]> git.proxmox.com Git - mirror_smartmontools-debian.git/blob - smartd.8.in
Imported Upstream version 5.38+svn2956
[mirror_smartmontools-debian.git] / smartd.8.in
1 .ig
2 Copyright (C) 2002-8 Bruce Allen <smartmontools-support@lists.sourceforge.net>
3
4 $Id: smartd.8.in 2921 2009-09-20 19:19:32Z samm2 $
5
6 This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
7 it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
8 the Free Software Foundation; either version 2, or (at your option)
9 any later version.
10
11 You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License (for
12 example COPYING); if not, write to the Free Software Foundation, Inc.,
13 675 Mass Ave, Cambridge, MA 02139, USA.
14
15 This code was originally developed as a Senior Thesis by Michael
16 Cornwell at the Concurrent Systems Laboratory (now part of the Storage
17 Systems Research Center), Jack Baskin School of Engineering,
18 University of California, Santa Cruz. http://ssrc.soe.ucsc.edu/
19 ..
20 .TH SMARTD 8 CURRENT_CVS_DATE CURRENT_CVS_VERSION CURRENT_CVS_DATE
21 .SH NAME
22 \fBsmartd\fP \- SMART Disk Monitoring Daemon
23
24 .SH SYNOPSIS
25 .B smartd [options]
26
27 .SH FULL PATH
28 .B /usr/local/sbin/smartd
29
30 .SH PACKAGE VERSION
31 CURRENT_CVS_VERSION released CURRENT_CVS_DATE at CURRENT_CVS_TIME
32
33 .SH DESCRIPTION
34 \fBsmartd\fP is a daemon that monitors the Self-Monitoring, Analysis
35 and Reporting Technology (SMART) system built into many ATA-3 and
36 later ATA, IDE and SCSI-3 hard drives. The purpose of SMART is to
37 monitor the reliability of the hard drive and predict drive failures,
38 and to carry out different types of drive self-tests. This version of
39 \fBsmartd\fP is compatible with ATA/ATAPI-7 and earlier standards (see
40 \fBREFERENCES\fP below).
41
42 \fBsmartd\fP will attempt to enable SMART monitoring on ATA devices
43 (equivalent to \fBsmartctl -s on\fP) and polls these and SCSI devices
44 every 30 minutes (configurable), logging SMART errors and changes of
45 SMART Attributes via the SYSLOG interface. The default location for
46 these SYSLOG notifications and warnings is \fB/var/log/messages\fP.
47 To change this default location, please see the \fB\'-l\'\fP
48 command-line option described below.
49
50 In addition to logging to a file, \fBsmartd\fP can also be configured
51 to send email warnings if problems are detected. Depending upon the
52 type of problem, you may want to run self\-tests on the disk, back up
53 the disk, replace the disk, or use a manufacturer\'s utility to force
54 reallocation of bad or unreadable disk sectors. If disk problems are
55 detected, please see the \fBsmartctl\fP manual page and the
56 \fBsmartmontools\fP web page/FAQ for further guidance.
57
58 If you send a \fBUSR1\fP signal to \fBsmartd\fP it will immediately
59 check the status of the disks, and then return to polling the disks
60 every 30 minutes. See the \fB\'\-i\'\fP option below for additional
61 details.
62
63 \fBsmartd\fP can be configured at start-up using the configuration
64 file \fB/usr/local/etc/smartd.conf\fP (Windows: \fB./smartd.conf\fP).
65 If the configuration file is subsequently modified, \fBsmartd\fP
66 can be told to re-read the configuration file by sending it a
67 \fBHUP\fP signal, for example with the command:
68 .fi
69 \fBkillall -HUP smartd\fP.
70 .fi
71 (Windows: See NOTES below.)
72
73 On startup, if \fBsmartd\fP finds a syntax error in the configuration
74 file, it will print an error message and then exit. However if
75 \fBsmartd\fP is already running, then is told with a \fBHUP\fP signal
76 to re-read the configuration file, and then find a syntax error in
77 this file, it will print an error message and then continue, ignoring
78 the contents of the (faulty) configuration file, as if the \fBHUP\fP
79 signal had never been received.
80
81 When \fBsmartd\fP is running in debug mode, the \fBINT\fP signal
82 (normally generated from a shell with CONTROL\-C) is treated in the
83 same way as a \fBHUP\fP signal: it makes \fBsmartd\fP reload its
84 configuration file. To exit \fBsmartd\fP use CONTROL-\e
85 (Cygwin: 2x CONTROL\-C, Windows: CONTROL\-Break).
86
87 On startup, in the absence of the configuration file
88 \fB/usr/local/etc/smartd.conf\fP, the \fBsmartd\fP daemon first scans for all
89 devices that support SMART. The scanning is done as follows:
90 .IP \fBLINUX:\fP 9
91 Examine all entries \fB"/dev/hd[a-t]"\fP for IDE/ATA
92 devices, and \fB"/dev/sd[a-z]"\fP for SCSI devices.
93 .IP \fBFREEBSD:\fP 9
94 Authoritative list of disk devices is obtained from SCSI (CAM) and ATA subsystems.
95 .IP \fBNETBSD/OPENBSD:\fP 9
96 Authoritative list of disk devices is obtained from sysctl
97 \'hw.disknames\'.
98 .IP \fBSOLARIS:\fP 9
99 Examine all entries \fB"/dev/rdsk/c?t?d?s?"\fP for IDE/ATA and SCSI disk
100 devices, and entries \fB"/dev/rmt/*"\fP for SCSI tape devices.
101 .IP \fBDARWIN:\fP 9
102 The IOService plane is scanned for ATA block storage devices.
103 .IP \fBWINDOWS\ 9x/ME\fP: 9
104 Examine all entries \fB"/dev/hd[a-d]"\fP (bitmask
105 from "\\\\.\\SMARTVSD") for IDE/ATA devices.
106 Examine all entries \fB"/dev/scsi[0\-9][0\-f]"\fP for SCSI devices
107 on ASPI adapter 0\-9, ID 0\-15.
108 .IP \fBWINDOWS\ NT4/2000/XP/2003/Vista\fP: 9
109 Examine all entries \fB"/dev/sd[a-j]"\fP ("\\\\.\\PhysicalDrive[0-9]")
110 for IDE/(S)ATA and SCSI disk devices
111
112 If a 3ware 9000 controller is installed, examine all entries
113 \fB"/dev/sdX,N"\fP for the first logical drive (\'unit\'
114 \fB"/dev/sdX"\fP) and all physical disks (\'ports\' \fB",N"\fP)
115 detected behind this controller. Same for a second controller if present.
116 .IP \fBCYGWIN\fP: 9
117 See "WINDOWS NT4/2000/XP/2003/Vista" above.
118 .IP \fBOS/2,eComStation\fP: 9
119 Use the form \fB"/dev/hd[a\-z]"\fP for IDE/ATA devices.
120 .PP
121 \fBsmartd\fP then monitors
122 for \fIall\fP possible SMART errors (corresponding to the \fB\'\-a\'\fP
123 Directive in the configuration file; see \fBCONFIGURATION FILE\fP
124 below).
125
126 .SH
127 OPTIONS
128 Long options are not supported on all systems. Use \fB\'smartd
129 \-h\'\fP to see the available options.
130
131 .TP
132 .B \-A PREFIX, \-\-attributelog=PREFIX
133 [NEW EXPERIMENTAL SMARTD FEATURE] [ATA ONLY]
134 Writes \fBsmartd\fP attribute information (normalized and raw attribute values)
135 to files \'PREFIX\'\'MODEL\-SERIAL.ata.csv\'. At each check cycle attributes
136 are logged as a line of semicolon separated triplets of the form
137 "attribute-ID;attribute-norm-value;attribute-raw-value;". Each line is
138 led by a date string of the form "yyyy-mm-dd HH:MM:SS" (in UTC).
139
140 .\" BEGIN ENABLE_ATTRIBUTELOG
141 If this option is not specified, attribute information is written to files
142 \'/usr/local/var/lib/smartmontools/attrlog.MODEL\-SERIAL.ata.csv\'.
143 To disable attribute log files, specify this option with an empty string
144 argument: \'-A ""\'.
145 .\" END ENABLE_ATTRIBUTELOG
146 MODEL and SERIAL are build from drive identify information, invalid
147 characters are replaced by underline.
148
149 If the PREFIX has the form \'/path/dir/\' (e.g. \'/var/lib/smartd/\'), then
150 files \'MODEL\-SERIAL.ata.csv\' are created in directory \'/path/dir\'.
151 If the PREFIX has the form \'/path/name\' (e.g. \'/var/lib/misc/attrlog\-\'),
152 then files 'nameMODEL\-SERIAL.ata.csv' are created in directory '/path/'.
153 The path must be absolute, except if debug mode is enabled.
154
155 .TP
156 .B \-B [+]FILE, \-\-drivedb=[+]FILE
157 [NEW EXPERIMENTAL SMARTD FEATURE] Read the drive database from FILE.
158 The new database replaces the built in database by default. If \'+\' is
159 specified, then the new entries prepend the built in entries.
160 Please see the \fBsmartctl\fP man page for further details.
161
162 .TP
163 .B \-c FILE, \-\-configfile=FILE
164 Read \fBsmartd\fP configuration Directives from FILE, instead of from
165 the default location \fB/usr/local/etc/smartd.conf\fP (Windows: \fB./smartd.conf\fP).
166 If FILE does \fBnot\fP exist, then \fBsmartd\fP will print an error
167 message and exit with nonzero status. Thus, \'\-c /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf\'
168 can be used to verify the existence of the default configuration file.
169
170 By using \'\-\' for FILE, the configuration is read from standard
171 input. This is useful for commands like:
172 .nf
173 .B echo /dev/hdb \-m user@home \-M test | smartd \-c \- \-q onecheck
174 .fi
175 to perform quick and simple checks without a configuration file.
176
177 .TP
178 .B \-d, \-\-debug
179 Runs \fBsmartd\fP in "debug" mode. In this mode, it displays status
180 information to STDOUT rather than logging it to SYSLOG and does not
181 \fBfork(2)\fP into the background and detach from the controlling
182 terminal. In this mode, \fBsmartd\fP also prints more verbose
183 information about what it is doing than when operating in "daemon"
184 mode. In this mode, the \fBQUIT\fP signal (normally generated from a
185 terminal with CONTROL\-C) makes \fBsmartd\fP reload its configuration
186 file. Please use CONTROL-\e to exit
187 (Cygwin: 2x CONTROL\-C, Windows: CONTROL\-Break).
188
189 Windows only: The "debug" mode can be toggled by the command
190 \fBsmartd sigusr2\fP. A new console for debug output is opened when
191 debug mode is enabled.
192 .TP
193 .B \-D, \-\-showdirectives
194 Prints a list (to STDOUT) of all the possible Directives which may
195 appear in the configuration file /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf, and then exits.
196 These Directives are also described later in this man page. They may
197 appear in the configuration file following the device name.
198 .TP
199 .B \-h, \-\-help, \-\-usage
200 Prints usage message to STDOUT and exits.
201
202 .TP
203 .B \-i N, \-\-interval=N
204 Sets the interval between disk checks to \fIN\fP seconds, where
205 \fIN\fP is a decimal integer. The minimum allowed value is ten and
206 the maximum is the largest positive integer that can be represented on
207 your system (often 2^31-1). The default is 1800 seconds.
208
209 Note that the superuser can make \fBsmartd\fP check the status of the
210 disks at any time by sending it the \fBSIGUSR1\fP signal, for example
211 with the command:
212 .nf
213 .B kill -SIGUSR1 <pid>
214 .fi
215 where \fB<pid>\fP is the process id number of \fBsmartd\fP. One may
216 also use:
217 .nf
218 .B killall -USR1 smartd
219 .fi
220 for the same purpose.
221 .fi
222 (Windows: See NOTES below.)
223
224 .TP
225 .B \-l FACILITY, \-\-logfacility=FACILITY
226 Uses syslog facility FACILITY to log the messages from \fBsmartd\fP.
227 Here FACILITY is one of \fIlocal0\fP, \fIlocal1\fP, ..., \fIlocal7\fP,
228 or \fIdaemon\fP [default]. If this command-line option is not used,
229 then by default messages from \fBsmartd\fP are logged to the facility
230 \fIdaemon\fP.
231
232 If you would like to have \fBsmartd\fP messages logged somewhere other
233 than the default \fB/var/log/messages\fP location, this can typically
234 be accomplished with (for example) the following steps:
235 .RS 7
236 .IP \fB[1]\fP 4
237 Modify the script that starts \fBsmartd\fP to include the \fBsmartd\fP
238 command-line argument \'\-l local3\'. This tells \fBsmartd\fP to log its
239 messages to facility \fBlocal3\fP.
