dd (Unix)
dd is a command-line utility for Unix and Unix-like operating systems, the primary purpose of which is to convert and copy files.[1]
Original author(s) | Ken Thompson |
---|---|
Developer(s) | AT&T Bell Laboratories |
Initial release | June 1974 |
Repository | git |
Operating system | Unix, Unix-like, Plan 9, Inferno |
Type | Command |
License | coreutils: GPLv3+ |
On Unix, device drivers for hardware (such as hard disk drives) and special device files (such as /dev/zero and /dev/random) appear in the file system just like normal files; dd can also read and/or write from/to these files, provided that function is implemented in their respective driver. As a result, dd can be used for tasks such as backing up the boot sector of a hard drive, and obtaining a fixed amount of random data. The dd program can also perform conversions on the data as it is copied, including byte order swapping and conversion to and from the ASCII and EBCDIC text encodings.[2]
History
The name dd is an allusion to the DD statement found in IBM's Job Control Language (JCL),[3][4] in which the initials stand for "Data Definition".[5] The command's syntax resembles a JCL statement more than other Unix commands do, so much that Eric S. Raymond says "the interface design was clearly a prank".[3] The interface is redesigned in Plan 9's dd command to use a command-line option style.[6]
Originally intended to convert between ASCII and EBCDIC, dd first appeared in Version 5 Unix.[7] The dd command is specified since the X/Open Portability Guide issue 2 of 1987. This is inherted into IEEE Std 1003.1-2008 (POSIX), which is part of the Single UNIX Specification.[8]
The version of dd
bundled in GNU coreutils was written by Paul Rubin, David MacKenzie, and Stuart Kemp.[9]
Usage
The command line syntax of dd differs from many other Unix programs. It uses the syntax option=value for its command-line options rather than the more standard -option value or --option=value formats. By default, dd reads from stdin and writes to stdout, but these can be changed by using the if (input file) and of (output file) options.[8]
Certain features of dd will depend on the computer system capabilities, such as dd's ability to implement an option for direct memory access. Sending a SIGINFO signal (or a USR1 signal on Linux) to a running dd process makes it print I/O statistics to standard error once and then continue copying. dd can read standard input from the keyboard. When end-of-file (EOF) is reached, dd will exit. Signals and EOF are determined by the software. For example, Unix tools ported to Windows vary as to the EOF: Cygwin uses Ctrl+D (the usual Unix EOF) and MKS Toolkit uses Ctrl+Z (the usual Windows EOF).
The non-standardized parts of dd invocation vary among implementations.
Output messages
On completion, dd prints to the stderr stream about statistics of the data transfer. The format is standardized in POSIX.[8](STDERR) The manual page for GNU dd does not describe this format, but the BSD manuals do.
Each of the "Records in" and "Records out" lines shows the number of complete blocks transferred + the number of partial blocks, e.g. because the physical medium ended before a complete block was read, or a physical error prevented reading the complete block.
Block size
A block is a unit measuring the number of bytes that are read, written, or converted at one time. Command-line options can specify a different block size for input/reading (ibs) compared to output/writing (obs), though the block size (bs) option will override both ibs and obs. The default value for both input and output block sizes is 512 bytes (the traditional block size of disks, and POSIX-mandated size of "a block"). The count option for copying is measured in blocks, as are both the skip count for reading and seek count for writing. Conversion operations are also affected by the "conversion block size" (cbs).[8](OPERANDS)
The value provided for block size options is interpreted as a decimal (base 10) integer number of bytes. It can also contain suffixes to indicate that the block size is an integer number of larger units than bytes. POSIX only specifies the suffixes b (blocks) for 512 and k (kibibytes) for 1024.[8](OPERANDS) Implementation differ on the additional suffixes they support: (Free)BSD uses lowercase m (mebibytes), g (gigibytes), and so on for tebibytes, exbibytes, pebibytes, zebibytes, and yobibytes,[10] while GNU uses M and G for the same units, with kB, MB, and GB used for their SI unit counterparts (kilobytes).[9] For example, for GNU dd, bs=16M indicates a blocksize of 16 mebibytes (16777216 bytes) and bs=3kB specifies 3000 bytes.
Additionally, some implementations understand the x character as a multiplication operator for both block size and count parameters. For example, bs=2x80x18b is interpreted as 2 × 80 × 18 × 512 = 1474560 bytes, the exact size of a 1440 KiB floppy disk. This is required in POSIX, but GNU does not seem to support it.[8](OPERANDS) As a result, it is more portable to use the POSIX shell arithmetic syntax of bs=$((2*80*18))b
.
Block size has an effect on performance of copying dd commands. Doing many small reads or writes is often slower than doing fewer large ones. Using large blocks requires more RAM and can complicate error recovery. When dd is used with variable-block-size devices such as tape drives or networks, the block size may determine the tape record size or packet size, depending on the network protocol used.
