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FDCONTROL(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual FDCONTROL(8)
NAME fdcontrol - display and modify floppy disk parameters
SYNOPSIS fdcontrol [-F] [-d dbg] [-f fmt] [-s fmtstr] [-v] device
DESCRIPTION The fdcontrol utility allows the modification of the run-time behavior of the fdc(4) driver for the device specified by device.
Commands are implemented to query the current device density settings as well as the underlying device hardware as registered with the driver, to manipulate debugging levels, and to adjust the device density settings. All the operations that manipulate the kernel settings are restricted to the superuser (by the device driver), while all inquiry requests only require read access to device.
The device argument should always be given as a full path name, e.g. /dev/fd0.
Inquiry Commands Running the fdcontrol utility without any of the optional flags will report the drive type that is registered with the device driver. In the shortest form, a single string describing the drive type will be returned. Possible values are: "360K", "1.2M", "720K", "1.44M", "2.88M", or "unknown". This information is primarily intended to be easily parsable by scripts.
In order to add some descriptive text that makes the output better human readable, the flag -v can be added.
Specifying flag -F will report the device's density settings in a form that is suitable as input to the -s fmtstr option (see below). Again, together with -v, some more text will be returned, including the total capacity of the density settings in kilobytes.
Debug Control The fdc(4) control utilities support two different options how to specify device density settings. The first form uses -f fmt to specify the format of the medium in kilobytes. Depending on the underlying drive type, the value is compared against a table of known commonly used device density settings for that drive, and if a match is found, those settings will be used. Currently, the following values for the respective drive types are acceptable:
2.88M and 1.44M drives: KB sectrac secsize ncyls speed heads flags 1721 21 2 (512) 82 500 2 MFM 1476 18 2 (512) 82 500 2 MFM 1440 18 2 (512) 80 500 2 MFM 1200 15 2 (512) 80 500 2 MFM 820 10 2 (512) 82 250 2 MFM 800 10 2 (512) 80 250 2 MFM 720 9 2 (512) 80 250 2 MFM
1.2M drives: KB sectrac secsize ncyls speed heads flags 720 9 2 (512) 80 300 2 MFM 360 9 2 (512) 40 300 2 MFM,2STEP 640 8 2 (512) 80 300 2 MFM
720K drives: KB sectrac secsize ncyls speed heads flags 720 9 2 (512) 80 250 2 MFM
360K drives: KB sectrac secsize ncyls speed heads flags 360 9 2 (512) 40 250 2 MFM
The second form to specify a device density uses -s fmtstr to explicitly specify each parameter in detail. The argument fmtstr is a comma- separated list of values of the form:
sectrac,secsize,datalen,gap,ncyls,speed,heads,f_gap,f_inter,offs2,flags
The meaning of the parameters is:
sectrac The number of sectors per track.
secsize The sector size code, 0 = 128 bytes (or less), 1 = 256 bytes, 2 = 512 bytes, 3 = 1024 bytes.
datalen The actual sector size if the size code is 0, or the (ignored) value 0xFF for larger size codes.
gap The length of the gap 3 parameter for read/write operations.
ncyls The number of cylinders.
speed The transfer speed in kilobytes per second. Can be 250, 300, 500, or 1000, but each drive type only supports a subset of these values.
heads The number of heads.
f_gap The length of the gap 3 when formatting media.
f_inter The sector interleave to be applied when formatting. 0 means no interleave, 1 means 1:1 etc.
offs2 The offset of the sector numbers on side 2 (i.e., head number 1). Normally, sector numbering on both sides starts with 1.
flags A list from one of the following flag values:
+mfm Use MFM encoding. -mfm Use FM (single-density) encoding. +2step Use 2 steps per each cylinder (for accessing 40-cylinder media in 80-cylinder drives). -2step Do not use 2 steps per cylinder, i.e., access each physical cylinder of the drive. +perpend Use perpendicular recording (for 2.88 MB media, currently not supported). -perpend Use longitudinal recording.
For any missing parameter, the current value will be used, so only actual $ fdcontrol /dev/fd0 1.44M
Same as above, but with verbose output. Note that the result is about the drive type, as opposed to a device density, so it is independent from the actual subdevice being used for device.
$ fdcontrol -v /dev/fd0 /dev/fd0: 1.44M drive (3.5" high-density)
Inquiry about the density settings:
$ fdcontrol -F /dev/fd0 18,512,0xff,0x1b,80,500,2,0x6c,1,0,+mfm
The verbose flag makes this human readable:
/dev/fd0: 1440 KB media type Format: 18,512,0xff,0x1b,80,500,2,0x6c,1,0,+mfm Sector size: 512 Sectors/track: 18 Heads/cylinder: 2 Cylinders/disk: 80 Transfer rate: 500 kbps Sector gap: 27 Format gap: 108 Interleave: 1 Side offset: 0 Flags <MFM>
As indicated, trailing commas in the parameter list may be omitted.
In order to access archaic 160 KB single-density (FM encoded) 5.25 media in a modern 1.2M drive, something like the following definition would be needed. (Note that not all controller hardware is actually capable of handling FM encoding at all.)
# fdcontrol -s 16,128,0x80,0x2,40,300,,0x10,,,-mfm,+2step /dev/fd1.1
It is still possible to hook up 8" drives to most modern floppy controllers, given the right cable magic. (On PC hardware, tell the BIOS that it is a 5.25" drive.) The classical 128/26/2/77 format can be read with this entry
fdcontrol -s 26,128,0x80,0x2,77,500,2,0x10,,,-mfm /dev/fd0
SEE ALSO fdc(4)
HISTORY The fdcontrol utility appeared in FreeBSD 2.0, and was vastly overhauled in FreeBSD 5.0.
AUTHORS The program and this man page was contributed by Jorg Wunsch, Dresden.
FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11 April 7, 2017 FreeBSD 14.0-RELEASE-p11