240 .IP \fB[2]\fP 4
241 Modify the \fBsyslogd\fP configuration file (typically
242 \fB/etc/syslog.conf\fP) by adding a line of the form:
243 .nf
244 \fBlocal3.* /var/log/smartd.log\fP
245 .fi
246 This tells \fBsyslogd\fP to log all the messages from facility \fBlocal3\fP to
247 the designated file: /var/log/smartd.log.
248 .IP \fB[3]\fP 4
249 Tell \fBsyslogd\fP to re-read its configuration file, typically by
250 sending the \fBsyslogd\fP process a \fBSIGHUP\fP hang-up signal.
251 .IP \fB[4]\fP 4
252 Start (or restart) the \fBsmartd\fP daemon.
253 .RE
254 .\" The following two lines are a workaround for a man2html bug. Please leave them.
255 .\" They define a non-existent option; useful because man2html can't correctly reset the margins.
256 .TP
257 .B \&
258 For more detailed information, please refer to the man pages for
259 \fBsyslog.conf\fP, \fBsyslogd\fP, and \fBsyslog\fP. You may also want
260 to modify the log rotation configuration files; see the man pages for
261 \fBlogrotate\fP and examine your system\'s /etc/logrotate.conf file.
262
263 Cygwin: Support for \fBsyslogd\fP as described above is available starting with Cygwin 1.5.15.
264 On older releases or if no local \fBsyslogd\fP is running, the \'\-l\' option has no effect.
265 In this case, all \fBsyslog\fP messages are written to Windows event log
266 or to file \fBC:/CYGWIN_SYSLOG.TXT\fP if the event log is not available.
267
268 Windows: Some \fBsyslog\fP functionality is implemented
269 internally in \fBsmartd\fP as follows: If no \'\-l\' option
270 (or \'\-l daemon\') is specified, messages are written to Windows
271 event log or to file \fB./smartd.log\fP if event log is not available
272 (Win9x/ME or access denied). By specifying other values of FACILITY,
273 log output is redirected as follows:
274 \'\-l local0\' to file \fB./smartd.log\fP,
275 \'\-l local1\' to standard output (redirect with \'>\' to any file),
276 \'\-l local2\' to standard error,
277 \'\-l local[3-7]\': to file \fB./smartd[1-5].log\fP.
278
279 When using the event log, the enclosed utility \fBsyslogevt.exe\fP
280 should be registered as an event message file to avoid error
281 messages from the event viewer. Use \'\fBsyslogevt -r smartd\fP\'
282 to register, \'\fBsyslogevt -u smartd\fP\' to unregister and
283 \'\fBsyslogevt\fP\' for more help.
284
285 .TP
286 .B \-n, \-\-no\-fork
287 Do not fork into background; this is useful when executed from modern
288 init methods like initng, minit or supervise.
289
290 On Cygwin, this allows running \fBsmartd\fP as service via cygrunsrv,
291 see NOTES below.
292
293 On Windows, this option is not available, use \'\-\-service\' instead.
294
295 .TP
296 .B \-p NAME, \-\-pidfile=NAME
297 Writes pidfile \fINAME\fP containing the \fBsmartd\fP Process ID
298 number (PID). To avoid symlink attacks make sure the directory to
299 which pidfile is written is only writable for root. Without this
300 option, or if the \-\-debug option is given, no PID file is written on
301 startup. If \fBsmartd\fP is killed with a maskable signal then the
302 pidfile is removed.
303 .TP
304 .B \-q WHEN, \-\-quit=WHEN
305 Specifies when, if ever, \fBsmartd\fP should exit. The valid
306 arguments are to this option are:
307
308 .I nodev
309 \- Exit if there are no devices to monitor, or if any errors are found
310 at startup in the configuration file. This is the default.
311
312 .I errors
313 \- Exit if there are no devices to monitor, or if any errors are found
314 in the configuration file /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf at startup or whenever it
315 is reloaded.
316
317 .I nodevstartup
318 \- Exit if there are no devices to monitor at startup. But continue
319 to run if no devices are found whenever the configuration file is
320 reloaded.
321
322 .I never
323 \- Only exit if a fatal error occurs (no remaining system memory,
324 invalid command line arguments). In this mode, even if there are no
325 devices to monitor, or if the configuration file
326 \fB/usr/local/etc/smartd.conf\fP has errors, \fBsmartd\fP will continue to run,
327 waiting to load a configuration file listing valid devices.
328
329 .I onecheck
330 \- Start \fBsmartd\fP in debug mode, then register devices, then check
331 device\'s SMART status once, and then exit with zero exit status if all
332 of these steps worked correctly.
333
334 This last option is intended for \'distribution-writers\' who want to
335 create automated scripts to determine whether or not to automatically
336 start up \fBsmartd\fP after installing smartmontools. After starting
337 \fBsmartd\fP with this command-line option, the distribution\'s install
338 scripts should wait a reasonable length of time (say ten seconds). If
339 \fBsmartd\fP has not exited with zero status by that time, the script
340 should send \fBsmartd\fP a SIGTERM or SIGKILL and assume that
341 \fBsmartd\fP will not operate correctly on the host. Conversely, if
342 \fBsmartd\fP exits with zero status, then it is safe to run
343 \fBsmartd\fP in normal daemon mode. If \fBsmartd\fP is unable to
344 monitor any devices or encounters other problems then it will return
345 with non-zero exit status.
346
347 .I showtests
348 \- Start \fBsmartd\fP in debug mode, then register devices, then write
349 a list of future scheduled self tests to stdout, and then exit with zero
350 exit status if all of these steps worked correctly.
351 Device's SMART status is not checked.
352
353 This option is intended to test whether the '-s REGEX' directives in
354 smartd.conf will have the desired effect. The output lists the next test
355 schedules, limited to 5 tests per type and device. This is followed by a
356 summary of all tests of each device within the next 90 days.
357 .TP
358 .B \-r TYPE, \-\-report=TYPE
359 Intended primarily to help
360 .B smartmontools
361 developers understand the behavior of
362 .B smartmontools
363 on non-conforming or poorly-conforming hardware. This option reports
364 details of
365 \fBsmartd\fP
366 transactions with the device. The option can be used multiple times.
367 When used just once, it shows a record of the ioctl() transactions
368 with the device. When used more than once, the detail of these ioctl()
369 transactions are reported in greater detail. The valid arguments to
370 this option are:
371
372 .I ioctl
373 \- report all ioctl() transactions.
374
375 .I ataioctl
376 \- report only ioctl() transactions with ATA devices.
377
378 .I scsiioctl
379 \- report only ioctl() transactions with SCSI devices.
380
381 Any argument may include a positive integer to specify the level of
382 detail that should be reported. The argument should be followed by a
383 comma then the integer with no spaces. For example, \fIataioctl,2\fP
384 The default level is 1, so \'\-r ataioctl,1\' and \'\-r ataioctl\' are
385 equivalent.
386
387 .TP
388 .B \-s PREFIX, \-\-savestates=PREFIX
389 [NEW EXPERIMENTAL SMARTD FEATURE] [ATA ONLY]
390 Reads/writes \fBsmartd\fP state information from/to files
391 \'PREFIX\'\'MODEL\-SERIAL.ata.state\'. This preserves SMART attributes, drive
392 min and max temperatures (\-W directive), info about last sent warning email
393 (\-m directive), and the time of next check of the self-test REGEXP
394 (\-s directive) across boot cycles.
395
396 .\" BEGIN ENABLE_SAVESTATES
397 If this option is not specified, state information is maintained in files
398 \'/usr/local/var/lib/smartmontools/smartd.MODEL\-SERIAL.ata.state\'.
399 To disable state files, specify this option with an empty string
400 argument: \'-s ""\'.
401 .\" END ENABLE_SAVESTATES
402 MODEL and SERIAL are build from drive identify information, invalid
403 characters are replaced by underline.
404
405 If the PREFIX has the form \'/path/dir/\' (e.g. \'/var/lib/smartd/\'), then
406 files \'MODEL\-SERIAL.ata.state\' are created in directory \'/path/dir\'.
407 If the PREFIX has the form \'/path/name\' (e.g. \'/var/lib/misc/smartd\-\'),
408 then files 'nameMODEL\-SERIAL.ata.state' are created in directory '/path/'.
409 The path must be absolute, except if debug mode is enabled.
410
411 The state information files are read on smartd startup. The files are
412 always (re)written after reading the configuration file, before rereading
413 the configuration file (SIGHUP), before smartd shutdown, and after a check
414 forced by SIGUSR1. After a normal check cycle, a file is only rewritten if
415 an important change (which usually results in a SYSLOG output) occurred.
416
417 .TP
418 .B \-\-service
419 Cygwin and Windows only: Enables \fBsmartd\fP to run as a Windows service.
420
421 On Cygwin, this option is kept for backward compatibility only.
422 It has the same effect as \'\-n, \-\-no\-fork\', see above.
423
424 On Windows, this option enables the buildin service support.
425 The option must be specified in the service command line as the first
426 argument. It should not be used from console.
427 See NOTES below for details.
428
429 .TP
430 .B \-V, \-\-version, \-\-license, \-\-copyright
431 Prints version, copyright, license, home page and SVN revision
432 information for your copy of \fBsmartd\fP to STDOUT and then exits.
433 Please include this information if you are reporting bugs or problems.
434
435 .SH EXAMPLES
436
437 .B
438 smartd
439 .fi
440 Runs the daemon in forked mode. This is the normal way to run
441 \fBsmartd\fP.
442 Entries are logged to SYSLOG (by default
443 .B /var/log/messages.)
444
445 .B
446 smartd -d -i 30
447 .fi
448 Run in foreground (debug) mode, checking the disk status
449 every 30 seconds.
450
451 .B
452 smartd -q onecheck
453 .fi
454 Registers devices, and checks the status of the devices exactly
455 once. The exit status (the bash
456 .B $?
457 variable) will be zero if all went well, and nonzero if no devices
458 were detected or some other problem was encountered.
459
460 .fi
461 Note that \fBsmartmontools\fP provides a start-up script in
462 \fB/usr/local/etc/rc.d/init.d/smartd\fP which is responsible for starting and
463 stopping the daemon via the normal init interface. Using this script,
464 you can start \fBsmartd\fP by giving the command:
465 .nf
466 .B /usr/local/etc/rc.d/init.d/smartd start
467 .fi
468 and stop it by using the command:
469 .nf
470 .B /usr/local/etc/rc.d/init.d/smartd stop
471
472 .fi
473 If you want \fBsmartd\fP to start running whenever your machine is
474 booted, this can be enabled by using the command:
475 .nf
476 .B /sbin/chkconfig --add smartd
477 .fi
478 and disabled using the command:
479 .nf
480 .B /sbin/chkconfig --del smartd
481 .fi
482
483 .\" DO NOT MODIFY THIS OR THE FOLLOWING TWO LINES. THIS MATERIAL
484 .\" IS AUTOMATICALLY INCLUDED IN THE FILE smartd.conf.5
485 .\" STARTINCLUDE
486
487 .SH CONFIGURATION FILE /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf
488 In the absence of a configuration file, under Linux
489 \fBsmartd\fP
490 will try to open the 20 ATA devices
491 .B /dev/hd[a-t]
492 and the 26 SCSI devices
493 .B /dev/sd[a-z].
494 Under FreeBSD,
495 \fBsmartd\fP
496 will try to open all existing ATA devices (with entries in /dev)
497 .B /dev/ad[0-9]+
498 and all existing SCSI devices (using CAM subsystem).
499 Under NetBSD/OpenBSD,
500 \fBsmartd\fP
501 will try to open all existing ATA devices (with entries in /dev)
502 .B /dev/wd[0-9]+c
503 and all existing SCSI devices
504 .B /dev/sd[0-9]+c.
505 Under Solaris \fBsmartd\fP will try to open all entries \fB"/dev/rdsk/c?t?d?s?"\fP for IDE/ATA and SCSI disk
506 devices, and entries \fB"/dev/rmt/*"\fP for SCSI tape devices.
507 Under Windows \fBsmartd\fP will try to open all entries \fB"/dev/hd[a-j]"\fP ("\\\\.\\PhysicalDrive[0-9]")
508 for IDE/ATA devices on WinNT4/2000/XP, \fB"/dev/hd[a-d]"\fP
509 (bitmask from "\\\\.\\SMARTVSD") for IDE/ATA devices on Win95/98/98SE/ME,
510 and \fB"/dev/scsi[0-9][0-7]"\fP (ASPI adapter 0-9, ID 0-7) for SCSI
511 devices on all versions of Windows.
