Purpose
 Converts and copies a file.
Description
 The 
dd command reads the 
InFile parameter or standard  input,
does the specified conversions, then copies the converted data to
the 
OutFile parameter or  standard  output. The input and output
block size can be specified to take advantage of raw physical I/O. 
Note: The term Block refers to the quantity of data read  or written
by the dd command in one operation and is not necessarily the
same size as a disk  block.
Where sizes are specified,
a number of bytes is expected. A number ending with w, b, or  k specifies multiplication by 2, 512, or 1024 respectively;
a pair of numbers separated by an  x  or an * (asterisk)
indicates a product. The count parameter expects the number of blocks, not the number of bytes, to be copied.
 The character-set
mappings associated with the  conv=ascii and  conv=ebcdic flags are complementary operations. These flags map  between ASCII
characters and the subset of EBCDIC characters found on most workstations
and keypunches.
 Use the  cbs parameter value if specifying any of the  block, unblock, ascii, ebcdic, or ibm conversions.
If  unblock or ascii parameters are specified, then
the dd command performs a  fixed-length to variable-length
conversion. Otherwise it performs a conversion from variable-length
to  fixed-length. The cbs parameter determines the fixed-length.
 Attention: If the cbs parameter value is specified
smaller than the smallest  input block, the converted block is truncated.
 After it finishes, the dd command reports the number of
whole and partial input and output  blocks.
 Note: - Usually,
you need only write access to the output file. However,
when the  output  file is not on a direct-access device and you use
the  seek flag,  you also
need read access to the file.
- The dd command inserts
new-line characters only when converting
with  the  conv=ascii or  conv=unblock flags set; it pads only when converting with the  conv=ebcdic,  conv=ibm,  or  conv=block flags set.
- Use
the backup, tar, or cpio command instead of the dd command
 whenever possible to copy files to tape. These commands are designed
for use with tape devices. For more  information on using tape devices,
see the rmt special file.
- The block size
values specified with the  bs,  ibs and  obs flags must always be a multiple
of the physical block size for 
the  media being used.
- When the  conv=sync flag
is  specified, the dd command pads any partial input blocks
with nulls. Thus, the dd command  inserts  nulls into the middle
of the data stream if any of the reads do not receive a full block
of data (as  specified by  the ibs flag). This is a common
occurrence when reading from pipes.
- If the bs flag
is specified by itself and no conversions
other  than  sync, noerror or notrunc are specified,
then the data from each input block will be  written  as a separate
output block; if the read returns less than a full block and sync is not specified,  then the  resulting output block will be the
same size as the input block. If the bs flag is not specified,
 or a  conversion other than sync, noerror or notrunc is specified, then the input will be  processed and collected into
fullsized output blocks until the end of input is reached.
 
Spanning across devices
 The 
dd can be made to span across devices if the input
file is  larger than the output device physical size. 
Note: Care has
to be taken when specifying the block size bs as exact multiple
of the physical size of the device because improper block size will
result in data inconsistency, or overlap.
The spanning
of dd across devices will not occur if either one of  the InFile
or the OutFile parameter is stdin or stdout.
 Spanning will
occur in such a way that dd will prompt for next device during
write if the output device is full. During read from the input device, dd will prompt for next device if the data is completely read
from the input device even when the device has not reached the end.
In this case it would be required to press 'n' to quit.
Flags
  | Item | Description | 
|---|
| bs=BlockSize | Specifies both the input
and output block size, superseding
the  ibs and  obs flags. The  block size values
specified with the bs flag must always be a multiple of the
physical block size  for the  media being used. | 
| cbs=BlockSize | Specifies the conversion block size for variable-length to
fixed-length and fixed-length to  variable-length conversions, such
as  conv=block. | 
| count=InputBlocks | Copies only the number of input blocks specified by the InputBlocks variable. | 
| conv= Conversion,.... | Specifies one or more conversion options. Multiple
conversions should be separated by commas.  The  following list describes
the possible options: ascii  Converts EBCDIC to ASCII. This option is incompatible
with the
 ebcdic,  ibm,  block, and  unblock  options.block  Converts variable-length records to fixed-length. The
length
is determined by the conversion  block  size (cbs). This option is
incompatible with the  ascii,  ebcdic,  ibm, and  unblock options.ebcdic  Converts ASCII to standard EBCDIC. This option
is incompatible
with the  ascii,  ibm,  block, and  unblock  options.ibm  Converts ASCII to an IBM® version of EBCDIC. This option is incompatible with the  ascii,  ebcdic,  block, and  unblock  options.iblock, oblock  Minimize data
loss resulting from a read or write error on direct
access devices. If you  specify the  iblock variable and an
error occurs during a block read (where the block size is 512 or the
size  specified  by the  ibs=InputBlockSize variable), the dd command  attempts
to reread the data block in smaller size units. If the dd command
can determine the  sector size  of the input device, it reads the
damaged block one sector at a time. Otherwise, it reads it 512 bytes
 at a time.  The input block size ( ibs) must be a multiple
of this retry size.  This option contains data loss associated with
a read error to a single sector. The oblock  conversion  works
similarly on output.lcase  Makes all alphabetic characters lowercase.noerror  Does
not stop processing on an error.notrunc  Does not truncate the output
file. Instead, blocks not explicitly
written to output are  preserved.ucase  Makes all alphabetic characters
uppercase.swab  Swaps every pair of bytes.sync  Pads every input block to the
 ibs value.unblock  Converts fixed-length
blocks to variable-length. The length
is determined by the conversion block size (cbs). This option is incompatible
with the  ascii,  ebcdic,  ibm, and  block options.
 | 
| files=InputFiles | Copies the number
of files specified by the InputFiles variable value of input
files  before  ending (makes sense only
where input is a magnetic tape or similar device). | 
| fskip=SkipEOFs | Skips past the number of end-of-file characters specified by
the SkipEOFs variable  before  starting to copy; this SkipEOFs variable is useful for positioning on multifile magnetic  tapes. | 
| ibs=InputBlockSize | Specifies the input-block size; the default is 512
bytes or
one block. The block-size values  specified  with the ibs flag
must always be a multiple of the physical block size for the media
being  used. | 
| if=InFile | Specifies the input file name; standard
input is the default. | 
| obs=OutputBlockSize | Specifies the output-block
size; the default is 512 bytes or
one block. The block size values  specified with the obs flag
must always be a multiple of the physical block size for the media
 being  used. | 
| of=OutFile | Specifies the output file name; standard
output is the default. | 
| seek=RecordNumber | Seeks the record specified
by the RecordNumber variable
from the beginning of output  file  before copying. | 
| skip=SkipInputBlocks | Skips the specified SkipInputBlocks value of input blocks
before starting to  copy. | 
| span=yes|no | Allows spanning across devices
if specified yes and
works as default if specified as no. See Spanning Across Devices, for more information.. | 
 
