FDISK(8) | MidnightBSD System Manager's Manual | FDISK(8) |
fdisk
— PC slice
table maintenance utility
fdisk |
[-BIaipqstu ] [-b
bootcode] [-1234 ]
[disk] |
fdisk |
-f configfile
[-itv ] [disk] |
In order for the BIOS to boot the kernel, certain conventions must
be adhered to. Sector 0 of the disk must contain boot code, a slice table,
and a magic number. BIOS slices can be used to break the disk up into
several pieces. The BIOS brings in sector 0 and verifies the magic number.
The sector 0 boot code then searches the slice table to determine which
slice is marked “active”. This boot code then brings in the
bootstrap from the active slice and, if marked bootable, runs it. Under DOS,
you can have one or more slices with one active. The DOS
fdisk
utility can be used to divide space on the
disk into slices and set one active.
The FreeBSD utility,
fdisk
, serves a similar purpose to the DOS utility.
The first form is used to display slice information or to interactively edit
the slice table. The second is used to write a slice table using a
configfile, and is designed to be used by other
scripts/programs.
Options are:
-a
-f
is
given.-b
bootcode-B
-f
is given.-f
configfile-i
is also given, in which case all
existing slices are deleted (marked as “unused”) before the
configfile is read. The
configfile can be
‘-
’, in which case standard input is
read. See CONFIGURATION FILE,
below, for file syntax.
WARNING:
when -f
is used, you are not asked if you really
want to write the slices table (as you are in the interactive mode). Use
with caution!
-i
-u
.)-I
-p
fdisk
configuration file
format and exit; see
CONFIGURATION FILE,
below.-q
-s
-t
-f
option to see what would be written to the
slice table. Implies -v
.-u
-f
is given.-v
-f
is used,
fdisk
prints out the slice table that is written
to the disk.-1234
-f
is given.The final disk name can be provided as a “bare” disk
name only, e.g. da0, or as a full pathname. If
omitted, fdisk
tries to figure out the default disk
device name from the mounted root device.
When called with no arguments, it prints the sector 0 slice table. An example follows:
******* Working on device /dev/ada0 ******* parameters extracted from in-core disklabel are: cylinders=769 heads=15 sectors/track=33 (495 blks/cyl) parameters to be used for BIOS calculations are: cylinders=769 heads=15 sectors/track=33 (495 blks/cyl) Warning: BIOS sector numbering starts with sector 1 Information from DOS bootblock is: The data for partition 1 is: sysid 165,(FreeBSD/NetBSD/386BSD) start 495, size 380160 (185 Meg), flag 0 beg: cyl 1/ sector 1/ head 0; end: cyl 768/ sector 33/ head 14 The data for partition 2 is: sysid 164,(unknown) start 378180, size 2475 (1 Meg), flag 0 beg: cyl 764/ sector 1/ head 0; end: cyl 768/ sector 33/ head 14 The data for partition 3 is: <UNUSED> The data for partition 4 is: sysid 99,(ISC UNIX, other System V/386, GNU HURD or Mach) start 380656, size 224234 (109 Meg), flag 80 beg: cyl 769/ sector 2/ head 0; end: cyl 197/ sector 33/ head 14
The disk is divided into three slices that happen to fill the disk. The second slice overlaps the end of the first. (Used for debugging purposes.)
Note: these numbers are calculated using BIOS's understanding of the disk geometry and saved in the bootblock.
The -i
and -u
flags are used to indicate that the slice data is to be updated. Unless the
-f
option is also given,
fdisk
will enter a conversational mode. In this
mode, no changes will be written to disk unless you explicitly tell
fdisk
to.
The fdisk
utility will display each slice
and ask whether you want to edit it. If you say yes,
fdisk
will step through each field, show you the old
value, and ask you for a new one. When you are done with the slice,
fdisk
will display it and ask you whether it is
correct. It will then proceed to the next entry.
Getting the cyl, sector, and head fields correct is tricky, so by default, they will be calculated for you; you can specify them if you choose to though.