512 Under Darwin, \fBsmartd\fP will open any ATA block storage device.
513
514 This can be annoying if you have an ATA or SCSI device that hangs or
515 misbehaves when receiving SMART commands. Even if this causes no
516 problems, you may be annoyed by the string of error log messages about
517 block-major devices that can\'t be found, and SCSI devices that can\'t
518 be opened.
519
520 One can avoid this problem, and gain more control over the types of
521 events monitored by
522 \fBsmartd\fP,
523 by using the configuration file
524 .B /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf.
525 This file contains a list of devices to monitor, with one device per
526 line. An example file is included with the
527 .B smartmontools
528 distribution. You will find this sample configuration file in
529 \fB/usr/local/share/doc/smartmontools-5.1/\fP. For security, the configuration file
530 should not be writable by anyone but root. The syntax of the file is as
531 follows:
532 .IP \(bu 4
533 There should be one device listed per line, although you may have
534 lines that are entirely comments or white space.
535 .IP \(bu 4
536 Any text following a hash sign \'#\' and up to the end of the line is
537 taken to be a comment, and ignored.
538 .IP \(bu 4
539 Lines may be continued by using a backslash \'\e\' as the last
540 non-whitespace or non-comment item on a line.
541 .IP \(bu 4
542 Note: a line whose first character is a hash sign \'#\' is treated as
543 a white-space blank line, \fBnot\fP as a non-existent line, and will
544 \fBend\fP a continuation line.
545 .PP 0
546 .fi
547 Here is an example configuration file. It\'s for illustrative purposes
548 only; please don\'t copy it onto your system without reading to the end
549 of the
550 .B DIRECTIVES
551 Section below!
552
553 .nf
554 .B ################################################
555 .B # This is an example smartd startup config file
556 .B # /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf for monitoring three
557 .B # ATA disks, three SCSI disks, six ATA disks
558 .B # behind two 3ware controllers, three SATA disks
559 .B # directly connected to the HighPoint Rocket-
560 .B # RAID controller, two SATA disks connected to
561 .B # the HighPoint RocketRAID controller via a pmport
562 .B # device, four SATA disks connected to an Areca
563 .B # RAID controller, and one SATA disk.
564 .B #
565 .nf
566 .B # First ATA disk on two different interfaces. On
567 .B # the second disk, start a long self-test every
568 .B # Sunday between 3 and 4 am.
569 .B #
570 .B \ \ /dev/hda -a -m admin@example.com,root@localhost
571 .B \ \ /dev/hdc -a -I 194 -I 5 -i 12 -s L/../../7/03
572 .B #
573 .nf
574 .B # SCSI disks. Send a TEST warning email to admin on
575 .B # startup.
576 .B #
577 .B \ \ /dev/sda
578 .B \ \ /dev/sdb -m admin@example.com -M test
579 .B #
580 .nf
581 .B # Strange device. It\'s SCSI. Start a scheduled
582 .B # long self test between 5 and 6 am Monday/Thursday
583 .B \ \ /dev/weird -d scsi -s L/../../(1|4)/05
584 .B #
585 .nf
586 .B # An ATA disk may appear as a SCSI device to the
587 .B # OS. If a SCSI to ATA Translation (SAT) layer
588 .B # is between the OS and the device then this can be
589 .B # flagged with the '-d sat' option. This situation
590 .B # may become common with SATA disks in SAS and FC
591 .B # environments.
592 .B \ \ /dev/sda -a -d sat
593 .B #
594 .nf
595 .B # Three disks connected to a MegaRAID controller
596 .B # Start short self-tests daily between 1-2, 2-3, and
597 .B # 3-4 am.
598 .B \ \ /dev/sda -d megaraid,0 -a -s S/../.././01
599 .B \ \ /dev/sda -d megaraid,1 -a -s S/../.././02
600 .B \ \ /dev/sda -d megaraid,2 -a -s S/../.././03
601 .B
602 .B #
603 .nf
604 .B # Four ATA disks on a 3ware 6/7/8000 controller.
605 .B # Start short self-tests daily between midnight and 1am,
606 .B # 1-2, 2-3, and 3-4 am. Starting with the Linux 2.6
607 .B # kernel series, /dev/sdX is deprecated in favor of
608 .B # /dev/tweN. For example replace /dev/sdc by /dev/twe0
609 .B # and /dev/sdd by /dev/twe1.
610 .B \ \ /dev/sdc -d 3ware,0 -a -s S/../.././00
611 .B \ \ /dev/sdc -d 3ware,1 -a -s S/../.././01
612 .B \ \ /dev/sdd -d 3ware,2 -a -s S/../.././02
613 .B \ \ /dev/sdd -d 3ware,3 -a -s S/../.././03
614 .B #
615 .nf
616 .B # Two ATA disks on a 3ware 9000 controller.
617 .B # Start long self-tests Sundays between midnight and
618 .B # 1am and 2-3 am
619 .B \ \ /dev/twa0 -d 3ware,0 -a -s L/../../7/00
620 .B \ \ /dev/twa0 -d 3ware,1 -a -s L/../../7/02
621 .B #
622 .nf
623 .B # Three SATA disks on a HighPoint RocketRAID controller.
624 .B # Start short self-tests daily between 1-2, 2-3, and
625 .B # 3-4 am.
626 .B # under Linux
627 .B \ \ /dev/sde -d hpt,1/1 -a -s S/../.././01
628 .B \ \ /dev/sde -d hpt,1/2 -a -s S/../.././02
629 .B \ \ /dev/sde -d hpt,1/3 -a -s S/../.././03
630 .B # or under FreeBSD
631 .B # /dev/hptrr -d hpt,1/1 -a -s S/../.././01
632 .B # /dev/hptrr -d hpt,1/2 -a -s S/../.././02
633 .B # /dev/hptrr -d hpt,1/3 -a -s S/../.././03
634 .B #
635 .nf
636 .B # Two SATA disks connected to a HighPoint RocketRAID
637 .B # via a pmport device. Start long self-tests Sundays
638 .B # between midnight and 1am and 2-3 am.
639 .B # under Linux
640 .B \ \ /dev/sde -d hpt,1/4/1 -a -s L/../../7/00
641 .B \ \ /dev/sde -d hpt,1/4/2 -a -s L/../../7/02
642 .B # or under FreeBSD
643 .B # /dev/hptrr -d hpt,1/4/1 -a -s L/../../7/00
644 .B # /dev/hptrr -d hpt,1/4/2 -a -s L/../../7/02
645 .B #
646 .nf
647 .B # Three SATA disks connected to an Areca
648 .B # RAID controller. Start long self-tests Sundays
649 .B # between midnight and 3 am.
650 .B \ \ /dev/sg2 -d areca,1 -a -s L/../../7/00
651 .B \ \ /dev/sg2 -d areca,2 -a -s L/../../7/01
652 .B \ \ /dev/sg2 -d areca,3 -a -s L/../../7/02
653 .B #
654 .nf
655 .B # The following line enables monitoring of the
656 .B # ATA Error Log and the Self-Test Error Log.
657 .B # It also tracks changes in both Prefailure
658 .B # and Usage Attributes, apart from Attributes
659 .B # 9, 194, and 231, and shows continued lines:
660 .B #
661 .B \ \ /dev/hdd\ -l\ error\ \e
662 .B \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ -l\ selftest\ \e
663 .B \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ -t\ \e\ \ \ \ \ \ # Attributes not tracked:
664 .B \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ -I\ 194\ \e\ \ # temperature
665 .B \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ -I\ 231\ \e\ \ # also temperature
666 .B \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ \ -I 9\ \ \ \ \ \ # power-on hours
667 .B #
668 .B ################################################
669 .fi
670
671 .PP
672 .SH CONFIGURATION FILE DIRECTIVES
673 .PP
674
675 If the first non-comment entry in the configuration file is the text
676 string
677 .B DEVICESCAN
678 in capital letters, then
679 \fBsmartd\fP
680 will ignore any remaining lines in the configuration file, and will
681 scan for devices.
682 .B DEVICESCAN
683 may optionally be followed by Directives that will apply to all
684 devices that are found in the scan. Please see below for additional
685 details.
686
687 .sp 2
688 The following are the Directives that may appear following the device
689 name or
690 .B DEVICESCAN
691 on any line of the
692 .B /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf
693 configuration file. Note that
694 .B these are NOT command-line options for
695 \fBsmartd\fP.
696 The Directives below may appear in any order, following the device
697 name.
698
699 .B For an ATA device,
700 if no Directives appear, then the device will be monitored
701 as if the \'\-a\' Directive (monitor all SMART properties) had been given.
702
703 .B If a SCSI disk is listed,
704 it will be monitored at the maximum implemented level: roughly
705 equivalent to using the \'\-H \-l selftest\' options for an ATA disk.
706 So with the exception of \'\-d\', \'\-m\', \'\-l selftest\', \'\-s\', and
707 \'\-M\', the Directives below are ignored for SCSI disks. For SCSI
708 disks, the \'\-m\' Directive sends a warning email if the SMART status
709 indicates a disk failure or problem, if the SCSI inquiry about disk
710 status fails, or if new errors appear in the self-test log.
711
712 .B If a 3ware controller is used
713 then the corresponding SCSI (/dev/sd?) or character device (/dev/twe?
714 or /dev/twa?) must be listed, along with the \'\-d 3ware,N\' Directive
715 (see below). The individual ATA disks hosted by the 3ware controller
716 appear to \fBsmartd\fP as normal ATA devices. Hence all the ATA
717 directives can be used for these disks (but see note below).
718
719 .B If an Areca controller is used
720 then the corresponding SCSI generic device (/dev/sg?) must be listed,
721 along with the \'\-d areca,N\' Directive (see below). The individual
722 SATA disks hosted by the Areca controller appear to \fBsmartd\fP as
723 normal ATA devices. Hence all the ATA directives can be used for
724 these disks. Areca firmware version 1.46 or later which supports
725 smartmontools must be used; Please see the \fBsmartctl\fP man page for
726 further details.
727
728 .TP
729 .B \-d TYPE
730 Specifies the type of the device. This Directive may be used multiple
731 times for one device, but the arguments \fIata\fP, \fIscsi\fP,
732 \fIsat\fP, \fImarvell\fP, \fIcciss,N\fP, \fIareca,N\fP, \fImegaraid,N\fP
733 and \fI3ware,N\fP are mutually-exclusive. If more than one is given then
734 \fBsmartd\fP will use the last one which appears.
735
736 If none of these three arguments is given, then \fBsmartd\fP will
737 first attempt to guess the device type by looking at whether the sixth
738 character in the device name is an \'s\' or an \'h\'. This will work for
739 device names like /dev/hda or /dev/sdb, and corresponds to choosing
740 \fIata\fP or \fIscsi\fP respectively. If
741 \fBsmartd\fP
742 can\'t guess from this sixth character, then it will simply try to
743 access the device using first ATA and then SCSI ioctl()s.
744
745 The valid arguments to this Directive are:
746
747 .I ata
748 \- the device type is ATA. This prevents
749 \fBsmartd\fP
750 from issuing SCSI commands to an ATA device.
751
752 .I scsi
753 \- the device type is SCSI. This prevents
754 \fBsmartd\fP
755 from issuing ATA commands to a SCSI device.
756
757 .I sat
758 \- the device type is SCSI to ATA Translation (SAT).
759 \fBsmartd\fP
760 will generate ATA (smart) commands and then package them in
761 the SAT defined ATA PASS THROUGH SCSI commands. The commands
762 are then routed through the SCSI pass through interface to the
763 operating system. There are two types of ATA PASS THROUGH
764 SCSI commands: a 12 byte and 16 byte variant.
765 \fBsmartd\fP
766 can use either and defaults to the 16 byte variant. This can
767 be overridden with this syntax: \'\-d sat,12\' or \'\-d sat,16\'.
768
769 .I marvell
770 \- Under Linux, interact with SATA disks behind Marvell chip-set
771 controllers (using the Marvell rather than libata driver).
772
773 .I megaraid,N
774 \- the device consists of one or more SCSI/SAS/SATA disks connected
775 to a MegaRAID controller. The non-negative integer N (in the range
776 of 0 to 127 inclusive) denotes which disk on the controller is monitored.
777 In log files and email messages this disk will be identified as
778 megaraid_disk_XXX with XXX in the range from 000 to 127 inclusive.
779
780 .I 3ware,N
781 \- the device consists of one or more ATA disks connected to a 3ware
782 RAID controller. The non-negative integer N (in the range from 0 to 127
783 inclusive) denotes which disk on the controller is monitored. In log
784 files and email messages this disk will be identified as 3ware_disk_XXX
785 with XXX in the range from 000 to 127 inclusive.
