.\" $OpenBSD: fdisk.8,v 1.84 2015/09/09 15:20:22 deraadt Exp $ .\" .\" .\" Copyright (c) 1997 Tobias Weingartner .\" .\" Permission to use, copy, modify, and distribute this software for any .\" purpose with or without fee is hereby granted, provided that the above .\" copyright notice and this permission notice appear in all copies. .\" .\" THE SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED "AS IS" AND THE AUTHOR DISCLAIMS ALL WARRANTIES .\" WITH REGARD TO THIS SOFTWARE INCLUDING ALL IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF .\" MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS. IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHOR BE LIABLE FOR .\" ANY SPECIAL, DIRECT, INDIRECT, OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES OR ANY DAMAGES .\" WHATSOEVER RESULTING FROM LOSS OF USE, DATA OR PROFITS, WHETHER IN AN .\" ACTION OF CONTRACT, NEGLIGENCE OR OTHER TORTIOUS ACTION, ARISING OUT OF .\" OR IN CONNECTION WITH THE USE OR PERFORMANCE OF THIS SOFTWARE. .\" .Dd $Mdocdate: September 9 2015 $ .Dt FDISK 8 .Os .Sh NAME .Nm fdisk .Nd MBR partition maintenance program .Sh SYNOPSIS .Nm fdisk .Op Fl egy .Op Fl i | u .Op Fl b Ar blocks .Oo .Fl c Ar cylinders .Fl h Ar heads .Fl s Ar sectors .Oc .Op Fl f Ar mbrfile .Op Fl l Ar blocks .Ar disk .Sh DESCRIPTION .Nm fdisk makes changes to the MBR table found on some disks. On such disks sector 0 contains a 4-entry MBR partition table that divides the space. .Pp Each entry has a type. A type of .Ar 0xA6 indicates an OpenBSD MBR partition, which starts with its own 16-entry partition table known as a .Xr disklabel 5 . This can be edited using .Xr disklabel 8 . .Pp Caution is advised when editing these tables, since some platforms use tricks to boot and may rely on specific configurations created at install time. .Pp The options are as follows: .Bl -tag -width Ds .It Fl b Ar blocks A special boot partition of the specified size will be written to disk on architectures that need one. Only valid with .Fl i . .It Xo .Fl c Ar cylinders .Fl h Ar heads .Fl s Ar sectors .Xc Specifies an alternate BIOS geometry for .Nm to use. By default, an automatic calculation of disk size will be built using heuristics. These figures are taken from the in-core disklabel (see .Xr disklabel 8 ) , or values that .Em /boot has passed to the kernel. .It Fl e Use the .Nm interactive editor to modify an MBR partition table. The editor permits configuration of the MBR partition, as well as extended MBR partitions. See .Sx COMMAND MODE , below, for more information. .It Fl f Ar mbrfile Specifies an alternate MBR template file. The default file is .Pa /usr/mdec/mbr . .It Fl g A protective MBR for GPT will be written to disk, instead of an MBR with an .Ox MBR partition. Only valid with .Fl i . .It Fl i Requests that the MBR partition data be re-initialized. In this mode, .Nm will completely overwrite the primary MBR bootcode and MBR partition table using the default MBR template .Pa /usr/mdec/mbr (or the one optionally specified by the .Fl f flag). In the default template, MBR partition number 3 will be configured as an .Ox MBR partition spanning the entire disk, except for a zone left at the start for booting. This mode is designed to initialize the MBR the very first time. If the .Fl g flag is also specified, a protective MBR for GPT will be created. .Pp Only one of .Fl i or .Fl u can be specified. .It Fl l Ar blocks Specify the number of blocks in the disk, and force the MBR to be in LBA mode only. .It Fl u Update MBR bootcode, preserving existing MBR partition table. The MBR bootcode extends from offset 0x000 to the start of the MBR partition table at offset 0x1BE. It is similar to the .Fl i flag, except the existing MBR partition table is preserved. This is useful for writing new MBR bootcode onto an existing drive, and is equivalent to the DOS command .Dq FDISK /MBR . Note that this option will overwrite the NT disk signature, if present. .Pp Only one of .Fl i or .Fl u can be specified. .It Fl y Avoid asking yes/no questions when not desirable. .It Ar disk Specify the .Ar disk to operate on. It can be specified either by its full pathname or an abbreviated disk form. In its abbreviated form, the path to the device, the .Sq r denoting .Qq raw device , and the partition letter, can all be omitted. For example, the first IDE disk can be specified as either .Pa /dev/rwd0c , .Pa /dev/wd0c , or .Ar wd0 . .El .Sh TYPICAL LAYOUT When called with no special flags, .Nm prints the MBR partition table of the specified disk: .Bd -literal -offset 1n # fdisk sd0 Disk: sd0 geometry: 121601/255/63 [1953525168 Sectors] Offset: 0 Signature: 0xAA55 Starting Ending LBA Info: #: id C H S - C H S [ start: size ] ------------------------------------------------------------------------ 0: 0B 0 1 1 - 26108 0 63 [ 63: 419425020 ] Win95 FAT-32 1: 00 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 [ 0: 0 ] unused 2: 00 0 0 0 - 0 0 0 [ 0: 0 ] unused *3: A6 26108 1 1 - 121600 254 63 [ 419425083: 1534094982 ] OpenBSD .Ed .Pp This 1953525168 sector (931GB) disk drive is divided into two MBR partitions that span the whole disk. The first MBR partition is a 200GB FAT-32 partition, the second is a 731GB .Ox MBR partition using the remainder of the disk. The fields of the output are: .Bl -tag -width "start/size" .It Em "#" Number identifying each MBR partition table entry. There are a total of four slots. .Sq * denotes the MBR partition which is declared bootable. .It Em "id" MBR partition type identifier. .Ox reserves the magic number hexadecimal A6 (166 decimal). .It