dd


SYNOPSIS

       dd [OPERAND]...
       dd OPTION


DESCRIPTION

       Copy a file, converting and formatting according to the operands.

       bs=BYTES
              force ibs=BYTES and obs=BYTES

       cbs=BYTES
              convert BYTES bytes at a time

       conv=CONVS
              convert the file as per the comma separated symbol list

       count=BLOCKS
              copy only BLOCKS input blocks

       ibs=BYTES
              read BYTES bytes at a time

       if=FILE
              read from FILE instead of stdin

       iflag=FLAGS
              read as per the comma separated symbol list

       obs=BYTES
              write BYTES bytes at a time

       of=FILE
              write to FILE instead of stdout

       oflag=FLAGS
              write as per the comma separated symbol list

       seek=BLOCKS
              skip BLOCKS obs-sized blocks at start of output

       skip=BLOCKS
              skip BLOCKS ibs-sized blocks at start of input

       status=noxfer
              suppress transfer statistics

       BLOCKS  and  BYTES may be followed by the following multiplicative suf-
       fixes: xM M, c 1, w 2,  b  512,  kB  1000,  K  1024,  MB  1000*1000,  M
       1024*1024,  GB 1000*1000*1000, G 1024*1024*1024, and so on for T, P, E,
       Z, Y.

       Each CONV symbol may be:
       nocreat
              do not create the output file

       excl   fail if the output file already exists

       notrunc
              do not truncate the output file

       ucase  change lower case to upper case

       swab   swap every pair of input bytes

       noerror
              continue after read errors

       sync   pad every input block with NULs to ibs-size; when used

              with block or unblock, pad with spaces rather than NULs

              fdatasync physically write output  file  data  before  finishing
              fsync     likewise, but also write metadata

       Each FLAG symbol may be:

       append append mode (makes sense only for output)

       direct use direct I/O for data

       dsync  use synchronized I/O for data

       sync   likewise, but also for metadata

       nonblock
              use non-blocking I/O

       nofollow
              do not follow symlinks

       noctty do not assign controlling terminal from file

       Sending  a  USR1  signal  to  a running 'dd' process makes it print I/O
       statistics to standard error and then resume copying.

              $ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/null& pid=$!
              $ kill -USR1 $pid; sleep 1; kill $pid

              18335302+0 records in 18335302+0 records  out  9387674624  bytes
              (9.4 GB) copied, 34.6279 seconds, 271 MB/s

       Options are:

       --help display this help and exit
       <http://www.gnu.org/licenses/gpl.html>.   There  is NO WARRANTY, to the
       extent permitted by law.


SEE ALSO

       The full documentation for dd is maintained as a  Texinfo  manual.   If
       the  info and dd programs are properly installed at your site, the com-
       mand

              info dd

       should give you access to the complete manual.


dd (coreutils) 5.97 May 2008 DD(1)


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