786
787 This Directive may at first appear confusing, because the 3ware
788 controller is a SCSI device (such as /dev/sda) and should be listed as
789 such in the the configuration file.
790 However when the \'\-d 3ware,N\'
791 Directive is used, then the corresponding disk is addressed using
792 native ATA commands which are \'passed through\' the SCSI driver. All
793 ATA Directives listed in this man page may be used. Note that while
794 you may use \fBany\fP of the 3ware SCSI logical devices /dev/sd? to
795 address \fBany\fP of the physical disks (3ware ports), error and log
796 messages will make the most sense if you always list the 3ware SCSI
797 logical device corresponding to the particular physical disks. Please
798 see the \fBsmartctl\fP man page for further details.
799
800 ATA disks behind 3ware controllers may alternatively be accessed via a
801 character device interface /dev/twe0-15 (3ware 6000/7000/8000
802 controllers) and /dev/twa0-15 (3ware 9000 series controllers). Note
803 that the 9000 series controllers may \fBonly\fP be accessed using the
804 character device interface /dev/twa0-15 and not the SCSI device
805 interface /dev/sd?. Please see the \fBsmartctl\fP man page for
806 further details.
807
808 Note that older 3w-xxxx drivers do not pass the \'Enable Autosave\'
809 (\fB-S on\fP) and \'Enable Automatic Offline\' (\fB-o on\fP) commands
810 to the disk, if the SCSI interface is used, and produce these types of
811 harmless syslog error messages instead: \fB\'3w-xxxx: tw_ioctl():
812 Passthru size (123392) too big\'\fP. This can be fixed by upgrading to
813 version 1.02.00.037 or later of the 3w-xxxx driver, or by applying a
814 patch to older versions. See
815 \fBhttp://smartmontools.sourceforge.net/\fP for instructions.
816 Alternatively use the character device interfaces /dev/twe0-15 (3ware
817 6/7/8000 series controllers) or /dev/twa0-15 (3ware 9000 series
818 controllers).
819
820 .I areca,N
821 \- the device consists of one or more SATA disks connected to an Areca
822 SATA RAID controller. The positive integer N (in the range from 1 to
823 24 inclusive) denotes which disk on the controller is monitored. In
824 log files and email messages this disk will be identifed as
825 areca_disk_XX with XX in the range from 01 to 24 inclusive.
826
827 .I cciss,N
828 \- the device consists of one or more SCSI disks connected to a cciss
829 RAID controller. The non-negative integer N (in the range from 0 to 15
830 inclusive) denotes which disk on the controller is monitored. In log
831 files and email messages this disk will be identified as cciss_disk_XX
832 with XX in the range from 00 to 15 inclusive.
833
834 .B 3ware, MegaRAID, Areca and cciss controllers are currently ONLY supported under Linux.
835
836 .I hpt,L/M/N
837 \- the device consists of one or more ATA disks connected to a HighPoint
838 RocketRAID controller. The integer L is the controller id, the integer M
839 is the channel number, and the integer N is the PMPort number if it is
840 available. The allowed values of L are from 1 to 4 inclusive, M are from
841 1 to 8 inclusive and N from 1 to 4 if PMPort available. And also these
842 values are limited by the model of the HighPoint RocketRAID controller.
843 In log files and email messages this disk will be identified as
844 hpt_X/X/X and X/X/X is the same as L/M/N, note if no N indicated, N set
845 to the default value 1.
846
847 .B HighPoint RocketRAID controllers are currently ONLY supported under Linux and FreeBSD.
848
849 .I removable
850 \- the device or its media is removable. This indicates to
851 \fBsmartd\fP
852 that it should continue (instead of exiting, which is the default
853 behavior) if the device does not appear to be present when
854 \fBsmartd\fP is started. This Directive may be used in conjunction
855 with the other \'\-d\' Directives.
856
857 .TP
858 .B \-n POWERMODE[,N][,q]
859 This \'nocheck\' Directive is used to prevent a disk from being
860 spun-up when it is periodically polled by \fBsmartd\fP.
861
862 ATA disks have five different power states. In order of increasing
863 power consumption they are: \'OFF\', \'SLEEP\', \'STANDBY\', \'IDLE\',
864 and \'ACTIVE\'. Typically in the OFF, SLEEP, and STANDBY modes the
865 disk\'s platters are not spinning. But usually, in response to SMART
866 commands issued by \fBsmartd\fP, the disk platters are spun up. So if
867 this option is not used, then a disk which is in a low\-power mode may
868 be spun up and put into a higher\-power mode when it is periodically
869 polled by \fBsmartd\fP.
870
871 Note that if the disk is in SLEEP mode when \fBsmartd\fP is started,
872 then it won't respond to \fBsmartd\fP commands, and so the disk won't
873 be registered as a device for \fBsmartd\fP to monitor. If a disk is in
874 any other low\-power mode, then the commands issued by \fBsmartd\fP to
875 register the disk will probably cause it to spin\-up.
876
877 The \'\fB\-n\fP\' (nocheck) Directive specifies if \fBsmartd\fP\'s
878 periodic checks should still be carried out when the device is in a
879 low\-power mode. It may be used to prevent a disk from being spun\-up
880 by periodic \fBsmartd\fP polling. The allowed values of POWERMODE
881 are:
882
883 .I never
884 \- \fBsmartd\fP will poll (check) the device regardless of its power
885 mode. This may cause a disk which is spun\-down to be spun\-up when
886 \fBsmartd\fP checks it. This is the default behavior if the '\-n'
887 Directive is not given.
888
889 .I sleep
890 \- check the device unless it is in SLEEP mode.
891
892 .I standby
893 \- check the device unless it is in SLEEP or STANDBY mode. In
894 these modes most disks are not spinning, so if you want to prevent
895 a laptop disk from spinning up each time that \fBsmartd\fP polls,
896 this is probably what you want.
897
898 .I idle
899 \- check the device unless it is in SLEEP, STANDBY or IDLE mode.
900 In the IDLE state, most disks are still spinning, so this is probably
901 not what you want.
902
903 Maximum number of skipped checks (in a row) can be specified by
904 appending positive number \',N\' to POWERMODE (like \'\-n standby,15\').
905 After N checks are skipped in a row, powermode is ignored and the
906 check is performed anyway.
907
908 When a periodic test is skipped, \fBsmartd\fP normally writes an
909 informal log message. The message can be suppressed by appending
910 the option \',q\' to POWERMODE (like \'\-n standby,q\').
911 This prevents a laptop disk from spinning up due to this message.
912
913 Both \',N\' and \',q\' can be specified together.
914
915 .TP
916 .B \-T TYPE
917 Specifies how tolerant
918 \fBsmartd\fP
919 should be of SMART command failures. The valid arguments to this
920 Directive are:
921
922 .I normal
923 \- do not try to monitor the disk if a mandatory SMART command fails, but
924 continue if an optional SMART command fails. This is the default.
925
926 .I permissive
927 \- try to monitor the disk even if it appears to lack SMART
928 capabilities. This may be required for some old disks (prior to
929 ATA\-3 revision 4) that implemented SMART before the SMART standards
930 were incorporated into the ATA/ATAPI Specifications. This may also be
931 needed for some Maxtor disks which fail to comply with the ATA
932 Specifications and don't properly indicate support for error\- or
933 self\-test logging.
934
935 [Please see the \fBsmartctl \-T\fP command-line option.]
936 .TP
937 .B \-o VALUE
938 Enables or disables SMART Automatic Offline Testing when
939 \fBsmartd\fP
940 starts up and has no further effect. The valid arguments to this
941 Directive are \fIon\fP and \fIoff\fP.
942
943 The delay between tests is vendor-specific, but is typically four
944 hours.
945
946 Note that SMART Automatic Offline Testing is \fBnot\fP part of the ATA
947 Specification. Please see the
948 .B smartctl \-o
949 command-line option documentation for further information about this
950 feature.
951 .TP
952 .B \-S VALUE
953 Enables or disables Attribute Autosave when \fBsmartd\fP
954 starts up and has no further effect. The valid arguments to this
955 Directive are \fIon\fP and \fIoff\fP. Also affects SCSI devices.
956 [Please see the \fBsmartctl \-S\fP command-line option.]
957 .TP
958 .B \-H
959 Check the SMART health status of the disk. If any Prefailure
960 Attributes are less than or equal to their threshold values, then disk
961 failure is predicted in less than 24 hours, and a message at loglevel
962 .B \'LOG_CRITICAL\'
963 will be logged to syslog. [Please see the
964 .B smartctl \-H
965 command-line option.]
966 .TP
967 .B \-l TYPE
968 Reports increases in the number of errors in one of the two SMART logs. The
969 valid arguments to this Directive are:
970
971 .I error
972 \- report if the number of ATA errors reported in the ATA Error Log
973 has increased since the last check.
974
975 .I selftest
976 \- report if the number of failed tests reported in the SMART
977 Self-Test Log has increased since the last check, or if the timestamp
978 associated with the most recent failed test has increased. Note that
979 such errors will \fBonly\fP be logged if you run self-tests on the
980 disk (and it fails a test!). Self-Tests can be run automatically by
981 \fBsmartd\fP: please see the \fB\'\-s\'\fP Directive below.
982 Self-Tests can also be run manually by using the \fB\'\-t\ short\'\fP
983 and \fB\'\-t\ long\'\fP options of \fBsmartctl\fP and the results of
984 the testing can be observed using the \fBsmartctl \'\-l\ selftest\'\fP
985 command-line option.]
986
987 [Please see the \fBsmartctl \-l\fP and \fB\-t\fP command-line
988 options.]
989 .TP
990 .B \-s REGEXP
991 Run Self-Tests or Offline Immediate Tests, at scheduled times. A
992 Self- or Offline Immediate Test will be run at the end of periodic
993 device polling, if all 12 characters of the string \fBT/MM/DD/d/HH\fP
994 match the extended regular expression \fBREGEXP\fP. Here:
995 .RS 7
996 .IP \fBT\fP 4
997 is the type of the test. The values that \fBsmartd\fP will try to
998 match (in turn) are: \'L\' for a \fBL\fPong Self-Test, \'S\' for a
999 \fBS\fPhort Self-Test, \'C\' for a \fBC\fPonveyance Self-Test (ATA
1000 only), and \'O\' for an \fBO\fPffline Immediate Test (ATA only). As
1001 soon as a match is found, the test will be started and no additional
1002 matches will be sought for that device and that polling cycle.
1003
1004 [NEW EXPERIMENTAL SMARTD FEATURE] To run scheduled Selective
1005 Self-Tests, use \'n\' for \fBn\fPext span, \'r\' to \fBr\fPedo last
1006 span, or \'c\' to \fBc\fPontinue with next span or redo last span
1007 based on status of last test. The LBA range is based on the first
1008 span from the last test.
1009 See the \fBsmartctl \-t select,[next|redo|cont]\fP options for
1010 further info.
1011
1012 .IP \fBMM\fP 4
1013 is the month of the year, expressed with two decimal digits. The
1014 range is from 01 (January) to 12 (December) inclusive. Do \fBnot\fP
1015 use a single decimal digit or the match will always fail!
1016 .IP \fBDD\fP 4
1017 is the day of the month, expressed with two decimal digits. The
1018 range is from 01 to 31 inclusive. Do \fBnot\fP
1019 use a single decimal digit or the match will always fail!
1020 .IP \fBd\fP 4
1021 is the day of the week, expressed with one decimal digit. The
1022 range is from 1 (Monday) to 7 (Sunday) inclusive.
1023 .IP \fBHH\fP 4
1024 is the hour of the day, written with two decimal digits, and given in
1025 hours after midnight. The range is 00 (midnight to just before 1am)
1026 to 23 (11pm to just before midnight) inclusive. Do \fBnot\fP use a
1027 single decimal digit or the match will always fail!
1028 .RE
1029 .\" The following two lines are a workaround for a man2html bug. Please leave them.
1030 .\" They define a non-existent option; useful because man2html can't correctly reset the margins.
1031 .TP
1032 .B \&
1033 Some examples follow. In reading these, keep in mind that in extended
1034 regular expressions a dot \fB\'.\'\fP matches any single character, and
1035 a parenthetical expression such as \fB\'(A|B|C)\'\fP denotes any one of the three possibilities \fBA\fP,
1036 \fBB\fP, or \fBC\fP.
