and 3 are supported. The
current
protection type of a disk can be found in the "P_TYPE" and "PROT_EN"
fields in the response of a READ CAPACITY (16) command (e.g. with
the 'sg_readcap --long' utility).
Given that a device supports a particular protection type, a user can
then choose to format that disk with that protection type by setting
the "FMTPINFO" and "Protection Field Usage" fields in the FORMAT UNIT
command. Those fields correspond to the --fmtpinfo=FPI and the
--pfu=PFU options in this utility. The list below shows the four
protection types followed by the options of this utility needed to select
them:
0 : --fmtpinfo=0 --pfu=0
1 : --fmtpinfo=2 --pfu=0
2 : --fmtpinfo=3 --pfu=0
3 : --fmtpinfo=3 --pfu=1
The default value of FPI (in --fmtpinfo=FPI) is 0 and the
default value of PFU (in --pfu=PFU) is 0. So if neither
--fmtpinfo=FPI nor --pfu=PFU are given then protection
type 0 (i.e. no protection information) is chosen.
NOTES
After a format that changes the logical block size or the number of logical
blocks on a disk, the operating system may need to be told to re-initialize
its setting for that disk. In Linux that can be done with:
echo 1 > /sys/block/sd{letter(s)}/device/rescan
where "letter(s)" will be between 'a' and 'zzz'. The lsscsi utility in Linux
can be used to check the various namings of a disk.
The SBC-2 standard states that the REQUEST SENSE command should be used
for obtaining progress indication when the format command is underway.
However, tests on a selection of disks shows that TEST UNIT READY
commands yield progress indications (but not REQUEST SENSE commands). So
the current version of this utility defaults to using TEST UNIT READY
commands to poll the disk to find out the progress of the format. The
--poll=PT option has been added to control this.
When the --format option is given without the --wait option
then the SCSI FORMAT UNIT command is issued with the IMMED bit set which
causes the SCSI command to return after it has started the format operation.
The --early option will cause sg_format to exit at that point.
Otherwise the DEVICE is polled every 60 seconds or every 10 seconds
if FFMT is non-zero. The poll is with TEST UNIT READY or REQUEST SENSE
commands until one reports an "all clear" (i.e. the format operation has
completed). Normally these polling commands will result in a progress
indicator (expressed as a percentage) being output to the screen. If the user
gets bored watching the progress report then sg_format process can be
terminated (e.g. with control-C) without affecting the format operation
which continues. However a target or device reset (or a power cycle) will
probably cause the device to become "format corrupt".
When the --format (or --tape) and --wait options are
both given then this utility may take a long time to return. In this case
care should be taken not to send any other SCSI commands to the disk as it
may not respond leaving those commands queued behind the active format
command. This may cause a timeout in the OS driver (in a lot shorter period
than 20 hours applicable to some format operations). This may result in the
OS resetting the disk leaving the format operation incomplete. This may leave
the disk in a "format corrupt" state requiring another format to remedy
the situation. Modern SCSI devices should yield a "not ready" sense key
with an additional sense indicating a format is in progress. With older
devices the user should take precautions that nothing attempts to access
a device while it is being formatted.
When the block size (i.e. the number of bytes in each block) is changed
on a disk two SCSI commands must be sent: a MODE SELECT to change the block
size followed by a FORMAT command. If the MODE SELECT command succeeds and
the FORMAT fails then the disk may be in a state that the standard
calls "format corrupt". A block descriptor in a subsequent MODE SENSE
will report the requested new block size while a READ CAPACITY command
will report the existing (i.e. previous) block size. Alternatively
the READ CAPACITY command may fail, reporting the device is not ready,
potentially requiring a format. The solution to this situation is to
do a format again (and this time the new block size does not have to
be given) or change the block size back to the original size.
The SBC-2 standard states that the block count can be set back to the
manufacturer's maximum recommended value in a format or resize operation.
