PNG  IHDR* pHYs+ IDATx]n#; cdLb Ǚ[at¤_:uP}>!Usă cag޿ ֵNu`ݼTâabO7uL&y^wFٝA"l[|ŲHLN밪4*sG3|Dv}?+y߉{OuOAt4Jj.u]Gz*҉sP'VQKbA1u\`& Af;HWj hsO;ogTu uj7S3/QzUr&wS`M$X_L7r2;aE+ώ%vikDA:dR+%KzƉo>eOth$z%: :{WwaQ:wz%4foɹE[9<]#ERINƻv溂E%P1i01 |Jvҗ&{b?9g=^wζXn/lK::90KwrюO\!ջ3uzuGv^;騢wq<Iatv09:tt~hEG`v;3@MNZD.1]L:{ծI3`L(÷ba")Y.iljCɄae#I"1 `3*Bdz>j<fU40⨬%O$3cGt]j%Fߠ_twJ;ABU8vP3uEԑwQ V:h%))LfraqX-ۿX]v-\9I gl8tzX ]ecm)-cgʒ#Uw=Wlێn(0hPP/ӨtQ“&J35 $=]r1{tLuǮ*i0_;NƝ8;-vݏr8+U-kruȕYr0RnC]*ެ(M:]gE;{]tg(#ZJ9y>utRDRMdr9㪩̞zֹb<ģ&wzJM"iI( .ꮅX)Qw:9,i좜\Ԛi7&N0:asϓc];=ΗOӣ APqz93 y $)A*kVHZwBƺnWNaby>XMN*45~ղM6Nvm;A=jֲ.~1}(9`KJ/V F9[=`~[;sRuk]rєT!)iQO)Y$V ی ۤmzWz5IM Zb )ˆC`6 rRa}qNmUfDsWuˤV{ Pݝ'=Kֳbg,UҘVz2ﴻnjNgBb{? ߮tcsͻQuxVCIY۠:(V뺕 ٥2;t`@Fo{Z9`;]wMzU~%UA蛚dI vGq\r82iu +St`cR.6U/M9IENDB`Hi, you can use sg_start to start (spin-up, 1) and stop (spin-down, 0) devices. I also offers a parameter (-s) to send a synchronize cache command to a device, so it should write back its internal buffers to the medium. Be aware that the Linux SCSI subsystem at this time does not automatically starts stopped devices, so stopping a device which is in use may have fatal results for you. So, you should apply with care. I use it in my shutdown script at the end (before the poweroff command): # SG_SHUG_NOS is set in my config file rc.config # SG_SHUT_NOS="0 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15" if test -x /bin/sg_start; then if test "`basename $command`" = "reboot"; then for no in $SG_SHUT_NOS; do /bin/sg_start /dev/sg$no -s >/dev/null 2>&1; done else for no in $SG_SHUT_NOS; do /bin/sg_start /dev/sg$no -s 0 >/dev/null 2>&1; done fi fi Enjoy! Kurt Garloff Postscript ========== sg_start has been reworked to allow a block device (e.g. /dev/sda) in addition to the sg device name (e.g. /dev/sg0) in the lk 2.6 series. sg_start now has more command line options, see its man page. Douglas Gilbert 2004/5/8