1037
1038 To schedule a short Self-Test between 2-3am every morning, use:
1039 .nf
1040 \fB \-s S/../.././02\fP
1041 .fi
1042 To schedule a long Self-Test between 4-5am every Sunday morning, use:
1043 .nf
1044 \fB \-s L/../../7/04\fP
1045 .fi
1046 To schedule a long Self-Test between 10-11pm on the first and
1047 fifteenth day of each month, use:
1048 .nf
1049 \fB \-s L/../(01|15)/./22\fP
1050 .fi
1051 To schedule an Offline Immediate test after every midnight, 6am,
1052 noon,and 6pm, plus a Short Self-Test daily at 1-2am and a Long
1053 Self-Test every Saturday at 3-4am, use:
1054 .nf
1055 \fB \-s (O/../.././(00|06|12|18)|S/../.././01|L/../../6/03)\fP
1056 .fi
1057 If Long Self-Tests of a large disks take longer than the system uptime,
1058 a full disk test can be performed by several Selective Self-Tests.
1059 To setup a full test of a 1TB disk within 20 days (one 50GB span
1060 each day), run this command once:
1061 .nf
1062 smartctl -t select,0-99999999 /dev/sda
1063 .fi
1064 To run the next test spans on Monday-Friday between 12-13am, run smartd
1065 with this directive:
1066 .nf
1067 \fB \-s n/../../[1-5]/12\fP
1068 .fi
1069
1070
1071 Scheduled tests are run immediately following the regularly-scheduled
1072 device polling, if the current local date, time, and test type, match
1073 \fBREGEXP\fP. By default the regularly-scheduled device polling
1074 occurs every thirty minutes after starting \fBsmartd\fP. Take caution
1075 if you use the \'\-i\' option to make this polling interval more than
1076 sixty minutes: the poll times may fail to coincide with any of the
1077 testing times that you have specified with \fBREGEXP\fP. In this case
1078 the test will be run following the next device polling.
1079
1080 Before running an offline or self-test, \fBsmartd\fP checks to be sure
1081 that a self-test is not already running. If a self-test \fBis\fP
1082 already running, then this running self test will \fBnot\fP be
1083 interrupted to begin another test.
1084
1085 \fBsmartd\fP will not attempt to run \fBany\fP type of test if another
1086 test was already started or run in the same hour.
1087
1088 To avoid performance problems during system boot, \fBsmartd\fP will
1089 not attempt to run any scheduled tests following the very first
1090 device polling (unless \'\-q onecheck\' is specified).
1091
1092 Each time a test is run, \fBsmartd\fP will log an entry to SYSLOG.
1093 You can use these or the '-q showtests' command-line option to verify
1094 that you constructed \fBREGEXP\fP correctly. The matching order
1095 (\fBL\fP before \fBS\fP before \fBC\fP before \fBO\fP) ensures that
1096 if multiple test types are all scheduled for the same hour, the
1097 longer test type has precedence. This is usually the desired behavior.
1098
1099 If the scheduled tests are used in conjunction with state persistence
1100 (\'\-s\' option), smartd will also try to match the hours since last
1101 shutdown (or 90 days at most). If any test would have been started
1102 during downtime, the longest (see above) of these tests is run after
1103 second device polling.
1104
1105 If the \'\-n\' directive is used and any test would have been started
1106 during disk standby time, the longest of these tests is run when the
1107 disk is active again.
1108
1109 Unix users: please beware that the rules for extended regular
1110 expressions [regex(7)] are \fBnot\fP the same as the rules for
1111 file\-name pattern matching by the shell [glob(7)]. \fBsmartd\fP will
1112 issue harmless informational warning messages if it detects characters
1113 in \fBREGEXP\fP that appear to indicate that you have made this
1114 mistake.
1115
1116 .TP
1117 .B \-m ADD
1118 Send a warning email to the email address \fBADD\fP if the \'\-H\',
1119 \'\-l\', \'\-f\', \'\-C\', or \'\-O\' Directives detect a failure or a
1120 new error, or if a SMART command to the disk fails. This Directive
1121 only works in conjunction with these other Directives (or with the
1122 equivalent default \'\-a\' Directive).
1123
1124 To prevent your email in-box from getting filled up with warning
1125 messages, by default only a single warning will be sent for each of
1126 the enabled alert types, \'\-H\', \'\-l\', \'\-f\', \'\-C\', or
1127 \'\-O\' even if more than one failure or error is detected or if the
1128 failure or error persists. [This behavior can be modified; see the
1129 \'\-M\' Directive below.]
1130
1131 To send email to more than one user, please use the following "comma
1132 separated" form for the address: \fBuser1@add1,user2@add2,...,userN@addN\fP
1133 (with no spaces).
1134
1135 To test that email is being sent correctly, use the \'\-M test\'
1136 Directive described below to send one test email message on
1137 \fBsmartd\fP
1138 startup.
1139
1140 By default, email is sent using the system
1141 .B mail
1142 command. In order that
1143 \fBsmartd\fP
1144 find the mail command (normally /bin/mail) an executable named
1145 .B \'mail\'
1146 must be in the path of the shell or environment from which
1147 \fBsmartd\fP
1148 was started. If you wish to specify an explicit path to the mail
1149 executable (for example /usr/local/bin/mail) or a custom script to
1150 run, please use the \'\-M exec\' Directive below.
1151
1152 Note that by default under Solaris, in the previous paragraph,
1153 \'\fBmailx\fP\' and \'\fB/bin/mailx\fP\' are used, since Solaris
1154 \'/bin/mail\' does not accept a \'\-s\' (Subject) command-line
1155 argument.
1156
1157 On Windows, the \'\fBBlat\fP\' mailer
1158 (\fBhttp://blat.sourceforge.net/\fP) is used by default.
1159 This mailer uses a different command line syntax, see
1160 \'\-M exec\' below.
1161
1162 Note also that there is a special argument
1163 .B <nomailer>
1164 which can be given to the \'\-m\' Directive in conjunction with the \'\-M
1165 exec\' Directive. Please see below for an explanation of its effect.
1166
1167 If the mailer or the shell running it produces any STDERR/STDOUT
1168 output, then a snippet of that output will be copied to SYSLOG. The
1169 remainder of the output is discarded. If problems are encountered in
1170 sending mail, this should help you to understand and fix them. If
1171 you have mail problems, we recommend running \fBsmartd\fP in debug
1172 mode with the \'-d\' flag, using the \'-M test\' Directive described
1173 below.
1174
1175 The following extension is available on Windows:
1176 By specifying \'\fBmsgbox\fP\' as a mail address, a warning
1177 "email" is displayed as a message box on the screen.
1178 Using both \'\fBmsgbox\fP\' and regular mail addresses is possible,
1179 if \'\fBmsgbox\fP\' is the first word in the comma separated list.
1180 With \'\fBsysmsgbox\fP\', a system modal (always on top) message box
1181 is used. If running as a service, a service notification message box
1182 (always shown on current visible desktop) is used.
1183
1184 .TP
1185 .B \-M TYPE
1186 These Directives modify the behavior of the
1187 \fBsmartd\fP
1188 email warnings enabled with the \'\-m\' email Directive described above.
1189 These \'\-M\' Directives only work in conjunction with the \'\-m\'
1190 Directive and can not be used without it.
1191
1192 Multiple \-M Directives may be given. If more than one of the
1193 following three \-M Directives are given (example: \-M once \-M daily)
1194 then the final one (in the example, \-M daily) is used.
1195
1196 The valid arguments to the \-M Directive are (one of the following
1197 three):
1198
1199 .I once
1200 \- send only one warning email for each type of disk problem detected. This
1201 is the default.
1202
1203 .I daily
1204 \- send additional warning reminder emails, once per day, for each type
1205 of disk problem detected.
1206
1207 .I diminishing
1208 \- send additional warning reminder emails, after a one-day interval,
1209 then a two-day interval, then a four-day interval, and so on for each
1210 type of disk problem detected. Each interval is twice as long as the
1211 previous interval.
1212
1213 In addition, one may add zero or more of the following Directives:
1214
1215 .I test
1216 \- send a single test email
1217 immediately upon
1218 \fBsmartd\fP
1219 startup. This allows one to verify that email is delivered correctly.
1220 Note that if this Directive is used,
1221 \fBsmartd\fP
1222 will also send the normal email warnings that were enabled with the \'\-m\' Directive,
1223 in addition to the single test email!
1224
1225 .I exec PATH
1226 \- run the executable PATH instead of the default mail command, when
1227 \fBsmartd\fP
1228 needs to send email. PATH must point to an executable binary file or
1229 script.
1230
1231 By setting PATH to point to a customized script, you can make
1232 \fBsmartd\fP perform useful tricks when a disk problem is detected
1233 (beeping the console, shutting down the machine, broadcasting warnings
1234 to all logged-in users, etc.) But please be careful. \fBsmartd\fP
1235 will \fBblock\fP until the executable PATH returns, so if your
1236 executable hangs, then \fBsmartd\fP will also hang. Some sample
1237 scripts are included in
1238 /usr/local/share/doc/smartmontools-5.1/examplescripts/.
1239
1240 The return status of the executable is recorded by \fBsmartd\fP in
1241 SYSLOG. The executable is not expected to write to STDOUT or
1242 STDERR. If it does, then this is interpreted as indicating that
1243 something is going wrong with your executable, and a fragment of this
1244 output is logged to SYSLOG to help you to understand the problem.
1245 Normally, if you wish to leave some record behind, the executable
1246 should send mail or write to a file or device.
1247
1248 Before running the executable, \fBsmartd\fP sets a number of
1249 environment variables. These environment variables may be used to
1250 control the executable\'s behavior. The environment variables
1251 exported by \fBsmartd\fP are:
1252 .RS 7
1253 .IP \fBSMARTD_MAILER\fP 4
1254 is set to the argument of \-M exec, if present or else to \'mail\'
1255 (examples: /bin/mail, mail).
1256 .IP \fBSMARTD_DEVICE\fP 4
1257 is set to the device path (examples: /dev/hda, /dev/sdb).
1258 .IP \fBSMARTD_DEVICETYPE\fP 4
1259 is set to the device type (possible values: ata, scsi, 3ware,N,
1260 areca,N, hpt,L/M/N). Here N=0,...,127 denotes the ATA disk behind a
1261 3ware RAID controller and L/M/N denotes the SATA disk behind a
1262 HighPoint RocketRAID controller.
1263 .IP \fBSMARTD_DEVICESTRING\fP 4
1264 is set to the device description. For SMARTD_DEVICETYPE of ata or
1265 scsi, this is the same as SMARTD_DEVICE. For 3ware RAID controllers,
1266 the form used is \'/dev/sdc [3ware_disk_01]\'. For HighPoint
1267 RocketRAID controller, the form is \'/dev/sdd [hpt_1/1/1]\' under Linux
1268 or \'/dev/hptrr [hpt_1/1/1]\' under FreeBSD. For Areca controllers, the
1269 form is \'/dev/sg2 [areca_disk_09]\'. In these cases the device string
1270 contains a space and is NOT quoted. So to use $SMARTD_DEVICESTRING in a
1271 bash script you should probably enclose it in double quotes.
1272 .IP \fBSMARTD_FAILTYPE\fP 4
1273 gives the reason for the warning or message email. The possible values that
1274 it takes and their meanings are:
1275 .nf
1276 .fi
1277 \fIEmailTest\fP: this is an email test message.
1278 .nf
1279 .fi
1280 \fIHealth\fP: the SMART health status indicates imminent failure.
1281 .nf
1282 .fi
1283 \fIUsage\fP: a usage Attribute has failed.
1284 .nf
1285 .fi
1286 \fISelfTest\fP: the number of self-test failures has increased.
1287 .nf
1288 .fi
1289 \fIErrorCount\fP: the number of errors in the ATA error log has increased.
1290 .nf
1291 .fi
1292 \fICurrentPendingSector\fP: one of more disk sectors could not be
1293 read and are marked to be reallocated (replaced with spare sectors).
1294 .nf
1295 .fi
1296 \fIOfflineUncorrectableSector\fP: during off\-line testing, or self\-testing,
1297 one or more disk sectors could not be read.
1298 .nf
1299 .fi
1300 \fIFailedHealthCheck\fP: the SMART health status command failed.
1301 .nf
1302 .fi
1303 \fIFailedReadSmartData\fP: the command to read SMART Attribute data failed.
1304 .nf
1305 .fi
1306 \fIFailedReadSmartErrorLog\fP: the command to read the SMART error log failed.
1307 .nf
1308 .fi
1309 \fIFailedReadSmartSelfTestLog\fP: the command to read the SMART self-test log failed.
1310 .nf
1311 .fi
1312 \fIFailedOpenDevice\fP: the open() command to the device failed.
1313 .IP \fBSMARTD_ADDRESS\fP 4
1314 is determined by the address argument ADD of the \'\-m\' Directive.