After all the slices are processed, you are given the option to change the “active” slice. Finally, when all the new data for sector 0 has been accumulated, you are asked to confirm whether you really want to rewrite it.
The difference between the -u
and
-i
flags is that the -u
flag
edits (updates) the existing slice parameters while the
-i
flag is used to “initialize” them
(old values will be ignored); if you edit the first slice,
-i
will also set it up to use the whole disk for
FreeBSD and make it active.
The automatic calculation of starting cylinder etc. uses a set of
figures that represent what the BIOS thinks the geometry of the drive is.
These figures are taken from the in-core disklabel by default, but
fdisk
initially gives you an opportunity to change
them. This allows you to create a bootblock that can work with drives that
use geometry translation under the BIOS.
If you hand craft your disk layout, please make sure that the FreeBSD slice starts on a cylinder boundary.
Editing an existing slice will most likely result in the loss of all data in that slice.
You should run fdisk
interactively once or
twice to see how it works. This is completely safe as long as you answer the
last question in the negative. There are subtleties that
fdisk
detects that are not fully explained in this
manual page.
When the -f
option is given, a disk's
slice table can be written using values from a
configfile. The syntax of this file is very simple;
each line is either a comment or a specification, as follows:
#
comment ...#
are comments and are
ignored.g
spec1 spec2 spec3c
numh
nums
numThese specs can occur in any order, as the leading letter determines which value is which; however, all three must be specified.
This line must occur before any lines that specify slice information.
It is an error if the following is not true:
1 <= number of cylinders 1 <= number of heads <= 256 1 <= number of sectors/track < 64
The number of cylinders should be less than or equal to 1024, but this is not enforced, although a warning will be printed. Note that bootable FreeBSD slices (the “/” file system) must lie completely within the first 1024 cylinders; if this is not true, booting may fail. Non-bootable slices do not have this restriction.
Example (all of these are equivalent), for a disk with 1019 cylinders, 39 heads, and 63 sectors:
g c1019 h39 s63 g h39 c1019 s63 g s63 h39 c1019
p
slice type start lengthOnly those slices explicitly mentioned by these lines are
modified; any slice not referenced by a p
line
will not be modified. However, if an invalid slice table is present, or
the -i
option is specified, all existing slice
entries will be cleared (marked as unused), and these
p
lines will have to be used to explicitly set
slice information. If multiple slices need to be set, multiple
p
lines must be specified; one for each
slice.
These slice lines must occur after any geometry specification lines, if one is present.
The type is 165 for FreeBSD slices. Specifying a slice type of zero is the same as clearing the slice and marking it as unused; however, dummy values (such as “0”) must still be specified for start and length.
Note: the start offset will be rounded upwards to a head boundary if necessary, and the end offset will be rounded downwards to a cylinder boundary if necessary.
Example: to clear slice 4 and mark it as unused:
p 4 0 0 0
Example: to set slice 1 to a FreeBSD slice, starting at sector 1 for 2503871 sectors (note: these numbers will be rounded upwards and downwards to correspond to head and cylinder boundaries):
p 1 165 1 2503871
Example: to set slices 1, 2 and 4 to FreeBSD slices, the first being 2 Gigabytes, the second being 10 Gigabytes and the forth being the remainder of the disk (again, numbers will be rounded appropriately):
p 1 165 63 2G
p 2 165 * 10G
p 3 0 0 0
p 4 165 * *
a
sliceExample: to make slice 1 the active slice:
a 1
A version of fdisk
first appeared in the
Mach Operating System. It was subsequently ported to
386BSD.
fdisk
for Mach Operating System was
written by Robert Baron
<rvb@cs.cmu.edu>. It
was ported to 386BSD by Julian
Elischer
<julian@tfs.com>.
The default boot code will not necessarily handle all slice types correctly, in particular those introduced since MS-DOS 6.x.
The entire utility should be made more user-friendly.
Most users new to FreeBSD do not understand the difference between “slice” and “partition”, causing difficulty to adjust.
You cannot use this command to completely dedicate a disk to FreeBSD. The bsdlabel(8) command must be used for this.
October 5, 2016 | midnightbsd-3.1 |