This can be done by placing an address of 0xffffffff (or the 64 bit
equivalent) in the appropriate block descriptor field to a MODE SELECT
command. In signed (two's complement) arithmetic that value corresponds
to '-1'. So a --count=-1 causes the block count to be set back to
the manufacturer's maximum recommended value. To see exactly which SCSI
commands are being executed and parameters passed add the "-vvv" option to
the sg_format command line.
The FMTDATA field shown in the FORMAT UNIT cdb does not have a corresponding
option in this utility. When set in the cdb it indicates an additional
parameter list will be sent to the DEVICE along with the cdb. It is set
as required, basically when any field in the parameter list header is set.
Short stroking is a technique to trade off capacity for performance on
hard disks. "Hard" disk is often used to mean a storage device with
spinning platters which contain the user data. Solid State Disk (SSD) is
the newer form of storage device that contains no moving parts. Hard disk
performance is usually highest on the outer tracks (usually the lower logical
block addresses) so by resizing or reformatting a disk to a smaller capacity,
average performance will usually be increased.
Other utilities may be useful in finding information associated with
formatting. These include sg_inq(8) to fetch standard INQUIRY
information (e.g. the PROTECT bit) and to fetch the EXTENDED INQUIRY
VPD page (e.g. RTO and GRD_CHK bits). The sdparm(8) utility can be
used to access and potentially change the now obsolete format mode page.
scsiformat is another utility available for formatting SCSI disks
with Linux. It dates from 1997 (most recent update) and may be useful for
disks whose firmware is of that vintage.
The COUNT numeric argument may include a multiplicative suffix or be
given in hexadecimal. See the "NUMERIC ARGUMENTS" section in the
sg3_utils(8) man page.
The SCSI SANITIZE command was introduced in SBC-3 revision 27. It is closely
related to the ATA sanitize disk feature set and can be used to remove all
existing data from a disk. Sanitize is more likely to be implemented on
modern disks (including SSDs) than FORMAT UNIT's security initialization
feature (see the --security option) and in some cases much faster.
SSDs that support thin provisioning will typically unmap all logical blocks
during a format. The reason is to improve the SSD's endurance. Also thin
provisioned formats typically complete faster than fully provisioned ones
on the same disk (see the --ip_def option). In either case format
operations on SSDs tend to be a lot faster than they are on hard disks with
spinning media.
TAPE
Tape system use a variant of the FORMAT UNIT command used on disks. Tape
systems use the FORMAT MEDIUM command which is simpler with only three
fields in the cdb typically used. Apart from sharing the same opcode the
cdbs of FORMAT UNIT and FORMAT MEDIUM are quite different. FORMAT MEDIUM's
fields are VERIFY, IMMED and FORMAT (with TRANSFER LENGTH always set to 0).
The VERIFY bit field is set with the --verify option. The IMMED bit
is manipulated by the --wait option in the same way it is for disks;
one difference is that if the --poll=PT option is not given then it
defaults to PT of 1 which means the poll is done with REQUEST SENSE
commands.
The argument given to the --tape=FM option is used to set the FORMAT
field. FM can take values from "-1" to "15" where "-1" (the default)
means don't do a tape format; value "8" to "15" are for vendor specific
formats. The --early option may also be used to set the IMMED
bit and then exit this utility (rather than poll periodically until it is
finished). In this case the tape drive will still be busy doing the format
for some time but, according to T10, should still respond in full to the
INQUIRY and REPORT LUNS commands. Other commands (including REQUEST SENSE)
should yield a "not ready" sense key with an additional sense code
of "Logical unit not ready, format in progress". Additionally REQUEST SENSE
should contain a progress indication in its sense data.
When FM is 1 or 2 then the settings in the Medium partition mode page
control the partitioning. That mode page can be viewed and modified with the
sdparm utility.
Prior to invoking this utility the tape may need to be positioned to the
beginning of partition 0. In Linux that can typically be done with the mt
utility (e.g. 'mt -f /dev/st0 rewind').
