For the NVMe device given, sends an identify namespace command and provides the result and returned structure\&.
.sp
The <device> parameter is mandatory and may be either the NVMe character device (ex: /dev/nvme0), or a namespace block device (ex: /dev/nvme0n1)\&. If the character device is given, the \*(Aq\-\-namespace\-id\*(Aq option is mandatory, otherwise it will use the ns\-id of the namespace for the block device you opened\&. For block devices, the ns\-id used can be overridden with the same option\&.
.sp
On success, the structure may be returned in one of several ways depending on the option flags; the structure may be parsed by the program or the raw buffer may be printed to stdout\&.
.SH"OPTIONS"
.PP
\-n <nsid>, \-\-namespace\-id=<nsid>
.RS4
Retrieve the identify namespace structure for the given nsid\&. This is required for the character devices, or overrides the block nsid if given\&.
Request controller return the identify namespace structure even if the namespace is not attached to the controller\&. This is valid only for controllers at or newer than revision 1\&.2\&. Controllers at revision lower than this may interpret the command incorrectly\&.
.RE
.PP
\-b, \-\-raw\-binary
.RS4
Print the raw buffer to stdout\&. Structure is not parsed by program\&. This overrides the vendor specific and human readable options\&.
.RE
.PP
\-v, \-\-vendor\-specific
.RS4
In addition to parsing known fields, this option will dump the vendor specific region of the structure in hex with ascii interpretation\&.
.RE
.PP
\-H, \-\-human\-readable
.RS4
This option will parse and format many of the bit fields into human\-readable formats\&.
.RE
.PP
\-o <format>, \-\-output\-format=<format>
.RS4
Set the reporting format to
\fInormal\fR,
\fIjson\fR, or
\fIbinary\fR\&. Only one output format can be used at a time\&.
.RE
.SH"EXAMPLES"
.sp
.RS4
.ien\{\
\h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c
.\}
.el\{\
.sp-1
.IP\(bu2.3
.\}
Has the program interpret the returned buffer and display the known fields in a human readable format:
.sp
.ifn\{\
.RS4
.\}
.nf
# nvme id\-ns /dev/nvme0n1
.fi
.ifn\{\
.RE
.\}
.RE
.sp
.RS4
.ien\{\
\h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c
.\}
.el\{\
.sp-1
.IP\(bu2.3
.\}
If using the character device or overriding namespace id:
.sp
.ifn\{\
.RS4
.\}
.nf
# nvme id\-ns /dev/nvme0 \-n 1
# nvme id\-ns /dev/nvme0n1 \-n 1
# nvme id\-ns /dev/nvme0 \-\-namespace\-id=1
.fi
.ifn\{\
.RE
.\}
.RE
.sp
.RS4
.ien\{\
\h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c
.\}
.el\{\
.sp-1
.IP\(bu2.3
.\}
In addition to showing the known fields, have the program to display the vendor unique field:
.sp
.ifn\{\
.RS4
.\}
.nf
# nvme id\-ns /dev/nvme0n1 \-\-vendor\-specific
# nvme id\-ns /dev/nvme0n1 \-v
.fi
.ifn\{\
.RE
.\}
.sp
The above will dump the \*(Aqvs\*(Aq buffer in hex since it doesn\(cqt know how to interpret it\&.
.RE
.sp
.RS4
.ien\{\
\h'-04'\(bu\h'+03'\c
.\}
.el\{\
.sp-1
.IP\(bu2.3
.\}
Have the program return the raw structure in binary:
The parse program in the above example can be a program that shows the structure in a way you like\&. The following program is such an example that will parse it and can accept the output through a pipe,
\*(Aq|\*(Aq, as shown in the above example, or you can