Uses
The dd command can be used for a variety of purposes. For plain-copying commands it tends to be slower than the domain-specific alternatives, but it excels at its unique ability to "overwrite or truncate a file at any point or seek in a file", a fairly low-level interface to the Unix file API.[11]
The examples below assume the use of GNU dd, mainly in the block size argument. To make them portable, replace e.g. bs=64M
with the shell arithmetic expression bs=$((64*1024*1024))
or bs=$((64 << 20))
(written equivalently with a bit shift).
Data transfer
dd can duplicate data across files, devices, partitions and volumes. The data may be input or output to and from any of these; but there are important differences concerning the output when going to a partition. Also, during the transfer, the data can be modified using the conv options to suit the medium. (For this purpose, however, dd is slower than cat.)[11]
An attempt to copy the entire disk using cp may omit the final block if it is of an unexpected length; whereas dd may succeed. The source and destination disks should have the same size.
blocks=$(isosize -d 2048 /dev/sr0)<br/>dd if=/dev/sr0 of=isoimage.iso bs=2048 count=$blocks status=progress | Creates an ISO disk image from a CD-ROM, DVD or Blu-ray disk.[12] |
dd if=system.img of=[[/dev/sdc]] bs=64M conv=noerror | Restores a hard disk drive (or an SD card, for example) from a previously created image. |
dd if=/dev/sdb2 of=partition.image bs=64M conv=noerror | Create an image of the partition sdb2, using a 64 MiB block size. |
dd if=/dev/sda2 of=/dev/sdb2 bs=64M conv=noerror | Clones one partition to another. |
dd if=/dev/ad0 of=/dev/ad1 bs=64M conv=noerror | Clones a hard disk drive "ad0" to "ad1". |
The noerror option means to keep going if there is an error, while the sync option causes output blocks to be padded.
In-place modification
dd can modify data in place. For example, this overwrites the first 512 bytes of a file with null bytes:
dd if=[[/dev/zero]] of=path/to/file bs=512 count=1 conv=notrunc
The notrunc conversion option means do not truncate the output file — that is, if the output file already exists, just replace the specified bytes and leave the rest of the output file alone. Without this option, dd would create an output file 512 bytes long.
Master boot record backup and restore
The example above can also be used to back up and restore any region of a device to a file, such as a master boot record.
To duplicate the first two sectors of a floppy disk:
dd if=/dev/fd0 of=MBRboot[[.img]] bs=512 count=2
Disk wipe
For security reasons, it is sometimes necessary to have a disk wipe of a discarded device. This can be achieved by a "data transfer" from the Unix special files.
- To write zeros to a disk, use
dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda bs=16M
. - To write random data to a disk, use
dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/sda bs=16M
.
When compared to the data modification example above, notrunc conversion option is not required as it has no effect when the dd's output file is a block device.[13]
The bs=16M option makes dd read and write 16 mebibytes at a time. For modern systems, an even greater block size may be faster. Note that filling the drive with random data may take longer than zeroing the drive, because the random data must be created by the CPU, while creating zeroes is very fast. On modern hard-disk drives, zeroing the drive will render most data it contains permanently irrecoverable.[14] However, with other kinds of drives such as flash memories, much data may still be recoverable by data remanence.
Modern hard disk drives contain a Secure Erase command designed to permanently and securely erase every accessible and inaccessible portion of a drive. It may also work for some solid-state drives (flash drives). As of 2017, it does not work on USB flash drives nor on Secure Digital flash memories. When available, this is both faster than using dd, and more secure. On Linux machines it is accessible via the hdparm command's --security-erase-enhanced option.
The shred program offers multiple overwrites, as well as more secure deletion of individual files.
Data recovery
Data recovery involves reading from a drive with some parts potentially inaccessible. dd is a good fit with this job with its flexible skipping (seek) and other low-level settings. The vanilla dd, however, is clumsy to use as the user has to read the error messages and manually calculate the regions that can be read. The single block size also limits the granuality of the recovery, as a trade-off has to be made: either use a small one for more data recovered or use a large one for speed.
A C program called dd_rescue was written in October 1999. It did away with the conversion functionality of dd, and supports two block sizes to deal with the dilemma. If a read using a large size fails, it falls back to the smaller size to gather as much as data possible. It can also run backwards.[15] In 2003, a dd_rhelp script was written to automate the process of using dd_rescue, keeping track of what areas have been read on its own.[16]
In 2004, GNU wrote a separate utility, unrelated to dd, called ddrescue. It has a more sophiscated dynamic block-size algorithm and keeps track of what has been read internally. The authors of both dd_rescue and dd_rhelp considers it superior to their implementation.[17] To help distinguish the newer GNU program from the older script, alternate names are sometimes used for GNU's ddrescue, including addrescue (the name on freecode.com and freshmeat.net), gddrescue (Debian package name), and gnu_ddrescue (openSUSE package name).
Another open-source program called savehd7 uses a sophisticated algorithm, but it also requires the installation of its own programming-language interpreter.
