1SG_START(8)                        SG3_UTILS                       SG_START(8)
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NAME

6       sg_start  -  send  SCSI  START  STOP UNIT command: start, stop, load or
7       eject medium
8

SYNOPSIS

10       sg_start  [0]  [1]  [--eject]  [--help]  [--fl=FL]  [--immed]  [--load]
11       [--loej]  [--mod=PC_MOD]  [--noflush]  [--pc=PC] [--readonly] [--start]
12       [--stop] [--verbose] [--version] DEVICE
13
14       sg_start  [--eject]  [--fl=FL]  [-i]  [--imm=0|1]   [--load]   [--loej]
15       [--mod=PC_MOD]  [--noflush] [--pc=PC] [-r] [--start] [--stop] [-v] [-V]
16       [0|1] DEVICE
17

DESCRIPTION

19       sg_start sends a SCSI START STOP UNIT command to the  DEVICE  with  the
20       selected  options. The most used options are --stop to spin down a disk
21       and --start to spin up a disk. Using --start on a disk that is  already
22       spinning  is  harmless.  There  is also finer grain control with "power
23       condition": active, idle or standby.  This  is  set  with  the  --pc=PC
24       option.  In  some  contexts the "stop" state can be considered an addi‐
25       tional power condition.
26
27       Devices that contain removable media such as cd/dvds can use the --loej
28       option  to  load the medium when used in conjunction with --start (i.e.
29       load medium then spin up). Alternatively --loej may be  used  to  eject
30       the  medium  when  used in conjunction with --stop (i.e. spin down then
31       eject medium). More simply, the loading  or  ejecting  of  a  removable
32       medium can be requested with the --load or --eject' option.
33
34       If  no  option  or  argument is given then a --start is assumed; as the
35       utility's name suggests.
36
37       This utility supports two command line syntaxes, the preferred  one  is
38       shown first in the synopsis and explained in this section. A later sec‐
39       tion on the old command  line  syntax  outlines  the  second  group  of
40       options.
41

OPTIONS

43       Arguments to long options are mandatory for short options as well.
44
45       0      same action as --stop.
46
47       1      same action as --start.
48
49       -e, --eject
50              stop  the  medium  and eject it from the drive. Only appropriate
51              for a device with  removable  medium.  Might  be  ignored  (pre‐
52              vented), see below.
53
54       -h, --help
55              print out the usage message then exit.
56
57       -f, --fl=FL
58              sets  the format layer number for the disc to "jump" to (defined
59              in MMC-5).  Values of FL can be 0 to 3. When this option is cho‐
60              sen,  the FL, LoEj and Start bits are set in the cdb as required
61              by MMC-5; thus the user does not need to set the --start  and/or
62              --load options.
63
64       -i, --immed
65              sets  the IMM bit on the START STOP UNIT command so this utility
66              will return immediately and not wait for the media  to  complete
67              the  requested action. The default is to wait until the media to
68              complete the requested action before returning.
69
70       -l, --load
71              load the medium in the drive and start it. Only appropriate  for
72              a removable medium.
73
74       -L, --loej
75              sets the LOEJ bit on the START STOP UNIT command. This loads the
76              media when the unit is started or eject  it  when  the  unit  is
77              stopped (i.e.  works in conjunction with START bit in cdb). This
78              option is ignored if 'pc >  0'.   Default  is  off  (i.e.  don't
79              attempt  to load or eject media). If a start/start indication is
80              not given (i.e. neither --start nor --stop) and this  option  is
81              given then a load and start action is assumed.
82
83       -m, --mod=PC_MOD
84              where  PC_MOD  is  the 'power condition modifier' value. 0 to 15
85              (inclusive) are valid and 0 is the default. This  'power  condi‐
86              tion modifier' field in the cdb was added after sbc3r13.
87
88       -n, --noflush
89              do  not  perform  a  flush to media (e.g. like SYNCHRONIZE CACHE
90              does) before a variant of this utility that limits access to the
91              media.  Using  the --stop option is an example of something that
92              limits access to the media. This 'noflush' field in the cdb  was
93              added after sbc3r13.
94
95       -O, --old
96              switch to older style options.
97
98       -p, --pc=PC
99              where  PC  is  the 'power conditions' value. 0 to 15 (inclusive)
100              are valid.  Default value is  0.  When  '--pc=0'  then  --eject,
101              --load,  --loej, --start and --stop are active. Some common val‐
102              ues are 1 for the "active" power condition (SBC); 2 for the idle
103              power  condition; 3 for the standby power condition; 5 for sleep
104              power condition (MMC); 7 for LU_CONTROL (SBC), 0xa (decimal  10)
105              for  FORCE_IDLE_0 (SBC) and 0xb (decimal 11) for FORCE_STANDBY_0
106              (SBC). See recent SBC-3, MMC-5 and SAS drafts at www.t10.org for
107              more information.
108
109       -r, --readonly
110              open  the  DEVICE  in read-only mode. Maybe required in Linux to
111              stop a nuisance spin-up if the DEVICE is an ATA disk.  The  nui‐
112              sance  spin-up may occur at the end of this command negating the
113              effect of the --stop option.
114
115       -s, --start
116              start (spin-up) the DEVICE. This sets the START bit in the  cdb.
117              Using  this  option on an already started device is harmless. In
118              the absence of other options, this option defaults (i.e. set the
119              START cdb bit).
120
121       -S, --stop
122              stop  (spin-down)  the  DEVICE. This clears the START bit in the
123              cdb.
124
125       -v, --verbose
126              increase the level of verbosity. Can be used multiple times.
127
128       -V, --version
129              print out version string then exit.
130