1315 If ADD is \fB<nomailer>\fP, then \fBSMARTD_ADDRESS\fP is not set.
1316 Otherwise, it is set to the comma-separated-list of email addresses
1317 given by the argument ADD, with the commas replaced by spaces
1318 (example:admin@example.com root). If more than one email address is
1319 given, then this string will contain space characters and is NOT
1320 quoted, so to use it in a bash script you may want to enclose it in
1321 double quotes.
1322 .IP \fBSMARTD_MESSAGE\fP 4
1323 is set to the one sentence summary warning email message string from
1324 \fBsmartd\fP.
1325 This message string contains space characters and is NOT quoted. So to
1326 use $SMARTD_MESSAGE in a bash script you should probably enclose it in
1327 double quotes.
1328 .IP \fBSMARTD_FULLMESSAGE\fP 4
1329 is set to the contents of the entire email warning message string from
1330 \fBsmartd\fP.
1331 This message string contains space and return characters and is NOT quoted. So to
1332 use $SMARTD_FULLMESSAGE in a bash script you should probably enclose it in
1333 double quotes.
1334 .IP \fBSMARTD_TFIRST\fP 4
1335 is a text string giving the time and date at which the first problem
1336 of this type was reported. This text string contains space characters
1337 and no newlines, and is NOT quoted. For example:
1338 .nf
1339 .fi
1340 Sun Feb 9 14:58:19 2003 CST
1341 .IP \fBSMARTD_TFIRSTEPOCH\fP 4
1342 is an integer, which is the unix epoch (number of seconds since Jan 1,
1343 1970) for \fBSMARTD_TFIRST\fP.
1344 .RE
1345 .\" The following two lines are a workaround for a man2html bug. Please leave them.
1346 .\" They define a non-existent option; useful because man2html can't correctly reset the margins.
1347 .TP
1348 .B \&
1349 The shell which is used to run PATH is system-dependent. For vanilla
1350 Linux/glibc it\'s bash. For other systems, the man page for
1351 \fBpopen\fP(3) should say what shell is used.
1352
1353 If the \'\-m ADD\' Directive is given with a normal address argument,
1354 then the executable pointed to by PATH will be run in a shell with
1355 STDIN receiving the body of the email message, and with the same
1356 command-line arguments:
1357 .nf
1358 -s "$SMARTD_SUBJECT" $SMARTD_ADDRESS
1359 .fi
1360 that would normally be provided to \'mail\'. Examples include:
1361 .nf
1362 .B -m user@home -M exec /bin/mail
1363 .B -m admin@work -M exec /usr/local/bin/mailto
1364 .B -m root -M exec /Example_1/bash/script/below
1365 .fi
1366
1367 Note that on Windows, the syntax of the \'\fBBlat\fP\' mailer is
1368 used:
1369 .nf
1370 - -q -subject "$SMARTD_SUBJECT" -to "$SMARTD_ADDRESS"
1371 .fi
1372
1373 If the \'\-m ADD\' Directive is given with the special address argument
1374 .B <nomailer>
1375 then the executable pointed to by PATH is run in a shell with
1376 .B no
1377 STDIN and
1378 .B no
1379 command-line arguments, for example:
1380 .nf
1381 .B -m <nomailer> -M exec /Example_2/bash/script/below
1382 .fi
1383 If the executable produces any STDERR/STDOUT output, then \fBsmartd\fP
1384 assumes that something is going wrong, and a snippet of that output
1385 will be copied to SYSLOG. The remainder of the output is then
1386 discarded.
1387
1388 Some EXAMPLES of scripts that can be used with the \'\-M exec\'
1389 Directive are given below. Some sample scripts are also included in
1390 /usr/local/share/doc/smartmontools-5.1/examplescripts/.
1391
1392 .TP
1393 .B \-f
1394 Check for \'failure\' of any Usage Attributes. If these Attributes are
1395 less than or equal to the threshold, it does NOT indicate imminent
1396 disk failure. It "indicates an advisory condition where the usage or
1397 age of the device has exceeded its intended design life period."
1398 [Please see the \fBsmartctl \-A\fP command-line option.]
1399 .TP
1400 .B \-p
1401 Report anytime that a Prefail Attribute has changed
1402 its value since the last check, 30 minutes ago. [Please see the
1403 .B smartctl \-A
1404 command-line option.]
1405 .TP
1406 .B \-u
1407 Report anytime that a Usage Attribute has changed its value
1408 since the last check, 30 minutes ago. [Please see the
1409 .B smartctl \-A
1410 command-line option.]
1411 .TP
1412 .B \-t
1413 Equivalent to turning on the two previous flags \'\-p\' and \'\-u\'.
1414 Tracks changes in \fIall\fP device Attributes (both Prefailure and
1415 Usage). [Please see the \fBsmartctl\fP \-A command-line option.]
1416 .TP
1417 .B \-i ID
1418 Ignore device Attribute number \fBID\fP when checking for failure of
1419 Usage Attributes. \fBID\fP must be a decimal integer in the range
1420 from 1 to 255. This Directive modifies the behavior of the \'\-f\'
1421 Directive and has no effect without it.
1422
1423 This is useful, for example, if you have a very old disk and don\'t
1424 want to keep getting messages about the hours-on-lifetime Attribute
1425 (usually Attribute 9) failing. This Directive may appear multiple
1426 times for a single device, if you want to ignore multiple Attributes.
1427 .TP
1428 .B \-I ID
1429 Ignore device Attribute \fBID\fP when tracking changes in the
1430 Attribute values. \fBID\fP must be a decimal integer in the range
1431 from 1 to 255. This Directive modifies the behavior of the \'\-p\',
1432 \'\-u\', and \'\-t\' tracking Directives and has no effect without one
1433 of them.
1434
1435 This is useful, for example, if one of the device Attributes is the disk
1436 temperature (usually Attribute 194 or 231). It\'s annoying to get reports
1437 each time the temperature changes. This Directive may appear multiple
1438 times for a single device, if you want to ignore multiple Attributes.
1439 .TP
1440 .B \-r ID[!]
1441 When tracking, report the \fIRaw\fP value of Attribute \fBID\fP along
1442 with its (normally reported) \fINormalized\fP value. \fBID\fP must be
1443 a decimal integer in the range from 1 to 255. This Directive modifies
1444 the behavior of the \'\-p\', \'\-u\', and \'\-t\' tracking Directives
1445 and has no effect without one of them. This Directive may be given
1446 multiple times.
1447
1448 A common use of this Directive is to track the device Temperature
1449 (often ID=194 or 231).
1450
1451 If the optional flag \'!\' is appended, a change of the Normalized
1452 value is considered critical. The report will be logged as LOG_CRIT
1453 and a warning email will be sent if \'-m\' is specified.
1454
1455 .TP
1456 .B \-R ID[!]
1457 When tracking, report whenever the \fIRaw\fP value of Attribute
1458 \fBID\fP changes. (Normally \fBsmartd\fP only tracks/reports changes
1459 of the \fINormalized\fP Attribute values.) \fBID\fP must be a decimal
1460 integer in the range from 1 to 255. This Directive modifies the
1461 behavior of the \'\-p\', \'\-u\', and \'\-t\' tracking Directives and
1462 has no effect without one of them. This Directive may be given
1463 multiple times.
1464
1465 If this Directive is given, it automatically implies the \'\-r\'
1466 Directive for the same Attribute, so that the Raw value of the
1467 Attribute is reported.
1468
1469 A common use of this Directive is to track the device Temperature
1470 (often ID=194 or 231). It is also useful for understanding how
1471 different types of system behavior affects the values of certain
1472 Attributes.
1473
1474 If the optional flag \'!\' is appended, a change of the Raw
1475 value is considered critical. The report will be logged as
1476 LOG_CRIT and a warning email will be sent if \'-m\' is specified.
1477 An example is \'-R 5!\' to warn when new sectors are reallocated.
1478
1479 .TP
1480 .B \-C ID[+]
1481 [ATA only] Report if the current number of pending sectors is
1482 non-zero. Here \fBID\fP is the id number of the Attribute whose raw
1483 value is the Current Pending Sector count. The allowed range of
1484 \fBID\fP is 0 to 255 inclusive. To turn off this reporting, use
1485 ID\ =\ 0. If the \fB\-C ID\fP option is not given, then it defaults to
1486 \fB\-C 197\fP (since Attribute 197 is generally used to monitor
1487 pending sectors).
1488
1489 If \'+\' is specified, a report is only printed if the number of sectors
1490 has increased between two check cycles. Some disks do not reset this
1491 attribute when a bad sector is reallocated.
1492 See also \'\-v 197,increasing\' below.
1493
1494 A pending sector is a disk sector (containing 512 bytes of your data)
1495 which the device would like to mark as ``bad" and reallocate.
1496 Typically this is because your computer tried to read that sector, and
1497 the read failed because the data on it has been corrupted and has
1498 inconsistent Error Checking and Correction (ECC) codes. This is
1499 important to know, because it means that there is some unreadable data
1500 on the disk. The problem of figuring out what file this data belongs
1501 to is operating system and file system specific. You can typically
1502 force the sector to reallocate by writing to it (translation: make the
1503 device substitute a spare good sector for the bad one) but at the
1504 price of losing the 512 bytes of data stored there.
1505
1506 .TP
1507 .B \-U ID[+]
1508 [ATA only] Report if the number of offline uncorrectable sectors is
1509 non-zero. Here \fBID\fP is the id number of the Attribute whose raw
1510 value is the Offline Uncorrectable Sector count. The allowed range of
1511 \fBID\fP is 0 to 255 inclusive. To turn off this reporting, use
1512 ID\ =\ 0. If the \fB\-U ID\fP option is not given, then it defaults to
1513 \fB\-U 198\fP (since Attribute 198 is generally used to monitor
1514 offline uncorrectable sectors).
1515
1516 If \'+\' is specified, a report is only printed if the number of sectors
1517 has increased since the last check cycle. Some disks do not reset this
1518 attribute when a bad sector is reallocated.
1519 See also \'\-v 198,increasing\' below.
1520
1521 An offline uncorrectable sector is a disk sector which was not
1522 readable during an off\-line scan or a self\-test. This is important
1523 to know, because if you have data stored in this disk sector, and you
1524 need to read it, the read will fail. Please see the previous \'\-C\'
1525 option for more details.
1526
1527 .TP
1528 .B \-W DIFF[,INFO[,CRIT]]
1529 Report if the current temperature had changed by at least \fBDIFF\fP
1530 degrees since last report, or if new min or max temperature is detected.
1531 Report or Warn if the temperature is greater or equal than one of
1532 \fBINFO\fP or \fBCRIT\fP degrees Celsius.
1533 If the limit \fBCRIT\fP is reached, a message with loglevel
1534 \fB\'LOG_CRITICAL\'\fP will be logged to syslog and a warning email
1535 will be send if '-m' is specified. If only the limit \fBINFO\fP is
1536 reached, a message with loglevel \fB\'LOG_INFO\'\fP will be logged.
1537
1538 If this directive is used in conjunction with state persistence
1539 (\'\-s\' option), the min and max temperature values are preserved
1540 across boot cycles. The minimum temperature value is not updated
1541 during the first 30 minutes after startup.
1542
1543 To disable any of the 3 reports, set the corresponding limit to 0.
1544 Trailing zero arguments may be omitted. By default, all temperature
1545 reports are disabled (\'-W 0\').
1546
1547 To track temperature changes of at least 2 degrees, use:
1548 .nf
1549 \fB \-W 2
1550 .fi
1551 To log informal messages on temperatures of at least 40 degrees, use:
1552 .nf
1553 \fB \-W 0,40
1554 .fi
1555 For warning messages/mails on temperatures of at least 45 degrees, use:
1556 .nf
1557 \fB \-W 0,0,45
1558 .fi
1559 To combine all of the above reports, use:
1560 .nf
1561 \fB \-W 2,40,45
1562 .fi
1563
1564 For ATA devices, smartd interprets Attribute 194 as Temperature Celsius
1565 by default. This can be changed to Attribute 9 or 220 by the drive
1566 database or by the \'-v\' directive, see below.
1567
1568 .TP
1569 .B \-F TYPE
1570 [ATA only] Modifies the behavior of \fBsmartd\fP to compensate for
1571 some known and understood device firmware bug. The arguments to this
1572 Directive are exclusive, so that only the final Directive given is
1573 used. The valid values are:
1574
1575 .I none
1576 \- Assume that the device firmware obeys the ATA specifications. This is
1577 the default, unless the device has presets for \'\-F\' in the device
1578 database.
