Provided by: sac2mseed_1.13+ds1-1build1_amd64 bug

NAME

       sac2mseed - SAC to miniSEED converter

SYNOPSIS

       sac2mseed [options] file1 [file2 file3 ...]

DESCRIPTION

       sac2mseed  converts  SAC  waveform  data to miniSEED format.  By default the format of the input files is
       automatically detected: alpha or binary (byte order autodetected).  The format can also  be  forced  with
       the  -f option.  If an input file name is prefixed with an '@' character the file is assumed to contain a
       list of input data files, see LIST FILES below.

       If the input file name ends in ".sac" (not case sensitive) the default output file name will be the  same
       with  the extension replace with ".mseed".  The output data may be re-directed to a single file or stdout
       using the -o option.

OPTIONS

       -V     Print program version and exit.

       -h     Print program usage and exit.

       -v     Be more verbose.  This flag can be used multiple times ("-v -v" or "-vv") for more verbosity.

       -S     Include SEED blockette 100 in each output record with the sample rate in  floating  point  format.
              The  basic  format  for  storing  sample  rates  in  SEED data records is a rational approximation
              (numerator/denominator).   Precision  will  be  lost  if  a  given  sample  rate  cannot  be  well
              approximated.  This option should be used in those cases.

       -n netcode
              Specify  the  SEED network code to use, if not specified the network code will be the value of the
              KNETWK variable in the SAC header, if KNETWK is not specified the network code will be blank.   It
              is highly recommended to specify a network code if no network is defined in the SAC file.

       -s stacode
              Specify  the  SEED station code to use, if not specified the station code will be the value of the
              KSTNM variable in the SAC header, if KSTNM is not specified the location ID will be blank.

       -l locid
              Specify the SEED location ID to use, if not specified the location ID will be  the  value  of  the
              KHOLE variable in the SAC header, if KHOLE is not specified the location ID will be blank.

       -c chancodes
              Specify  the SEED channel codes to use, if not specified the channel code will be the value of the
              KCMPNM variable in the SAC header, if KCMPNM is not specified the location ID will be blank.  As a
              special case a dot (.) will be interpreted as the same character as the input  channel  name,  for
              example,  "L.."  can  be specified to only replace the first code with 'L' and leave the other two
              codes as they are.

       -r bytes
              Specify the miniSEED record length in bytes, default is 4096.

       -e encoding
              Specify the miniSEED data encoding format, default is 11 (Steim-2 compression).   Other  supported
              encoding  formats  include  10 (Steim-1 compression), 1 (16-bit integers) and 3 (32-bit integers).
              The 16-bit integers encoding should only be used if all data samples  can  be  represented  in  16
              bits.

       -b byteorder
              Specify  the  miniSEED  byte order, default is 1 (big-endian or most significant byte first).  The
              other option is 0 (little-endian or least significant byte first).  It is  highly  recommended  to
              always create big-endian SEED.

       -o outfile
              Write  all  miniSEED  records to outfile, if outfile is a single dash (-) then all miniSEED output
              will go to stdout.  All diagnostic output from the program is written to stderr and  should  never
              get mixed with data going to stdout.

       -m metafile
              For  each  input  SAC  file  write  a one-line summary of channel metadata metafile.  The one-line
              summary is a comma-separated list  containing:  network,  station,  location,  channel,  latitude,
              longitude,  elevation, depth, azimuth, incidence, instrument name, scale factor, sampling rate and
              start and end times.  In SAC the component  azimuth  is  in  degrees  clockwise  from  north,  the
              component  incident  angle  is  in  degrees  from vertical and the elevation and depth are both in
              meters.

       -me    When writing out a metadata file include the event name (kevnm)  and  user  strings  0,  1  and  2
              (kuser0, kuser1 and kuser2).

       -s factor
              When writing data to an integer (miniSEED) encoding format apply this scaling factor to each input
              floating  point data sample before truncating to an integer.  By default autoscaling is used and a
              scaling factor is determined that will scale the maximum sample value to a minimum  of  6  digits.
              If  none of the input sample values include fractional components the scaling factor will be 1 and
              the floating point data will simply be truncated to their integer components.

       -f format
              By default the format of each input file is autodetected, either alpha or binary  (little  or  big
              endian byte order autodetected as well).  This option forces the format for every input file:

              0 : Autodetect SAC format (default)
              1 : Alphanumeric SAC format
              2 : Binary SAC format, autodetect byte order
              3 : Binary SAC format, little-endian
              4 : Binary SAC format, big-endian

SEED LOCATION IDS

       The  contents  of  the SAC header variable KHOLE is used as the SEED location ID if it is set.  While the
       definition of KHOLE and SEED location ID are not officially the same, this is  a  known  convention  when
       converting between these two formats.

LIST FILES

       If  an  input  file  is  prefixed with an '@' character the file is assumed to contain a list of file for
       input.  Multiple list files can be combined with multiple input files on the  command  line.   The  last,
       space separated field on each line is assumed to be the file name to be read.

       An example of a simple text list:

       TA.ELFS..LHE.SAC
       TA.ELFS..LHN.SAC
       TA.ELFS..LHZ.SAC

ABOUT SAC

       Seismic Analysis Code (SAC) is a general purpose interactive program designed for the study of sequential
       signals,  especially timeseries data.  Originally developed at the Lawrence Livermore National Laboratory
       the SAC software package is also available from IRIS.

AUTHOR

       Chad Trabant
       IRIS Data Management Center

                                                   2017/04/03                                       SAC2MSEED(1)