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NAMEnvme-io-passthru - Submit an arbitrary io command, return results SYNOPSISnvme-io-passthru <device> [--opcode=<opcode> | -O <opcode>] DESCRIPTIONSubmits an arbitrary NVMe IO command and returns the applicable results. This may be the simply the command’s result and status, or may also include a buffer if the command returns one. This command does no interpretation of the opcodes or options. The <device> parameter is mandatory and may be either the NVMe character device (ex: /dev/nvme0), or a namespace block device (ex: /dev/nvme0n1). On success, the returned structure (if applicable) may be returned in one of several ways depending on the option flags; the structure may printed by the program as a hex dump, or may be returned as a raw buffer printed to stdout for another program to parse. OPTIONS-O <opcode>, --opcode=<opcode> The NVMe opcode to send to the device in the
command
-f <flags>, --flags=<flags> The NVMe command flags to send to the device in the
command
-R <rsvd>, --rsvd=<rsvd> The value for the reserved field in the command.
-n <nsid>, --namespace-id=<nsid> The value for the ns-id in the command. Defaults to
0.
-[2-9] <cdw>, --cdw[2-3,10-15]=<cdw> Specifies the command dword value for that specified
entry in the command
-r, --read, -w, --write Used for the data-direction for the command and required
for commands sending/receiving data. Don’t use both read and write at
the same time.
-i <file>, --input-file=<file> If the command is a data-out (write) command, use this
file to fill the buffer sent to the device. If no file is given, assumed to
use STDIN. If the command is a data-in (read) command, the data returned from
the device will be saved here.
-M <file>, --metadata=<file> If the command is a data-out (write) command, use this
file to fill the metadata buffer sent to the device. If no file is given,
assumed to use STDIN. If the command is a data-in (read) command, the metadata
returned from the device will be saved here.
-l <data-len>, --data-len=<data-len> The data length for the buffer used for this
command.
-m <data-len>, --metadata-len=<data-len> The metadata length for the buffer used for this
command.
-s, --show-cmd Print out the command to be sent.
-d, --dry-run Do not actually send the command. If want to use
--dry-run option, --show-cmd option must be set. Otherwise --dry-run
option will be ignored.
-b, --raw-binary Print the raw returned buffer to stdout if the command
returns data or a structure.
-p <prefill>, --prefill <prefill> Prefill the buffer with a predetermined byte value.
Defaults to 0. This may be useful if the data you are writing is shorter than
the required buffer, and you need to pad it with a known value. It may also be
useful if you need to confirm if a device is overwriting a buffer on a data-in
command.
-T, --latency Print out the latency the IOCTL took (in us).
-o <fmt>, --output-format=<fmt> Set the reporting format to normal, json or
binary. Only one output format can be used at a time.
-v, --verbose Increase the information detail in the output.
-t <timeout>, --timeout=<timeout> Override default timeout value. In milliseconds.
EXAMPLESnvme io-passthru /dev/nvme0n1 --opcode=2 --namespace-id=1 --data-len=4096 --read --cdw10=0 --cdw11=0 --cdw12=0x70000 --raw-binary NVMEPart of the nvme-user suite
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