Exit
Status
 This command
returns the following exit values:
 | Item | Description | 
|---|
| 0 | The input file was copied successfully. | 
| >0 | An error
occurred. | 
Examples
 - To convert an ASCII text file to
EBCDIC, type:  dd  if=text.ascii  of=text.ebcdic  conv=ebcdic This command
converts the text.ascii file to EBCDIC representation, storing
the EBCDIC  version  in the text.ebcdic file.Note: When you specify the conv=ebcdic parameter,
the  dd  command converts the ASCII
^ (circumflex) character to an unused EBCDIC character (9A hexadecimal),
and  the ASCII  ~ (tilde) to the EBCDIC ^ (NOT symbol).  
- To convert the variable-length record ASCII file /etc/passwd to  a file of  132-byte fixed-length EBCDIC records, type:  dd  if=/etc/passwd  cbs=132  conv=ebcdic  of=/tmp/passwd.ebcdic 
- To convert the 132-byte-per-record EBCDIC file
to variable-length
ASCII  lines in  lowercase, type:  dd  if=/tmp/passwd.ebcdic  cbs=132  conv=ascii  of=/tmp/passwd.ascii 
- To convert the variable-length record ASCII
file /etc/passwd to  a file of  132-byte fixed-length records
in the IBM version
of EBCDIC,
type:  dd  if=/etc/passwd  cbs=132  conv=ibm  of=/tmp/passwd.ibm 
- To copy blocks from
a tape with 1KB blocks to another tape using
2KB  blocks,  type:  dd  if=/dev/rmt0  ibs=1024  obs=2048  of=/dev/rmt1 
- To
use the dd command as a filter, type:  ls -l | dd  conv=ucase This command displays
a long listing of the current directory in uppercase.Note: The performance of the  dd command and  cpio command to the 9348 Magnetic Tape Unit Model 12 can be improved
by changing the default block size.  To change  the block size, use
the  chdev command in the  following way:   chdev -l Device_name -a block_size=32k
 
 
- To perform efficient transfers to 3.5-inch 1.4MB diskette using
36 blocks of  512  bytes, type:  dd  if=Filename  of=/dev/rfd0  bs=36b  conv=sync This command
writes the value of the Filename parameter to the diskette
device  a cylinder at a time. The conv=sync is required when
reading from disk and when the file  size is not  a multiple of the
diskette block size. Do not try this if the input to the dd command is a pipe  instead of  a file, it will pad most of the input
with nulls instead of just the last block. 
- To copy blocks
from a input file with block size set to 720b blocks
 into a 1.44MB size diskette type:  dd if=testfile of=/dev/fd0 bs=720b conv=sync Note: If the input file is larger than the physical size
of the output device then dd will prompt you for another device. 
- To copy blocks from a input file with block size set to
32k blocks
 to a tape type:  dd if=inputfile of=/dev/rmt0 bs=32k conv=sync 
- To copy blocks of data from tape to a file in the
current directory
 with block size set to 32k blocks type as follows: dd if=/dev/rmt0 of=outfile bs=32k conv=sync 
- To copy blocks from an input file with block size
set to 720b,
onto a 1.44MB size diskette, enter: dd if=testfile of=/dev/fd0 bs=720b conv=sync span=yes
 Note: If the input file is larger than the physical size of the
output device, then dd will prompt you for another device. 
- To copy blocks from an input file with block size set to
32k,
to a tape, enter: dd if=inputfile of=/dev/rmt0 bs=32k conv=sync span=yes
 
- To copy blocks of data from tape with block size set to
32k, to
a file in the current directory, enter: dd if=dev/rmt0 of=outfile bs=32k conv=sync span=yes
 
Files
  | Item | Description | 
|---|
| /usr/bin/dd | Contains the dd command. |