NOTES

132       To avoid confusion, only one of  0,  1  --eject,  --load,  --start  and
133       --stop should be given.
134
135       There  is  an  associated  "power  condition" mode page (0x1a) in which
136       timer values can be set for transitioning to  either  idle  or  standby
137       state  after  a period of inactivity. The sdparm utility can be used to
138       view the power condition mode page and if  required  change  it.  If  a
139       DEVICE  is  in  either  idle  or  standby  power condition state then a
140       REQUEST SENSE command (see the  sg_requests  utility)  should  yield  a
141       sense key of "no sense" and an additional sense code of "Low power con‐
142       dition on" on recent SCSI devices.
143
144       Ejection of removable media (e.g. 'sg_start --eject /dev/hdd' where the
145       DEVICE  is an ATAPI cd/dvd drive) may be prevented by a prior SCSI PRE‐
146       VENT ALLOW MEDIUM REMOVAL command (see sg_prevent). In this  case  this
147       utility  should  fail  with  an  error generated by the device: illegal
148       request / medium  removal  prevented.  This  can  be  overridden  using
149       sg_prevent or, for example, 'sdparm --command=unlock /dev/hdd'.
150
151       The  SCSI  TEST  UNIT  READY  command can be used to find out whether a
152       DEVICE is ready to transfer data. If rotating media is stopped or still
153       coming  up to speed, then the TEST UNIT READY command will yield a "not
154       ready" sense key and an more informative additional sense code. See the
155       sg_turs utility.
156
157       In  the  2.4  series of Linux kernels the DEVICE must be a SCSI generic
158       (sg) device. In the 2.6 series block devices (e.g. SCSI disks  and  DVD
159       drives)  can  also be specified. For example "sg_start 0 /dev/sda" will
160       work in the 2.6 series kernels.
161
162       In the Linux 2.6 series, especially with ATA disks, using this  utility
163       to  stop  (spin down) a disk may not be sufficient and other mechanisms
164       will start the disk again some time later. The user might  additionally
165       mark    the    disk    as    "offline"    with    'echo    offline    >
166       /sys/block/sda/device/state' where sda is the block name of  the  disk.
167       To restart the disk "offline" can be replaced with "running". Note that
168       once the 'state' is set to offline, no SCSI commands can be sent to the
169       device  until  it  is  set  back to running. Also stopping a disk via a
170       pass-through interface (e.g. /dev/sg1 or /dev/bsg/1:0:0:0)  may  reduce
171       unwanted  side  effects  (such as restarting it again when this utility
172       completes).
173

EXIT STATUS

175       The exit status of sg_start is 0 when it is successful.  Otherwise  see
176       the sg3_utils(8) man page.
177

