Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: Low level format?
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers Low level format? Post 23742 by day on Friday 28th of June 2002 07:52:23 AM
Old 06-28-2002
Data hmz

the command newfs doesn't work on my machine Smilie
And the command format is olso unknown for it :\

ps: I have mandrake8.1 linux may be its important to know that..
 

7 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

write() issue during a low level hdd access

Hi, I am trying to write zeroes to the hdd using a c program. I don't want to use the dd or ddrescue or any such inbuilt program because of reasons like real time progress, writing custom patterns. (my program is more like an erasure application, but does only zero fill). here are the steps... (35 Replies)
Discussion started by: sponnusa
35 Replies

2. IP Networking

Best reference for understanding low level info on nic cards drivers and functionality

Hi, What is the best reference that gives in detail on nic cards configuration , assigning multiple ip addresses to a single interface, netlink library etc and all basic stuff at this level..? Thanks (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Gopi Krishna P
2 Replies

3. AIX

High Runqueue (R) LOW CPU LOW I/O Low Network Low memory usage

Hello All I have a system running AIX 61 shared uncapped partition (with 11 physical processors, 24 Virtual 72GB of Memory) . The output from NMON, vmstat show a high run queue (60+) for continous periods of time intervals, but NO paging, relatively low I/o (6000) , CPU % is 40, Low network.... (9 Replies)
Discussion started by: IL-Malti
9 Replies

4. Programming

System calls and C language low-level qualities???

Hi friends, I hope everyone is fine and doing well. I queried in my previous thread about the low-level qualities of C/C++ languages.I really thank you people for explaining, it was really helpful. One more ambiquity that I have in my mind is regarding the unix system calls like open, creat,... (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: gabam
1 Replies

5. Programming

Why is C/C++ considered low-level languages???

Hi friends, I hope everyone is doing well and fine. I have always been hearing that C/C++ are relatively low-level as compared to Java/C# etc. Could you please tell me some low-level qualities of C/C++? And I think disk deframenters are written in C/C++, please correct me if I am wrong. And please... (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: gabam
5 Replies

6. Red Hat

SSL certificate generation on OS level or application level

We have a RHEL 5.8 server at the production level and we have a Java application on this server. I know of the SSL certificate generation at the OS (RHEL) level but it is implemented on the Java application by our development team using the Java keytool. My doubt is that is the SSL generation can... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: RHCE
3 Replies

7. Programming

Low level X11 programming

How to use X11 without Xlib not XCB? How draw window directly on low level? I must use anyway window manager like Motif? I have ridden that X11 has server-client architecture, client send via TCP/IP to port 6000 request for primitives and get replies. Where is detailed description of it? In X11... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: AndrzejB
0 Replies
SG_RESET(8)							     SG3_UTILS							       SG_RESET(8)

NAME
sg_reset - sends SCSI device, target, bus or host reset; or checks reset state SYNOPSIS
sg_reset [-b] [-d] [-h] [-t] [-V] DEVICE DESCRIPTION
The sg_reset utility with no options (just a DEVICE) reports on the reset state (e.g. if a reset is underway) of DEVICE. When given a -d, -t, -b or -h option it requests a device, target, bus or host reset respectively. The ability to reset a SCSI target (often called a "hard reset" at the transport level) was added in linux kernel 2.6.27 . Low level driv- ers that support target reset hopefully reset a logical unit only when given the device reset (i.e. -d) option. This should removed the ambiguity of whether "device" meant LU or target that we have had in the past. In the linux kernel 2.6 series this utility can be called on sd, sr (cd/dvd), st or sg device nodes; if the user has appropriate permis- sions. In the linux kernel 2.4 series support for this utility first appeared in lk 2.4.19 and could only be called on sg device nodes. Various vendors made this capability available in their kernels prior to lk 2.4.19. OPTIONS
-b attempt a SCSI bus reset. This would normally be tried if the device reset (i.e. option -d) was not successful. -d attempt a SCSI device reset. If the device seems stuck, this is the first reset that should be tried. This assumes the linux scsi mid level error handler is not already in the process of resetting DEVICE. -h attempt a host adapter reset. This would normally be tried if both device reset (i.e. option -d) and bus reset (i.e. option -b) were not successful. -t attempt a SCSI target reset. This assumes the linux scsi mid level error handler is not already in the process of resetting the tar- get that contains the given DEVICE. -V prints the version string then exits. NOTES
The error recovery code within the linux kernel when faced with a SCSI command timing out and no response from the device (LU), first tries a device reset and if that is not successful tries a target reset. If that is not successful it tries a bus reset. If that is not success- ful it tries a host reset. Users of this utility should check whether such a recovery is already underway before trying to reset with this utility. The "device,target,bus,host" order is also recommended (i.e. first start with the smallest hammer). The above is a generalization and exact details will vary depending on the transport and the low level driver concerned. SAM-4 defines a hard reset, a logical unit reset and a I_T nexus reset. A hard reset is defined to be a power on condition, a microcode change or a transport reset event. A LU reset and an I_T nexus reset can be requested via task management function (and support for LU reset is mandatory). In Linux the SCSI subsystem leaves it up to the low level drivers as to whether a "device reset" is only for the addressed LU or all the LUs in the device that contains the addressed LU (i.e. a target reset). The additional of the target reset (i.e. option -t) should give more control in this area. The "bus reset" is a transport reset and may be a dummy operation, depending on the transport. A "host reset" attempts to re-initialize the HBA that the request passes through en route to the DEVICE. Note that a "host reset" and a "bus reset" may cause collateral damage. This utility does not allow individual SCSI commands (or tasks as they are called in SAM-4) to be aborted. SAM-4 defines ABORT TASK and ABORT TASK SET task management functions for that. Prior to SAM-3 there was a TARGET RESET task management function. Several transports still support that function and many associated linux low level drivers map the -t option to it. AUTHORS
Written by Douglas Gilbert. COPYRIGHT
Copyright (C) 1999-2009 Douglas Gilbert This software is distributed under the GPL version 2. There is NO warranty; not even for MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PUR- POSE. sg3_utils-1.28 July 2009 SG_RESET(8)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 05:37 PM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy