SYNOPSIS
nvme [<global-options>] toshiba vs-internal-log <device>
[--output-file=<FILE>, -O <FILE>] (optional)
[--saved-log, -s] (optional)
DESCRIPTION
For the NVMe device given, sends the Toshiba internal device log request and either saves the result to a file or dumps the content to stdout.
The <device> parameter is mandatory and may be either the NVMe character device (ex: /dev/nvme0), or a namespace block device (ex: /dev/nvme0n1).
The log is associated with the controller rather than any namespaces.
Two logs exist, the current log and the previous log.
This will only work on Toshiba devices supporting this feature.
Note: The logs are quite large - typically 100’s of MB. This command can take several minutes to complete. A progress runner is included when data is written to file and a page count is included in the stdout dump.
OPTIONS
- -O <FILE>
- --output-file=<FILE>
-
Output binary file. Defaults to text-formatted dump to stdout
- -p
- --prev-log
-
Use previous log contents. Defaults to the current log contents.
GLOBAL OPTIONS
The following options are defined at the top-level nvme command
and are available to this subcommand:
- --dry-run
-
Print the command that would be executed, but do not actually execute it.
- --no-ioctl-probing
-
Disable probing for 64-bit IOCTL support.
- --no-retries
-
Disable retry logic on transient errors.
- -o <fmt>
- --output-format=<fmt>
-
Set the reporting format to normal, tabular, 'json, or binary. Only one output format may be used at a time.
- --output-format-version=<version>
-
Select the output format version. Version 1 uses the original field naming, while version 2 (default) provides more consistent and script-friendly field names.
- --timeout=<ms>
-
Set the timeout for the command in milliseconds.
- -v
- --verbose
-
Increase the level of detail in the output. May be specified multiple times to further increase verbosity.
EXAMPLES
-
Get the current log from the device and dump it to stdout:
# nvme toshiba internal-log /dev/nvme0 -
Get the previous log from the device and save to a binary file:
# nvme toshiba internal-log /dev/nvme0 --output-file=log.bin --prev-log
NVME
Part of the nvme-user suite