OLDER COMMAND LINE OPTIONS

179       The  options  in  this  section  were  the only ones available prior to
180       sg3_utils version 1.23 . In sg3_utils  version  1.23  and  later  these
181       older  options can be selected by either setting the SG3_UTILS_OLD_OPTS
182       environment variable or using '--old' (or '-O) as the first option.
183
184       Note that the action of --loej  is  slightly  different  in  the  older
185       interface:  when  neither --start nor --stop (nor proxies for them) are
186       given, --loej performs an eject operation. In the  same  situation  the
187       newer interface will perform a load operation.
188
189       Earlier versions of sg_start had a '-s' option to perform a SYNCHRONIZE
190       CACHE command before the START STOP UNIT command was issued.  According
191       to  recent  SBC-2 drafts this is done implicitly if required. Hence the
192       '-s' option has been dropped.
193
194       All options, other than '-v' and '-V', can be given with a single  "-".
195       For  example:  "sg_start -stop /dev/sda" and "sg_start --stop /dev/sda"
196       are equivalent. The single "-" form is for backward compatibility.
197
198       0      stop (spin-down) DEVICE.
199
200       1      start (spin-up) DEVICE.
201
202       --eject
203              stop the medium and eject it from the drive.
204
205       --fl=FL
206              sets the format layer number for the disc to "jump" to  (defined
207              in MMC-5).
208
209       -i     sets  the IMM bit on the START STOP UNIT command so this utility
210              will return immediately and not wait for the media to spin down.
211              Same  effect  as  '--imm=1'.  The  default  action (without this
212              option or a '--imm=1' option) is to wait until the  media  spins
213              down before returning.
214
215       --imm=0|1
216              when  the  immediate  bit is 1 then this utility returns immedi‐
217              ately after the DEVICE  has  received  the  command.  When  this
218              option is 0 (the default) then the utility returns once the com‐
219              mand has completed its action (i.e. it waits until the device is
220              started or stopped).
221
222       --load load the medium in the drive and start it.
223
224       --loej sets  the  LOEJ  bit  in the START STOP UNIT cdb. When a "start"
225              operation is indicated, then a load and start is performed. When
226              a  "stop"  operation is indicated, then a stop and eject is per‐
227              formed. When neither a "start" or "stop" operation is  indicated
228              does  a  stop and eject. [Note that the last action differs from
229              the new interface in which the option of this name  defaults  to
230              load and start.]
231
232       -N     switch to the newer style options.
233
234       --mod=PC_MOD
235              where  PC_MOD  is  the 'power condition modifier' value. 0 to 15
236              (inclusive) are valid and 0 is the default. This field was added
237              after sbc3r13.
238
239       --noflush
240              do  not  perform  a  flush to media (e.g. like SYNCHRONIZE CACHE
241              does) before a variant of this utility that limits access to the
242              media.  Using  the --stop option is an example of something that
243              limits access to the media. This field was added after sbc3r13.
244
245       --pc=PC
246              where PC is the 'power condition' value (in hex). 0 to f (inclu‐
247              sive) are valid. Default value is 0.
248
249       -r     see the --readonly option above. May be useful for ATA disks.
250
251       --start
252              start (spin-up) DEVICE.
253
254       --stop stop (spin-down) DEVICE. Same meaning as "0" argument.
255
256       -v     verbose: outputs SCSI command in hex to console before with exe‐
257              cuting it. '-vv' and '-vvv' are also accepted  yielding  greater
258              verbosity.
259
260       -V     print out version string then exit.
261

AUTHOR

263       Written by K. Garloff and D. Gilbert
264

REPORTING BUGS

266       Report bugs to <dgilbert at interlog dot com>.
267
269       Copyright © 2002-2012 Kurt Garloff, Douglas Gilbert
270       This  software is distributed under the GPL version 2. There is NO war‐
271       ranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR  A  PARTICULAR  PUR‐
272       POSE.
273

SEE ALSO

275       sg_prevent(sg3_utils),    sg_requests(sg3_utils),    sg_turs(sg3_utils)
276       sdparm(sdparm)
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280sg3_utils-1.35                   November 2012                     SG_START(8)
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