1579
1580 .I samsung
1581 \- In some Samsung disks (example: model SV4012H Firmware Version:
1582 RM100-08) some of the two- and four-byte quantities in the SMART data
1583 structures are byte-swapped (relative to the ATA specification).
1584 Enabling this option tells \fBsmartd\fP to evaluate these quantities
1585 in byte-reversed order. Some signs that your disk needs this option
1586 are (1) no self-test log printed, even though you have run self-tests;
1587 (2) very large numbers of ATA errors reported in the ATA error log;
1588 (3) strange and impossible values for the ATA error log timestamps.
1589
1590 .I samsung2
1591 \- In more recent Samsung disks (firmware revisions ending in "\-23") the
1592 number of ATA errors reported is byte swapped. Enabling this option
1593 tells \fBsmartd\fP to evaluate this quantity in byte-reversed order.
1594
1595 .I samsung3
1596 \- Some Samsung disks (at least SP2514N with Firmware VF100\-37) report
1597 a self\-test still in progress with 0% remaining when the test was already
1598 completed. If this directive is specified, \fBsmartd\fP will not skip the
1599 next scheduled self\-test (see Directive \'\-s\' above) in this case.
1600
1601 Note that an explicit \'\-F\' Directive will over-ride any preset
1602 values for \'\-F\' (see the \'\-P\' option below).
1603
1604
1605 [Please see the \fBsmartctl \-F\fP command-line option.]
1606
1607 .TP
1608 .B \-v N,OPTION
1609 Modifies the labeling for Attribute N, for disks which use
1610 non-standard Attribute definitions. This is useful in connection with
1611 the Attribute tracking/reporting Directives.
1612
1613 This Directive may appear multiple times. Valid arguments to this
1614 Directive are:
1615
1616 .I 9,minutes
1617 \- Raw Attribute number 9 is power-on time in minutes. Its raw value
1618 will be displayed in the form \'Xh+Ym\'. Here X is hours, and Y is
1619 minutes in the range 0-59 inclusive. Y is always printed with two
1620 digits, for example \'06\' or \'31\' or \'00\'.
1621
1622 .I 9,seconds
1623 \- Raw Attribute number 9 is power-on time in seconds. Its raw value
1624 will be displayed in the form \'Xh+Ym+Zs\'. Here X is hours, Y is
1625 minutes in the range 0-59 inclusive, and Z is seconds in the range
1626 0-59 inclusive. Y and Z are always printed with two digits, for
1627 example \'06\' or \'31\' or \'00\'.
1628
1629 .I 9,halfminutes
1630 \- Raw Attribute number 9 is power-on time, measured in units of 30
1631 seconds. This format is used by some Samsung disks. Its raw value
1632 will be displayed in the form \'Xh+Ym\'. Here X is hours, and Y is
1633 minutes in the range 0-59 inclusive. Y is always printed with two
1634 digits, for example \'06\' or \'31\' or \'00\'.
1635
1636 .I 9,temp
1637 \- Raw Attribute number 9 is the disk temperature in Celsius.
1638
1639 .I 192,emergencyretractcyclect
1640 \- Raw Attribute number 192 is the Emergency Retract Cycle Count.
1641
1642 .I 193,loadunload
1643 \- Raw Attribute number 193 contains two values. The first is the
1644 number of load cycles. The second is the number of unload cycles.
1645 The difference between these two values is the number of times that
1646 the drive was unexpectedly powered off (also called an emergency
1647 unload). As a rule of thumb, the mechanical stress created by one
1648 emergency unload is equivalent to that created by one hundred normal
1649 unloads.
1650
1651 .I 194,10xCelsius
1652 \- Raw Attribute number 194 is ten times the disk temperature in
1653 Celsius. This is used by some Samsung disks (example: model SV1204H
1654 with RK100-13 firmware).
1655
1656 .I 194,unknown
1657 \- Raw Attribute number 194 is NOT the disk temperature, and its
1658 interpretation is unknown. This is primarily useful for the -P
1659 (presets) Directive.
1660
1661 .I 197,increasing
1662 \- Raw Attribute number 197 (Current Pending Sector Count) is not
1663 reset if uncorrectable sectors are reallocated. This also sets
1664 \'-C 197+\' if no other \'-C\' directive is specified.
1665
1666 .I 198,increasing
1667 \- Raw Attribute number 198 (Offline Uncorrectable Sector Count) is not
1668 reset if uncorrectable sector are reallocated. This also sets
1669 \'-U 198+\' if no other \'-U\' directive is specified.
1670
1671 .I 198,offlinescanuncsectorct
1672 \- Raw Attribute number 198 is the Offline Scan UNC Sector Count.
1673
1674 .I 200,writeerrorcount
1675 \- Raw Attribute number 200 is the Write Error Count.
1676
1677 .I 201,detectedtacount
1678 \- Raw Attribute number 201 is the Detected TA Count.
1679
1680 .I 220,temp
1681 \- Raw Attribute number 220 is the disk temperature in Celsius.
1682
1683 Note: a table of hard drive models, listing which Attribute
1684 corresponds to temperature, can be found at:
1685 \fBhttp://www.guzu.net/linux/hddtemp.db\fP
1686
1687 .I N,raw8
1688 \- Print the Raw value of Attribute N as six 8-bit unsigned base-10
1689 integers. This may be useful for decoding the meaning of the Raw
1690 value. The form \'N,raw8\' prints Raw values for ALL Attributes in this
1691 form. The form (for example) \'123,raw8\' only prints the Raw value for
1692 Attribute 123 in this form.
1693
1694 .I N,raw16
1695 \- Print the Raw value of Attribute N as three 16-bit unsigned base-10
1696 integers. This may be useful for decoding the meaning of the Raw
1697 value. The form \'N,raw16\' prints Raw values for ALL Attributes in this
1698 form. The form (for example) \'123,raw16\' only prints the Raw value for
1699 Attribute 123 in this form.
1700
1701 .I N,raw48
1702 \- Print the Raw value of Attribute N as a 48-bit unsigned base-10
1703 integer. This may be useful for decoding the meaning of the Raw
1704 value. The form \'N,raw48\' prints Raw values for ALL Attributes in
1705 this form. The form (for example) \'123,raw48\' only prints the Raw
1706 value for Attribute 123 in this form.
1707
1708 .TP
1709 .B \-P TYPE
1710 Specifies whether
1711 \fBsmartd\fP
1712 should use any preset options that are available for this drive. The
1713 valid arguments to this Directive are:
1714
1715 .I use
1716 \- use any presets that are available for this drive. This is the default.
1717
1718 .I ignore
1719 \- do not use any presets for this drive.
1720
1721 .I show
1722 \- show the presets listed for this drive in the database.
1723
1724 .I showall
1725 \- show the presets that are available for all drives and then exit.
1726
1727 [Please see the
1728 .B smartctl \-P
1729 command-line option.]
1730
1731 .TP
1732 .B \-a
1733 Equivalent to turning on all of the following Directives:
1734 .B \'\-H\'
1735 to check the SMART health status,
1736 .B \'\-f\'
1737 to report failures of Usage (rather than Prefail) Attributes,
1738 .B \'\-t\'
1739 to track changes in both Prefailure and Usage Attributes,
1740 .B \'\-l\ selftest\'
1741 to report increases in the number of Self-Test Log errors,
1742 .B \'\-l\ error\'
1743 to report increases in the number of ATA errors,
1744 .B \'\-C 197\'
1745 to report nonzero values of the current pending sector count, and
1746 .B \'\-U 198\'
1747 to report nonzero values of the offline pending sector count.
1748
1749 Note that \-a is the default for ATA devices. If none of these other
1750 Directives is given, then \-a is assumed.
1751
1752 .TP
1753 .B #
1754 Comment: ignore the remainder of the line.
1755 .TP
1756 .B \e
1757 Continuation character: if this is the last non-white or non-comment
1758 character on a line, then the following line is a continuation of the current
1759 one.
1760 .PP
1761 If you are not sure which Directives to use, I suggest experimenting
1762 for a few minutes with
1763 .B smartctl
1764 to see what SMART functionality your disk(s) support(s). If you do
1765 not like voluminous syslog messages, a good choice of
1766 \fBsmartd\fP
1767 configuration file Directives might be:
1768 .nf
1769 .B \-H \-l\ selftest \-l\ error \-f.
1770 .fi
1771 If you want more frequent information, use:
1772 .B -a.
1773
1774 .TP
1775 .B ADDITIONAL DETAILS ABOUT DEVICESCAN
1776 If the first non-comment entry in the configuration file is the text
1777 string \fBDEVICESCAN\fP in capital letters, then \fBsmartd\fP will
1778 ignore any remaining lines in the configuration file, and will scan
1779 for devices.
1780
1781 If \fBDEVICESCAN\fP is not followed by any Directives, then smartd
1782 will scan for both ATA and SCSI devices, and will monitor all possible
1783 SMART properties of any devices that are found.
1784
1785 \fBDEVICESCAN\fP may optionally be followed by any valid Directives,
1786 which will be applied to all devices that are found in the scan. For
1787 example
1788 .nf
1789 .B DEVICESCAN -m root@example.com
1790 .fi
1791 will scan for all devices, and then monitor them. It will send one
1792 email warning per device for any problems that are found.
1793 .nf
1794 .B DEVICESCAN -d ata -m root@example.com
1795 .fi
1796 will do the same, but restricts the scan to ATA devices only.
1797 .nf
1798 .B DEVICESCAN -H -d ata -m root@example.com
1799 .fi
1800 will do the same, but only monitors the SMART health status of the
1801 devices, (rather than the default \-a, which monitors all SMART
1802 properties).
1803
1804 .TP
1805 .B EXAMPLES OF SHELL SCRIPTS FOR \'\-M exec\'
1806 These are two examples of shell scripts that can be used with the \'\-M
1807 exec PATH\' Directive described previously. The paths to these scripts
1808 and similar executables is the PATH argument to the \'\-M exec PATH\'
1809 Directive.
1810
1811 Example 1: This script is for use with \'\-m ADDRESS -M exec PATH\'. It appends
1812 the output of
1813 .B smartctl -a
1814 to the output of the smartd email warning message and sends it to ADDRESS.
1815
1816 .nf
1817 \fB
1818 #! /bin/bash
1819
1820 # Save the email message (STDIN) to a file:
1821 cat > /root/msg
1822
1823 # Append the output of smartctl -a to the message:
1824 /usr/local/sbin/smartctl -a -d $SMART_DEVICETYPE $SMARTD_DEVICE >> /root/msg
1825
1826 # Now email the message to the user at address ADD:
1827 /bin/mail -s "$SMARTD_SUBJECT" $SMARTD_ADDRESS < /root/msg
1828 \fP
1829 .fi
1830
1831 Example 2: This script is for use with \'\-m <nomailer> \-M exec
1832 PATH\'. It warns all users about a disk problem, waits 30 seconds, and
1833 then powers down the machine.
1834
1835 .nf
1836 \fB
1837 #! /bin/bash
1838
1839 # Warn all users of a problem
1840 wall \'Problem detected with disk: \' "$SMARTD_DEVICESTRING"
1841 wall \'Warning message from smartd is: \' "$SMARTD_MESSAGE"
1842 wall \'Shutting down machine in 30 seconds... \'
1843
1844 # Wait half a minute
1845 sleep 30
1846
1847 # Power down the machine
1848 /sbin/shutdown -hf now
1849 \fP
1850 .fi
1851
1852 Some example scripts are distributed with the smartmontools package,
1853 in /usr/local/share/doc/smartmontools-5.1/examplescripts/.
1854
1855 Please note that these scripts typically run as root, so any files
1856 that they read/write should not be writable by ordinary users or
1857 reside in directories like /tmp that are writable by ordinary users
1858 and may expose your system to symlink attacks.
1859
1860 As previously described, if the scripts write to STDOUT or STDERR,
1861 this is interpreted as indicating that there was an internal error
1862 within the script, and a snippet of STDOUT/STDERR is logged to SYSLOG.
