Hi,
 
I think it represents the size of the command, and not size of data transferred.
 
Thanks,
 
Rajat

-----Original Message-----
From: [EMAIL PROTECTED] [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] Behalf Of vichy
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 11:31 AM
To: '??'
Cc: [email protected]
Subject: RE: question about SCSI commands



Hi:

I know there is also a number behind Linux instructions.

But I have no idea whether the number behind Linux instructions has the same 
meaning as one behind SCSI.

I found these numbers from the specs and some kind friends have already told me 
what it means, the bytes it transfer.

Sincerely Yours,

vichy


  _____  


From: 2üò1 [mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Sent: Tuesday, March 18, 2008 1:33 PM
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED] 
Subject: Fw:question about SCSI commands

 

 

 Hi, I'm a green hand, too, and where did you get the information below, from 
the command:

man SCSI-command

?

 

 

if it did, then it's different classification for the same function. 

number 1, maybe  means this is a write commamd

number 3, maybe means this is a write function is standard lib.

ect.

 

 

Best regards !

 

 

---------- ×a・¢óê1/4tD??¢ ----------
・¢1/4tè?£o"vichy <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>" 
・¢?íè?AEú£o2008-03-15 15:59:36
ê?1/[EMAIL PROTECTED]
?÷ìa£o question about SCSI commands

Dear all:
I found there is number at the end of SCSI commands like below:
Command     document
WRITE(6)     SBC
WRITE(10)    SBC
WRITE(12)    SBC
Could someone tell me what the number, (6), (10) and (12) mean?
Appreciate your help,
vichy
 
 
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