SCSI diagnostic pages

SCSI target devices provide a number of SCSI diagnostic pages. These can be used by a Send Diagnostic command to tell a target device to run a specialised self-test. The Receive Diagnostic Results command is used where the results from the self-test operation are non-trivial.

Most of the common SCSI devices such as disk-drives support only one or two diagnostic pages. SES devices can support many diagnostic pages.

List of SCSI diagnostic pages

SCSI uses a one byte addressing scheme for diagnostic pages, allowing for a total 256 possible pages. There is a standard map of diagnostic page addresses shown below. Note that any given SCSI device type will only support a subset of these diagnostic pages.

Some diagnostic pages have two different meanings depending on whether they are being used for control purposes (Send Diagnostic command) or to interrogate status (Receive Diagnostic Results command). Those cases are shown as double entries in the table below using this convention: "control definition / status definition".

  • 00h - list of supported diagnostic pages
  • 01h - SES - configuration
  • 02h - SES - enclosure control / enclosure status
  • 03h - SES - help text
  • 04h - SES - string out / string in
  • 05h - SES - threshold out / SES threshold in
  • 06h - SES - obsolete
  • 07h - SES - element descriptor
  • 08h - SES - short enclosure status
  • 09h - SES - enclosure busy
  • 0Ah - SES - additional element
  • 0Bh - SES - subenclosure help text
  • 0Ch - SES - subenclosure string out / SES subenclosure string in
  • 0Dh - SES - supported SES diagnostic pages
  • 0Eh - SES - download microcode control / SES download microcode status
  • 0Fh - SES - subenclosure nickname control / SES subenclosure nickname status
  • 10h-1Fh - SES - vendor-specific
  • 20h-2Fh - SES - reserved
  • 30h-3Eh - reserved
  • 3Fh - used by the SCSI transport layer
  • 40h - disk/optical - translate address
  • 41h-7Fh - reserved
  • 80h-FFh - vendor-specific


gollark: 𝒚𝒐𝒖𝒓 𝒄𝒂𝒕𝒔 𝒐𝒍𝒅𝒆𝒓 𝒕𝒉𝒂𝒏 𝒎𝒆 [6]
gollark: I see.
gollark: Does your "laser" have multiple power settings or something?
gollark: What? Your question makes no sense.
gollark: 1 + 1 = 3 (50% margin of error)
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.