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1 .TH LSBLK 8 "February 2013" "util-linux" "System Administration"
2 .SH NAME
3 lsblk \- list block devices
4 .SH SYNOPSIS
5 .B lsblk
6 [options]
7 .RI [ device ...]
8 .SH DESCRIPTION
9 .B lsblk
10 lists information about all available or the specified block devices. The
11 .B lsblk
12 command reads the
13 .B sysfs
14 filesystem and
15 .B udev db
16 to gather information. If the udev db is not available or lsblk is compiled without udev support than it
17 tries to read LABELs, UUIDs and filesystem types from the block device. In this case root permissions
18 are necessary.
19 .PP
20 The command prints all block devices (except RAM disks) in a tree-like format
21 by default. Use
22 .B "lsblk --help"
23 to get a list of all available columns.
24 .PP
25 The default output, as well as the default output from options like
26 .B \-\-fs
27 and
28 .BR \-\-topology ,
29 is subject to change. So whenever possible, you should avoid using default
30 outputs in your scripts. Always explicitly define expected columns by using
31 .B \-\-output
32 .I columns-list
33 and
34 .B \-\-list
35 in environments where a stable output is required.
36 .PP
37 Note that
38 .B lsblk
39 might be executed in time when
40 .B udev
41 does not have all information about recently added or modified devices yet. In this
42 case it is recommended to use
43 .B "udevadm settle"
44 before lsblk to synchronize with udev.
45 .SH OPTIONS
46 .TP
47 .BR \-a , " \-\-all"
48 Also list empty devices and RAM disk devices.
49 .TP
50 .BR \-b , " \-\-bytes"
51 Print the SIZE column in bytes rather than in a human-readable format.
52 .TP
53 .BR \-D , " \-\-discard"
54 Print information about the discarding capabilities (TRIM, UNMAP) for each device.
55 .TP
56 .BR \-d , " \-\-nodeps"
57 Do not print holder devices or slaves. For example, \fBlsblk --nodeps /dev/sda\fR prints
58 information about the sda device only.
59 .TP
60 .BR \-E , " \-\-dedup " \fIcolumn\fP
61 Use \fIcolumn\fP as a de-duplication key to de-duplicate output tree. If the
62 key is not available for the device, or the device is a partition and parental
63 whole-disk device provides the same key than the device is always printed.
64
65 The usual use case is to de-duplicate output on system multi-path devices, for
66 example by \fB\-E WWN\fR.
67 .TP
68 .BR \-e , " \-\-exclude " \fIlist\fP
69 Exclude the devices specified by the comma-separated \fIlist\fR of major device numbers.
70 Note that RAM disks (major=1) are excluded by default if \fB\-\-all\fR is no specified.
71 The filter is applied to the top-level devices only. This maybe be confusing for
72 \fB\-\-list\fR output format where hierarchy of the devices is not obvious.
73 .TP
74 .BR \-f , " \-\-fs"
75 Output info about filesystems. This option is equivalent to
76 .BR -o\ NAME,FSTYPE,LABEL,UUID,MOUNTPOINT .
77 The authoritative information about filesystems and raids is provided by the
78 .BR blkid (8)
79 command.
80 .TP
81 .BR \-h , " \-\-help"
82 Display help text and exit.
83 .TP
84 .BR \-I , " \-\-include " \fIlist\fP
85 Include devices specified by the comma-separated \fIlist\fR of major device numbers.
86 The filter is applied to the top-level devices only. This maybe be confusing for
87 \fB\-\-list\fR output format where hierarchy of the devices is not obvious.
88 .TP
89 .BR \-i , " \-\-ascii"
90 Use ASCII characters for tree formatting.
91 .TP
92 .BR \-J , " \-\-json"
93 Use JSON output format. It's strongly recommended to use \fB\-\-output\fR and
94 also \fB\-\-tree\fR if necessary.
95 .TP
96 .BR \-l , " \-\-list"
97 Produce output in the form of a list. The output does not provide information
98 about relationships between devices and since version 2.34 every device is
99 printed only once.
100 .TP
101 .BR \-M , " \-\-merge"
102 Group parents of sub-trees to provide more readable output for RAIDs and
103 Multi-path devices. The tree-like output is required.
104 .TP
105 .BR \-m , " \-\-perms"
106 Output info about device owner, group and mode. This option is equivalent to
107 .BR -o\ NAME,SIZE,OWNER,GROUP,MODE .
