table of contents
- buster 1.7-1
- buster-backports 1.12-5~bpo10+1
- testing 1.12-5
- unstable 1.12-8
- experimental 1.14-3
NVME-ID-NVMSET(1) | NVMe Manual | NVME-ID-NVMSET(1) |
NAME¶
nvme-id-nvmset - Send NVMe Identify NVM Set List, return result and structureSYNOPSIS¶
nvme id-nvmset <device> [-i <id> | --nvmset_id=<id> ] [-o <fmt> | --output-format=<fmt>]
DESCRIPTION¶
For the NVMe device given, sends an identify NVM set list command and provides the result and returned structure.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 structure may be returned in one of several ways depending on the option flags; the structure may be parsed by the program or the raw buffer may be printed to stdout.
OPTIONS¶
-i <id>, --nvmset_id=<id>-o <format>, --output-format=<format>
EXAMPLES¶
# nvme id-nvmset /dev/nvme0
# nvme id-nvmset /dev/nvme0 --output-format=binary > id_nvmset.raw # nvme id-nvmset /dev/nvme0 -o binary > id_nvmset.raw
It is probably a bad idea to not redirect stdout when using this mode.
# nvme id-nvmset /dev/nvme0 -o binary | nvme_parse_id_nvmset
The parse program in the above example can be a program that shows the structure in a way you like. The following program is such an example that will parse it and can accept the output through a pipe, '|', as shown in the above example, or you can 'cat' a saved output buffer to it.
NVME
Part of the nvme-user suite
01/08/2019 | NVMe |