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setpci(8)                      The PCI Utilities                      setpci(8)

NAME
       setpci - configure PCI devices

SYNOPSIS
       setpci [options] devices operations...

DESCRIPTION
       setpci is a utility for querying and configuring PCI devices.

       All numbers are entered in hexadecimal notation.

       Root privileges are necessary for almost all operations, excluding reads
       of the standard header of the configuration space on some operating sys-
       tems.  Please see lspci(8) for details on access rights.

OPTIONS
   General options
       -v     Tells setpci to be verbose and display detailed information about
              configuration space accesses.

       -f     Tells  setpci not to complain when there's nothing to do (when no
              devices are selected).   This  option  is  intended  for  use  in
              widely-distributed  configuration  scripts  where  it's uncertain
              whether the device in question is present in the machine or not.

       -D     `Demo mode' -- don't write anything to the  configuration  regis-
              ters.   It's useful to try setpci -vD to verify that your complex
              sequence of setpci operations does what you think it should do.

       -r     Avoids bus scan if each operation selects a specific device (uses
              the -s selector with specific domain, bus, slot,  and  function).
              This  is  faster,  but if the device does not exist, it fails in-
              stead of matching an empty set of devices.

       --version
              Show setpci version. This option should be used stand-alone.

       --help Show detailed help on available options. This  option  should  be
              used stand-alone.

       --dumpregs
              Show a list of all known PCI registers and capabilities. This op-
              tion should be used stand-alone.

   PCI access options
       The  PCI  utilities  use  the  PCI  library  to talk to PCI devices (see
       pcilib(7) for details). You can use the following options  to  influence
       its behavior:

       -A <method>
              The library supports a variety of methods to access the PCI hard-
              ware.  By default, it uses the first access method available, but
              you  can  use  this option to override this decision. See -A help
              for a list of available methods and their descriptions.

       -O <param>=<value>
              The behavior of the library is controlled by several named  para-
              meters.   This  option  allows one to set the value of any of the
              parameters. Use -O help for a list of known parameters and  their
              default values.

       -H1    Use  direct  hardware access via Intel configuration mechanism 1.
              (This is a shorthand for -A intel-conf1.)

       -H2    Use direct hardware access via Intel configuration  mechanism  2.
              (This is a shorthand for -A intel-conf2.)

       -G     Increase debug level of the library.

DEVICE SELECTION
       Before  each sequence of operations you need to select which devices you
       wish that operation to affect.

       -s [[[[<domain>]:]<bus>]:][<slot>][.[<func>]]
              Consider only devices in the specified domain (in case  your  ma-
              chine  has  several  host bridges, they can either share a common
              bus number space or each of them can address a PCI domain of  its
              own; domains are numbered from 0 to ffff), bus (0 to ff), slot (0
              to  1f)  and function (0 to 7).  Each component of the device ad-
              dress can be omitted or set to "*", both meaning "any value". All
              numbers are hexadecimal.  E.g., "0:" means all devices on bus  0,
              "0"  means  all  functions  of device 0 on any bus, "0.3" selects
              third function of device 0 on all buses and ".4" matches only the
              fourth function of each device.

       -d [<vendor>]:[<device>][:<class>[:<prog-if>]]
              Select devices with specified vendor, device, class ID, and  pro-
              gramming interface.  The ID's are given in hexadecimal and may be
              omitted  or  given as "*", both meaning "any value". The class ID
              can contain "x" characters which stand for "any digit".

       When -s and -d are combined, only devices that match both  criteria  are
       selected.  When  multiple  options  of  the same kind are specified, the
       rightmost one overrides the others.

OPERATIONS
       There are two kinds of operations: reads and writes. To read a register,
       just specify its name. Writes have the  form  name=value,value...  where
       each  value  is  either  a  hexadecimal  number or an expression of type
       data:mask where both data and mask are hexadecimal numbers. In the  lat-
       ter  case,  only  the  bits corresponding to binary ones in the mask are
       changed (technically, this is a read-modify-write operation).

       There are several ways to identify a register:

       •      Tell its address in hexadecimal.

       •      Spell its name. Setpci knows the names of all  registers  in  the
              standard  configuration  headers.  Use `setpci --dumpregs' to get
              the complete list.  See PCI bus specifications  for  the  precise
              meaning  of  these  registers  or  consult  header.h  or /usr/in-
              clude/pci/pci.h for a brief sketch.

       •      If the register is a part of a PCI capability,  you  can  specify
              the name of the capability to get the address of its first regis-
              ter.  See  the  names  starting  with  `CAP_'  or  `ECAP_' in the
              --dumpregs output.

       •      If the name of the capability is not known to setpci, you can re-
              fer to it by its number in the form CAPid or ECAPid, where id  is
              the numeric identifier of the capability in hexadecimal.

       •      Each of the previous formats can be followed by +offset to add an
              offset  (a hex number) to the address. This feature can be useful
              for addressing of registers living within  a  capability,  or  to
              modify parts of standard registers.

       •      To  choose how many bytes (1, 2, or 4) should be transferred, you
              should append a width specifier .B, .W, or .L. The width  can  be
              omitted  if  you  are referring to a register by its name and the
              width of the register is well known.

       •      Finally, if a capability exists multiple  times  you  can  choose
              which one to target using @number. Indexing starts at 0.

       All names of registers and width specifiers are case-insensitive.

EXAMPLES
       COMMAND
              asks for the word-sized command register.

       4.w    is a numeric address of the same register.

       COMMAND.l
              asks  for  a  32-bit word starting at the location of the command
              register, i.e., the command and status registers together.

       VENDOR_ID+1.b
              specifies the upper byte of the vendor ID register (remember, PCI
              is little-endian).

       CAP_PM+2.w
              corresponds to the second word of the power  management  capabil-
              ity.

       ECAP108.l
              asks for the first 32-bit word of the extended capability with ID
              0x108.

SEE ALSO
       lspci(8), pcilib(7)

AUTHOR
       The PCI Utilities are maintained by Martin Mares <mj@ucw.cz>.

pciutils-3.13.0                   30 May 2024                         setpci(8)

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