108 .TP
109 .BR \-n , " \-\-noheadings"
110 Do not print a header line.
111 .TP
112 .BR \-o , " \-\-output " \fIlist\fP
113 Specify which output columns to print. Use
114 .B \-\-help
115 to get a list of all supported columns. The columns may affect tree-like output.
116 The default is to use tree for the column 'NAME' (see also \fB\-\-tree\fR).
117
118 The default list of columns may be extended if \fIlist\fP is
119 specified in the format \fI+list\fP (e.g. \fBlsblk -o +UUID\fP).
120 .TP
121 .BR \-O , " \-\-output\-all "
122 Output all available columns.
123 .TP
124 .BR \-P , " \-\-pairs"
125 Produce output in the form of key="value" pairs.
126 All potentially unsafe characters are hex-escaped (\\x<code>).
127 .TP
128 .BR \-p , " \-\-paths"
129 Print full device paths.
130 .TP
131 .BR \-r , " \-\-raw"
132 Produce output in raw format. All potentially unsafe characters are hex-escaped
133 (\\x<code>) in the NAME, KNAME, LABEL, PARTLABEL and MOUNTPOINT columns.
134 .TP
135 .BR \-S , " \-\-scsi"
136 Output info about SCSI devices only. All partitions, slaves and holder devices are ignored.
137 .TP
138 .BR \-s , " \-\-inverse"
139 Print dependencies in inverse order. If the \fB\-\-list\fR output is requested then
140 the lines are still ordered by dependencies.
141 .TP
142 .BR \-T , " \-\-tree" [ =\fIcolumn ]
143 Force tree-like output format. If \fIcolumn\fP is specified, then a tree is printed in the column.
144 The default is NAME column.
145 .TP
146 .BR \-t , " \-\-topology"
147 Output info about block-device topology.
148 This option is equivalent to
149 .BR -o\ NAME,ALIGNMENT,MIN-IO,OPT-IO,PHY-SEC,LOG-SEC,ROTA,SCHED,RQ-SIZE,RA,WSAME .
150 .TP
151 .BR \-V , " \-\-version"
152 Display version information and exit.
153 .TP
154 .BR \-x , " \-\-sort " \fIcolumn\fP
155 Sort output lines by \fIcolumn\fP. This option enables \fB\-\-list\fR output format by default.
156 It is possible to use the option \fI\-\-tree\fP to force tree-like output and
157 than the tree branches are sorted by the \fIcolumn\fP.
158 .TP
159 .BR \-z , " \-\-zoned"
160 Print the zone model for each device.
161 .TP
162 .BR " \-\-sysroot " \fIdirectory\fP
163 Gather data for a Linux instance other than the instance from which the lsblk
164 command is issued. The specified directory is the system root of the Linux
165 instance to be inspected. This option is designed for the testing purpose.
166
167 .SH NOTES
168 For partitions, some information (e.g. queue attributes) is inherited from the
169 parent device.
170 .PP
171 The
172 .B lsblk
173 command needs to be able to look up each block device by major:minor numbers,
174 which is done by using
175 .IR /sys/dev/block .
176 This sysfs block directory appeared in kernel 2.6.27 (October 2008).
177 In case of problems with a new enough kernel, check that CONFIG_SYSFS
178 was enabled at the time of the kernel build.
179
180 .SH RETURN CODES
181 .IP 0
182 success
183 .IP 1
184 failure
185 .IP 32
186 none of specified devices found
187 .IP 64
188 some specified devices found, some not found
189
190 .SH AUTHORS
191 .nf
192 Milan Broz <mbroz@redhat.com>
193 Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
194 .fi
195 .SH ENVIRONMENT
196 .IP LSBLK_DEBUG=all
197 enables lsblk debug output.
198 .IP LIBBLKID_DEBUG=all
199 enables libblkid debug output.
200 .IP LIBMOUNT_DEBUG=all
201 enables libmount debug output.
202 .IP LIBSMARTCOLS_DEBUG=all
203 enables libsmartcols debug output.
204 .IP LIBSMARTCOLS_DEBUG_PADDING=on
205 use visible padding characters. Requires enabled LIBSMARTCOLS_DEBUG.
206 .SH SEE ALSO
207 .BR ls (1),
208 .BR blkid (8),
209 .BR findmnt (8)
210 .SH AVAILABILITY
211 The lsblk command is part of the util-linux package and is available from
212 https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.