1863 The remainder is flushed.
1864
1865 .\" ENDINCLUDE
1866 .\" DO NOT MODIFY THIS OR PREVIOUS/NEXT LINES. THIS DEFINES THE
1867 .\" END OF THE INCLUDE SECTION FOR smartd.conf.5
1868
1869 .SH NOTES
1870 \fBsmartd\fP
1871 will make log entries at loglevel
1872 .B LOG_INFO
1873 if the Normalized SMART Attribute values have changed, as reported using the
1874 .B \'\-t\', \'\-p\',
1875 or
1876 .B \'\-u\'
1877 Directives. For example:
1878 .nf
1879 .B \'Device: /dev/hda, SMART Attribute: 194 Temperature_Celsius changed from 94 to 93\'
1880 .fi
1881 Note that in this message, the value given is the \'Normalized\' not the \'Raw\'
1882 Attribute value (the disk temperature in this case is about 22
1883 Celsius). The
1884 .B \'-R\'
1885 and
1886 .B \'-r\'
1887 Directives modify this behavior, so that the information is printed
1888 with the Raw values as well, for example:
1889 .nf
1890 .B \'Device: /dev/hda, SMART Attribute: 194 Temperature_Celsius changed from 94 [Raw 22] to 93 [Raw 23]\'
1891 .fi
1892 Here the Raw values are the actual disk temperatures in Celsius. The
1893 way in which the Raw values are printed, and the names under which the
1894 Attributes are reported, is governed by the various
1895 .B \'-v Num,Description\'
1896 Directives described previously.
1897
1898 Please see the
1899 .B smartctl
1900 manual page for further explanation of the differences between
1901 Normalized and Raw Attribute values.
1902
1903 \fBsmartd\fP
1904 will make log entries at loglevel
1905 .B LOG_CRIT
1906 if a SMART Attribute has failed, for example:
1907 .nf
1908 .B \'Device: /dev/hdc, Failed SMART Attribute: 5 Reallocated_Sector_Ct\'
1909 .fi
1910 This loglevel is used for reporting enabled by the
1911 .B \'\-H\', \-f\', \'\-l\ selftest\',
1912 and
1913 .B \'\-l\ error\'
1914 Directives. Entries reporting failure of SMART Prefailure Attributes
1915 should not be ignored: they mean that the disk is failing. Use the
1916 .B smartctl
1917 utility to investigate.
1918
1919 Under Solaris with the default \fB/etc/syslog.conf\fP configuration,
1920 messages below loglevel \fBLOG_NOTICE\fP will \fBnot\fP be recorded.
1921 Hence all \fBsmartd\fP messages with loglevel \fBLOG_INFO\fP will be
1922 lost. If you want to use the existing daemon facility to log all
1923 messages from \fBsmartd\fP, you should change \fB/etc/syslog.conf\fP
1924 from:
1925 .nf
1926 ...;daemon.notice;... /var/adm/messages
1927 .fi
1928 to read:
1929 .nf
1930 ...;daemon.info;... /var/adm/messages
1931 .fi
1932 Alternatively, you can use a local facility to log messages: please
1933 see the \fBsmartd\fP '-l' command-line option described above.
1934
1935 On Cygwin and Windows, the log messages are written to the event log
1936 or to a file. See documentation of the '-l FACILITY' option above for
1937 details.
1938
1939 On Windows, the following built-in commands can be used to control
1940 \fBsmartd\fP, if running as a daemon:
1941
1942 \'\fBsmartd status\fP\' \- check status
1943
1944 \'\fBsmartd stop\fP\' \- stop smartd
1945
1946 \'\fBsmartd reload\fP\' \- reread config file
1947
1948 \'\fBsmartd restart\fP\' \- restart smartd
1949
1950 \'\fBsmartd sigusr1\fP\' \- check disks now
1951
1952 \'\fBsmartd sigusr2\fP\' \- toggle debug mode
1953
1954 On WinNT4/2000/XP, \fBsmartd\fP can also be run as a Windows service:
1955
1956
1957 The Cygwin Version of \fBsmartd\fP can be run as a service via the
1958 cygrunsrv tool. The start-up script provides Cygwin-specific commands
1959 to install and remove the service:
1960 .nf
1961 .B /usr/local/etc/rc.d/init.d/smartd install [options]
1962 .B /usr/local/etc/rc.d/init.d/smartd remove
1963 .fi
1964 The service can be started and stopped by the start-up script as usual
1965 (see \fBEXAMPLES\fP above).
1966
1967
1968 The Windows Version of \fBsmartd\fP has buildin support for services:
1969
1970 \'\fBsmartd install [options]\fP\' installs a service
1971 named "smartd" (display name "SmartD Service") using the command line
1972 \'/installpath/smartd.exe --service [options]\'.
1973
1974 \'\fBsmartd remove\fP\' can later be used to remove the service entry
1975 from registry.
1976
1977 Upon startup, the smartd service changes the working directory
1978 to its own installation path. If smartd.conf and blat.exe are stored
1979 in this directory, no \'-c\' option and \'-M exec\' directive is needed.
1980
1981 The debug mode (\'-d\', \'-q onecheck\') does not work if smartd is
1982 running as service.
1983
1984 The service can be controlled as usual with Windows commands \'net\'
1985 or \'sc\' (\'\fBnet start smartd\fP\', \'\fBnet stop smartd\fP\').
1986
1987 Pausing the service (\'\fBnet pause smartd\fP\') sets the interval between
1988 disk checks (\'-i N\') to infinite.
1989
1990 Continuing the paused service (\'\fBnet continue smartd\fP\') resets the
1991 interval and rereads the configuration file immediately (like \fBSIGHUP\fP):
1992
1993 Continuing a still running service (\'\fBnet continue smartd\fP\' without
1994 preceding \'\fBnet pause smartd\fP\') does not reread configuration but
1995 checks disks immediately (like \fBSIGUSR1\fP).
1996
1997 .SH LOG TIMESTAMP TIMEZONE
1998
1999 When \fBsmartd\fP makes log entries, these are time-stamped. The time
2000 stamps are in the computer's local time zone, which is generally set
2001 using either the environment variable \'\fBTZ\fP\' or using a
2002 time-zone file such as \fB/etc/localtime\fP. You may wish to change
2003 the timezone while \fBsmartd\fP is running (for example, if you carry
2004 a laptop to a new time-zone and don't reboot it). Due to a bug in the
2005 \fBtzset(3)\fP function of many unix standard C libraries, the
2006 time-zone stamps of \fBsmartd\fP might not change. For some systems,
2007 \fBsmartd\fP will work around this problem \fIif\fP the time-zone is
2008 set using \fB/etc/localtime\fP. The work-around \fIfails\fP if the
2009 time-zone is set using the \'\fBTZ\fP\' variable (or a file that it
2010 points to).
2011
2012
2013 .SH RETURN VALUES
2014 The return value (exit status) of
2015 \fBsmartd\fP
2016 can have the following values:
2017 .TP
2018 .B 0:
2019 Daemon startup successful, or \fBsmartd\fP was killed by a SIGTERM (or in debug mode, a SIGQUIT).
2020 .TP
2021 .B 1:
2022 Commandline did not parse.
2023 .TP
2024 .B 2:
2025 There was a syntax error in the config file.
2026 .TP
2027 .B 3:
2028 Forking the daemon failed.
2029 .TP
2030 .B 4:
2031 Couldn\'t create PID file.
2032 .TP
2033 .B 5:
2034 Config file does not exist (only returned in conjunction with the \'-c\' option).
2035 .TP
2036 .B 6:
2037 Config file exists, but cannot be read.
2038 .TP
2039 .B 8:
2040 \fBsmartd\fP
2041 ran out of memory during startup.
2042 .TP
2043 .B 9:
2044 A compile time constant of\fB smartd\fP was too small. This can be caused by an
2045 excessive number of disks, or by lines in \fB /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf\fP that are too long.
2046 Please report this problem to \fB smartmontools-support@lists.sourceforge.net\fP.
2047 .TP
2048 .B 10
2049 An inconsistency was found in \fBsmartd\fP\'s internal data
2050 structures. This should never happen. It must be due to either a
2051 coding or compiler bug. \fIPlease\fP report such failures to
2052 smartmontools-support@lists.sourceforge.net.
2053 .TP
2054 .B 16:
2055 A device explicitly listed in
2056 .B /usr/local/etc/smartd.conf
2057 can\'t be monitored.
2058 .TP
2059 .B 17:
2060 \fBsmartd\fP
2061 didn\'t find any devices to monitor.
2062 .TP
2063 .B 254:
2064 When in daemon mode,
2065 \fBsmartd\fP
2066 received a SIGINT or SIGQUIT. (Note that in debug mode, SIGINT has
2067 the same effect as SIGHUP, and makes \fBsmartd\fP reload its
2068 configuration file. SIGQUIT has the same effect as SIGTERM and causes
2069 \fBsmartd\fP to exit with zero exit status.
2070 .TP
2071 .B 132 and above
2072 \fBsmartd\fP
2073 was killed by a signal that is not explicitly listed above. The exit
2074 status is then 128 plus the signal number. For example if
2075 \fBsmartd\fP
2076 is killed by SIGKILL (signal 9) then the exit status is 137.
2077
2078 .PP
2079 .SH AUTHOR
2080 \fBBruce Allen\fP smartmontools-support@lists.sourceforge.net
2081 .fi
2082 University of Wisconsin \- Milwaukee Physics Department
2083
2084 .PP
2085 .SH CONTRIBUTORS
2086 The following have made large contributions to smartmontools:
2087 .nf
2088 \fBCasper Dik\fP (Solaris SCSI interface)
2089 \fBChristian Franke\fP (Windows interface, C++ redesign, USB support, ...)
2090 \fBDouglas Gilbert\fP (SCSI subsystem)
2091 \fBGuido Guenther\fP (Autoconf/Automake packaging)
2092 \fBGeoffrey Keating\fP (Darwin ATA interface)
2093 \fBEduard Martinescu\fP (FreeBSD interface)
2094 \fBFr\*'ed\*'eric L. W. Meunier\fP (Web site and Mailing list)
2095 \fBGabriele Pohl\fP (Web site and Wiki, conversion from CVS to SVN)
2096 \fBKeiji Sawada\fP (Solaris ATA interface)
2097 \fBManfred Schwarb\fP (Drive database)
2098 \fBSergey Svishchev\fP (NetBSD interface)
2099 \fBDavid Snyder and Sergey Svishchev\fP (OpenBSD interface)
2100 \fBPhil Williams\fP (User interface and drive database)
2101 \fBShengfeng Zhou\fP (Linux/FreeBSD HighPoint RocketRAID interface)
2102 .fi
2103 Many other individuals have made smaller contributions and corrections.
2104
2105 .PP
2106 .SH CREDITS
2107 .fi
2108 This code was derived from the smartsuite package, written by Michael
2109 Cornwell, and from the previous ucsc smartsuite package. It extends
2110 these to cover ATA-5 disks. This code was originally developed as a
2111 Senior Thesis by Michael Cornwell at the Concurrent Systems Laboratory
2112 (now part of the Storage Systems Research Center), Jack Baskin School
2113 of Engineering, University of California, Santa
2114 Cruz. \fBhttp://ssrc.soe.ucsc.edu/\fP .
2115 .SH
2116 HOME PAGE FOR SMARTMONTOOLS:
2117 .fi
2118 Please see the following web site for updates, further documentation, bug
2119 reports and patches: \fBhttp://smartmontools.sourceforge.net/\fP
2120
2121 .SH SEE ALSO:
2122 \fBsmartd.conf\fP(5), \fBsmartctl\fP(8), \fBsyslogd\fP(8),
2123 \fBsyslog.conf\fP(5), \fBbadblocks\fP(8), \fBide\-smart\fP(8), \fBregex\fP(7).
2124
2125 .SH
2126 REFERENCES FOR SMART
2127 .fi
2128 An introductory article about smartmontools is \fIMonitoring Hard
2129 Disks with SMART\fP, by Bruce Allen, Linux Journal, January 2004,
2130 pages 74-77. This is \fBhttp://www.linuxjournal.com/article.php?sid=6983\fP
2131 online.
2132
2133 If you would like to understand better how SMART works, and what it
2134 does, a good place to start is with Sections 4.8 and 6.54 of the first
2135 volume of the \'AT Attachment with Packet Interface-7\' (ATA/ATAPI-7)
2136 specification. This documents the SMART functionality which the
2137 \fBsmartmontools\fP utilities provide access to. You can find
2138 Revision 4b of this document at
2139 \fBhttp://www.t13.org/docs2004/d1532v1r4b-ATA-ATAPI-7.pdf\fP .
2140 Earlier and later versions of this Specification are available from
2141 the T13 web site \fBhttp://www.t13.org/\fP .
2142
2143 .fi
2144 The functioning of SMART was originally defined by the SFF-8035i
2145 revision 2 and the SFF-8055i revision 1.4 specifications. These are
2146 publications of the Small Form Factors (SFF) Committee. Links to
2147 these documents may be found in the References section of the
2148 smartmontools home page at \fBhttp://smartmontools.sourceforge.net/#references\fP .
2149
2150 .SH
2151 SVN ID OF THIS PAGE:
2152 $Id: smartd.8.in 2921 2009-09-20 19:19:32Z samm2 $