NATACONTROL(8) BSD System Manager's Manual NATACONTROL(8)NAMEnatacontrol — NATA device driver control program
SYNOPSISnatacontrol ⟨command⟩ args
natacontrol attach channel
natacontrol detach channel
natacontrol reinit channel
natacontrol create type [interleave] disk0 ... diskN
natacontrol delete raid
natacontrol addspare raid disk
natacontrol rebuild raid
natacontrol status raid
natacontrol mode device
natacontrol info channel
natacontrol cap device
natacontrol list
DESCRIPTION
The natacontrol utility is a control program that provides the user
access and control to the DragonFly nata(4) subsystem.
The natacontrol utility can cause severe system crashes and loss of data
if used improperly. Please exercise caution when using this command!
The channel argument is the ATA channel device (e.g., ata0) on which to
operate. The following commands are supported:
attach Attach an ATA channel. Devices on the channel are probed and
attached as is done on boot.
detach Detach an ATA channel. Devices on the channel are removed from
the kernel, and all outstanding transfers etc. are returned back
to the system marked as failed.
reinit Reinitialize an ATA channel. Both devices on the channel are
reset and initialized to the parameters the ATA driver has
stored internally. Devices that have gone bad and no longer
respond to the probe, or devices that have physically been
removed, are removed from the kernel. Likewise are devices that
show up during a reset, probed and attached.
create Create a type ATA RAID. The type can be RAID0 (stripe), RAID1
(mirror), RAID0+1, SPAN or JBOD. In case the RAID has a RAID0
component, the interleave must be specified in number of sec‐
tors. The RAID will be created of the individual disks named
disk0 ... diskN.
Although the nata(4) driver allows for creating an ATA RAID on
disks with any controller, there are restrictions. It is only
possible to boot on an array if it is either located on a “real”
ATA RAID controller like the Promise or Highpoint controllers,
or if the RAID declared is of RAID1 or SPAN type; in case of a
SPAN, the partition to boot must reside on the first disk in the
SPAN.
delete Delete a RAID array on a RAID capable ATA controller.
addspare
Add a spare disk to an existing RAID.
rebuild Rebuild a RAID1 array on a RAID capable ATA controller.
status Get the status of an ATA RAID.
mode Without the mode argument, the current transfer modes of the
device are printed. If the mode argument is given, the nata(4)
driver is asked to change the transfer mode to the one given.
The nata(4) driver will reject modes that are not supported by
the hardware. Modes are given like “PIO3”, “udma2”, “udma100”,
case does not matter.
Currently supported modes are: PIO0, PIO1, PIO2, PIO3, PIO4,
WDMA2, UDMA2 (alias UDMA33), UDMA4 (alias UDMA66), UDMA5 (alias
UDMA100) and UDMA6 (alias UDMA133). The device name and manu‐
facture/version strings are shown.
cap Show detailed info about the device on device.
info Show info about the attached devices on the channel.
list Show info about all attached devices on all active controllers.
EXAMPLES
To get information on devices attached to a channel, use the command
line:
natacontrol info ata0
To see the devices' current access modes, use the command line:
natacontrol mode ad0
which results in the modes of the devices being displayed as a string
like this:
current mode = UDMA100
You can set the mode with natacontrol and a string like the above, for
example:
natacontrol mode ad0 PIO4
The new modes are set as soon as the natacontrol command returns.
SEE ALSOnata(4)HISTORY
The natacontrol utility first appeared in FreeBSD 4.6 and was imported
into DragonFly 1.7.
AUTHORS
The natacontrol utility was written by Søren Schmidt ⟨sos@FreeBSD.org⟩.
This manual page was written by Søren Schmidt ⟨sos@FreeBSD.org⟩.
BSD December 5, 2006 BSD