Benchmarking drive performance
To make drive benchmark test and analyze the sequential (and usually single-threaded) system read and write performance for 1024-byte blocks:
Generating a file with random data
To make a file of 100 random bytes using the kernel random driver:
dd if=[[/dev/urandom]] of=myrandom bs=100 count=1
Converting a file to upper case
To convert a file to uppercase:
dd if=filename of=filename1 conv=ucase,notrunc
Progress indicator
Being a program mainly designed as a filter, dd normally does not provide any progress indication. This can be overcome by sending an USR1 signal to the running GNU dd process, resulting in dd printing the current number of transferred blocks.
The following one-liner results in continuous output of progress every 10 seconds until the transfer is finished, when dd-pid is replaced by the process-id of dd:
while kill -USR1 ''dd-pid'' ; do sleep 10 ; done
Newer versions of GNU dd support the status=progress option, which enables periodic printing of transfer statistics to stderr.[18]
Forks
dcfldd
dcfldd is a fork of GNU dd that is an enhanced version developed by Nick Harbour, who at the time was working for the United States' Department of Defense Computer Forensics Lab.[19][20][21] Compared to dd, dcfldd allows more than one output file, supports simultaneous multiple checksum calculations, provides a verification mode for file matching, and can display the percentage progress of an operation. The last release was in 2006.
dc3dd
dc3dd is another enhanced GNU dd from the United States Department of Defense Cyber Crime Center (DC3). It can be seen as a continuation of the dcfldd, with a stated aim of updating whenever the GNU upstream is updated. Its last release was in 2018.[22]
See also
- Backup
- Disk cloning
- Disk Copy
- Disk image
- .img (filename extension)
- List of Unix commands
- ddrescue a GNU version that copies data from corrupted files
References
- Austin Group. "POSIX standard: dd invocation". Retrieved 2016-09-29.
- Chessman, Sam. "How and when to use the dd command?". CodeCoffee. Retrieved 2008-02-19.
- Raymond, Eric S. "dd". Retrieved 2008-02-19.
- Ritchie, Dennis (Feb 17, 2004). "Re: origin of the UNIX dd command". Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers. Usenet: c0s1he$1atuh9$1@ID-156882.news.uni-berlin.de. Retrieved January 10, 2016.
dd was always named after JCL dd cards.
- Shein, Barry (Apr 22, 1990). "Re: etymology of the Unix "dd" command". Newsgroup: alt.folklore.computers. Usenet: 1990Apr22.191928.11180@world.std.com. Retrieved 2016-07-14.
- – Plan 9 Programmer's Manual, Volume 1
- McIlroy, M. D. (1987). A Research Unix reader: annotated excerpts from the Programmer's Manual, 1971–1986 (PDF) (Technical report). CSTR. Bell Labs. 139.
- – Commands & Utilities Reference, The Single UNIX Specification, Issue 7 from The Open Group
- – Linux User's Manual – User Commands
- – FreeBSD General Commands Manual
- Gilles (2011). "cloning - dd vs cat – is dd still relevant these days?". Unix & Linux Stack Exchange.
- Reading an ISO image from a CD, DVD, or BD, ARCH linux documentation, accessed: 2017-01-22.
- "linux - Why using conv=notrunc when cloning a disk with dd?". Stack Overflow. 2013-12-11. Retrieved 2014-03-24.
- Wright, Craig; Kleiman, Dave; Sundhar R. S., Shyaam (2008). "Overwriting Hard Drive Data: The Great Wiping Controversy". Lecture Notes in Computer Science. Information Systems Security. 5352: 243–257. doi:10.1007/978-3-540-89862-7_21.
- "dd_rescue". garloff.de.
- LAB Valentin (19 September 2011). "dd_rhelp author's repository".
Important note : For some times, dd_rhelp was the only tool (AFAIK) that did this type of job, but since a few years, it is not true anymore: Antonio Diaz did write a ideal replacement for my tool: GNU 'ddrescue'.
- "Ddrescue - GNU Project - Free Software Foundation (FSF)". gnu.org.
- "GNU Coreutils: dd invocation". The GNU Operating System and the Free Software Movement. Retrieved 2019-08-26.
- "DCFLDD at Source Forge". Source Forge. Retrieved 2013-08-17.
- Jeremy Faircloth, Chris Hurley (2007). Penetration Tester's Open Source Toolkit. Syngress. pp. 470–472. ISBN 9780080556079.
- Jack Wiles, Anthony Reyes (2011). The Best Damn Cybercrime and Digital Forensics Book Period. Syngress. pp. 408–411. ISBN 9780080556086.
- "dc3dd". SourceForge.
External links
The Wikibook Guide to Unix has a page on the topic of: Commands |
- : convert and copy a file – Commands & Utilities Reference, The Single UNIX Specification, Issue 7 from The Open Group
- – Plan 9 Programmer's Manual, Volume 1
- dd: manual page from the GNU Core Utilities.
- – Darwin and macOS General Commands Manual
- dd for Windows.
- savehd7 - Save a potentially damaged harddisk partition
- dd_rhelp
- Softpanorama dd page.
- DD at Linux Questions Wiki.
- Forensics (DD) Dcfldd