EXAMPLES
These examples use Linux device names. For suitable device names in
other supported Operating Systems see the sg3_utils(8) man page.
In the first example below simply find out the existing block count and
size derived from two sources: a block descriptor in a MODE SELECT command
response and from the response of a READ CAPACITY commands. No changes
are made:
# sg_format /dev/sdm
Now a simple format, leaving the block count and size as they were previously.
The FORMAT UNIT command is executed in IMMED mode and the device is polled
every 60 seconds to print out a progress indication:
# sg_format --format /dev/sdm
Now the same format, but waiting (passively) until the format operation is
complete:
# sg_format --format --wait /dev/sdm
Next is a format in which the block size is changed to 520 bytes and the block
count is set to the manufacturer's maximum value (for that block size). Note,
not all disks support changing the block size:
# sg_format --format --size=520 /dev/sdm
Now a resize operation so that only the first 0x10000 (65536) blocks on a disk
are accessible. The remaining blocks remain unaltered.
# sg_format --resize --count=0x10000 /dev/sdm
Now resize the disk back to its normal (maximum) block count:
# sg_format --resize --count=-1 /dev/sdm
One reason to format a SCSI disk is to add protection information. First
check which protection types are supported by a disk (by checking the SPT
field in the Extended inquiry VPD page together with the Protect bit in the
standard inquiry response):
# sg_vpd -p ei -l /dev/sdb
extended INQUIRY data VPD page:
ACTIVATE_MICROCODE=0
SPT=1 [protection types 1 and 2 supported]
....
Format with type 1 protection:
# sg_format --format --fmtpinfo=2 /dev/sdm
After a successful format with type 1 protection, READ CAPACITY(16)
should show something like this:
# sg_readcap -l /dev/sdm
Read Capacity results:
Protection: prot_en=1, p_type=0, p_i_exponent=0 [type 1 protection]
Logical block provisioning: lbpme=0, lbprz=0
....
To format with type 3 protection:
# sg_format --format --fmtpinfo=3 --pfu=1 /dev/sdm
For the disk shown above this will probably fail because the Extended inquiry
VPD page showed only types 1 and 2 protection are supported.
Here are examples of using fast format (FFMT field in FORMAT UNIT cdb) to
quickly switch between 512 and 4096 byte logical block size. Assume disk
starts with 4096 byte logical block size and all important data has been
backed up.
# sg_format --format --ffmt=1 --size=512 /dev/sdd
Now /dev/sdd should have 512 byte logical block size. And to switch it back:
# sg_format --format --ffmt=1 --size=4096 /dev/sdd
EXIT STATUS
The exit status of sg_format is 0 when it is successful. Otherwise see
the sg3_utils(8) man page. Unless the --wait option is given, the
exit status may not reflect the success of otherwise of the format.
Using sg_turs(8) and sg_readcap(8) after the format operation may be wise.
AUTHORS
Written by Grant Grundler, James Bottomley and Douglas Gilbert.
REPORTING BUGS
Report bugs to <dgilbert at interlog dot com>.
COPYRIGHT
Copyright © 2005-2018 Grant Grundler, James Bottomley and Douglas Gilbert
This software is distributed under the GPL version 2. There is NO
warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE.
SEE ALSO
sg_turs(8), sg_requests(8), sg_inq(8), sg_modes(8), sg_vpd(8),
sg_reassign(8), sg_readcap(8), sg3_utils(8),
sg_sanitize(8) [all in sg3_utils],
lsscsi(8), mt(mt-st), sdparm(8), scsiformat (old), hdparm(8)
Index
- NAME
-
- SYNOPSIS
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- OPTIONS
-
- LISTS
-
- PROTECTION INFORMATION
-
- NOTES
-
- TAPE
-
- EXAMPLES
-
- EXIT STATUS
-
- AUTHORS
-
- REPORTING BUGS
-
- COPYRIGHT
-
- SEE ALSO
-
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Time: 01:45:45 GMT, September 12, 2018