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SG_IDENT(8)			   SG3_UTILS			   SG_IDENT(8)

NAME
       sg_ident	- send SCSI REPORT/SET IDENTIFYING INFORMATION command

SYNOPSIS
       sg_ident	 [--ascii]  [--clear]  [--help]	 [--itype=IT]  [--raw] [--set]
       [--verbose] [--version] DEVICE

DESCRIPTION
       Send a SCSI REPORT IDENTIFYING INFORMATION or SET IDENTIFYING  INFORMA-
       TION command to DEVICE. Prior to	SPC-4 (revision	7) these commands were
       called REPORT DEVICE IDENTIFIER and SET DEVICE IDENTIFIER respectively.
       SCSI devices that support these two commands allow users	to write (set)
       identifying  information	and report it back at some later time. The in-
       formation is persistent (i.e. stored on some non-volatile medium	within
       the SCSI	device that will survive a power outage).

       Typically the space allocated for the  information  is  limited:	 SPC-4
       (revision  7) states that for information type 0, the minimum length is
       64 bytes	and the	maximum	is 512 bytes. For other	information  types  (1
       to  126	inclusive)  the	 maximum length	is 256 bytes. Also information
       types 1 to 126 (inclusive)  should  contain  a  null  terminated	 UTF-8
       string. The author has seen older disks that only support 16 bytes.

       The  default  action  when no options are given is to invoke the	Report
       Identifying Information command with the	information type defaulting to
       zero. Error reports are sent to stderr. By default the  information  is
       shown  in ASCII-HEX (up to 16 bytes per line) with an ASCII representa-
       tion to the right with dots replacing non printable characters.

OPTIONS
       Arguments to long options are mandatory for short options as well.

       -A, --ascii
	      invokes the Report Identifying Information command and  if  any-
	      thing  is	found interprets it as ASCII (or UTF-8 which is	locale
	      dependent) and prints the	information to stdout.

       -C, --clear
	      invokes the Set Identifying Information command with an informa-
	      tion length of zero. This	has the	effect of clearing the	exist-
	      ing information.

       -h, --help
	      output the usage message then exit.

       -i, --itype=IT
	      where  IT	is the information type. Defaults to zero. The maximum
	      value is 127 which is special and	cannot be used with  --set  or
	      --clear.	The  information type of 127 (if supported) causes the
	      REPORT IDENTIFYING INFORMATION command to	respond	with a list of
	      available	information types and their maximum lengths in	bytes.
	      The odd numbered information types between 3 and 125 (inclusive)
	      are not to be used (as they clash	with the SCC-2 standard).

       -r, --raw
	      invokes  the  Report Identifying information command and if any-
	      thing is found sends the information (which may  be  binary)  to
	      stdout. Nothing else is sent to stdout however error reports, if
	      any, are sent to stderr.

       -S, --set
	      first  reads stdin until an EOF is detected then invokes the Set
	      Identifying Information command to set  what  has	 been  fetched
	      from  stdin  as the information. The amount of data read must be
	      between 1	and 512	bytes length (inclusive).

       -v, --verbose
	      increase the level of verbosity, (i.e. debug output).

       -V, --version
	      print the	version	string and then	exit.

       This utility permits users to write their own  identifying  information
       to their	SCSI devices. There are	several	other types of descriptors (or
       designators)  that  the	user cannot change. These include the SCSI IN-
       QUIRY command with  its	standard  vendor  and  product	identification
       strings and the product revision	level; plus the	large amount of	infor-
       mation  provided	 by the	"Device	Identification"	VPD page (see sg_vpd).
       There is	also the READ MEDIA SERIAL NUMBER command (see	sg_rmsn).  The
       MMC-4  command  set for CD and DVDs has a "media	serial number" feature
       (0x109) [and a "logical unit serial  number"  feature].	These  can  be
       viewed with the sg_get_config utility.

EXAMPLES
       First,  to  see if there	is an existing information whose format	is un-
       known (for information type 0), use no options:

	 # sg_ident /dev/sdb
	  00	 31 32 33 34 35	36 37 38  39 30		 1234567890

       If it is	ASCII then it can printed as such:

	 # sg_ident --ascii /dev/sdb
	 1234567890

       The information can be copied to	a file,	cleared	and  then  re-asserted
       with this sequence:

	 # sg_ident --raw /dev/sdb > t
	 # sg_ident --clear /dev/sdb
	 # cat t | sg_ident --set /dev/sdb

EXIT STATUS
       The  exit  status of sg_ident is	0 when it is successful. Otherwise see
       the sg3_utils(8)	man page.

AUTHORS
       Written by Douglas Gilbert.

REPORTING BUGS
       Report bugs to <dgilbert	at interlog dot	com>.

COPYRIGHT
       Copyright (C) 2005-2018 Douglas Gilbert
       This software is	distributed under a BSD-2-Clause license. There	is  NO
       warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PUR-
       POSE.

SEE ALSO
       sg_vpd(sg3_utils), sg_rmsn(sg3_utils), sg_get_config(sg3_utils)

sg3_utils-1.43			  August 2018			   SG_IDENT(8)

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