Em "C/H/S" These fields provide the starting and ending address of the MBR partition in BIOS geometry. .It Em "start/size" These fields provide the starting sector and size in sectors of the MBR partition in linear block addresses. .El .Pp .Em NOTE : The BIOS geometry sectors field (C/H/S) is .Dq 1 based , but the LBA "start" field is .Dq 0 based . .Pp The CHS values will need to be in the BIOS's geometry for the system to be able to boot and use the drive correctly. These values must be kept correctly synchronized or a variety of problems develop which are very difficult to diagnose. .Pp The .Ox MBR partition shown above is subdivided further using the functionality provided by .Xr disklabel 8 , which provides .Ox partitions. .Bd -literal -offset 1n # /dev/rsd0c: type: SCSI disk: SCSI disk label: WDC WD10EADS-65L duid: 085ef8d68623f5b3 flags: bytes/sector: 512 sectors/track: 63 tracks/cylinder: 255 sectors/cylinder: 16065 cylinders: 121601 total sectors: 1953525168 boundstart: 419425083 boundend: 1953520065 drivedata: 0 16 partitions: # size offset fstype [fsize bsize cpg] a: 2097125 419425083 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 b: 4715520 421522208 swap c: 1953525168 0 unused d: 8388608 426237728 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 e: 16771072 434626336 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 f: 4194304 451397408 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 g: 2097152 455591712 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 h: 20971520 457688864 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 i: 419425020 63 MSDOS j: 4194304 478660384 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 k: 4194304 482854688 4.2BSD 2048 16384 1 l: 629145536 487049024 4.2BSD 4096 32768 1 .Ed .Pp These .Ox partitions are then mounted as follows using .Pa /etc/fstab : .Bd -literal -offset indent /dev/sd0a / ffs rw,softdep 1 1 /dev/sd0d /tmp ffs rw,softdep,nodev,nosuid 1 2 /dev/sd0e /var ffs rw,softdep,nodev,nosuid 1 2 /dev/sd0f /usr ffs rw,softdep,nodev 1 2 /dev/sd0g /usr/X11R6 ffs rw,softdep,nodev 1 2 /dev/sd0h /usr/local ffs rw,softdep,nodev 1 2 /dev/sd0i /mnt/example msdos rw,nodev,nosuid 1 2 /dev/sd0j /usr/src ffs rw,softdep,nodev,nosuid 1 2 /dev/sd0k /usr/obj ffs rw,softdep,nodev,nosuid 1 2 /dev/sd0l /home ffs rw,softdep,nodev,nosuid 1 2 .Ed .Sh COMMAND MODE The .Fl e flag causes .Nm to enter an interactive command mode. The prompt contains information about the state of the edit process. .Pp .Dl fdisk:*1\*(Gt .Pp .Sq * means that the in-memory copy of the boot block has been modified, but not yet written to disk. .Pp 1 is the disk offset of the currently selected boot block being edited. This number will be 2 when editing an extended MBR partition, 3 when editing an extended MBR partition within an extended MBR partition, and so on. .Pp The list of commands and their explanations are given below. Commands may be abbreviated provided enough characters are given to ensure unambiguity. .Bl -tag -width Ds .It Cm ?\& A synonym for .Cm help . .It Cm help Display a list of commands that .Nm understands in the interactive edit mode. .It Cm manual Display this manual page. .It Cm reinit Initialize the currently selected, in-memory copy of the boot block. .It Cm disk Display the current drive geometry that .Nm probed using kernel provided information and various heuristics. The disk geometry may be changed at this point. .It Cm edit Ar # Edit a given table entry in the memory copy of the current boot block. Sizes may be adjusted in BIOS geometry mode or using sector offsets and sizes. A unit .Sq b , .Sq k , .Sq m , or .Sq g may be appended to indicate bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes. The special size value .Sq * will cause the partition to be sized to use the remainder of the disk. .It Cm flag Ar # Op Ar value Make the given MBR partition table entry bootable and mark all others as not bootable (only one entry can be marked bootable). The bootable partition is denoted with .Sq * . .\" If you wish to boot from an extended .\" MBR partition, you will need to mark the MBR partition table entry for the .\" extended MBR partition as bootable. If a .Ar value of 0 is given, the MBR partition is marked as not bootable, but no other MBR partitions are touched. .It Cm update Update the machine MBR bootcode and 0xAA55 signature in the memory copy of the currently selected boot block. Note that this option will overwrite an NT disk signature, if present. .It Cm select Ar # Select and load into memory the boot block pointed to by the extended MBR partition table entry in the current boot block. .It Cm setpid Ar # Change the MBR partition identifier of the given MBR partition table entry. This command is particularly useful for reassigning an existing MBR partition to .Ox . .It Cm swap Ar # Ar # Swap two MBR entries. .It Cm print Op Ar unit Print the currently selected in-memory copy of the boot block and its MBR table to the terminal. A .Ar unit .Sq b , .Sq k , .Sq m , or .Sq g may be appended to indicate bytes, kilobytes, megabytes, or gigabytes. Otherwise the number of sectors is printed. .It Cm write Write the in-memory copy of the boot block to disk. .It Cm exit Exit the current level of .Nm fdisk , either returning to the previously selected in-memory copy of a boot block, or exiting the program if there is none. .It Cm quit Exit the current level of .Nm fdisk , either returning to the previously selected in-memory copy of a boot block, or exiting the program if there is none. Unlike .Em exit it does write the modified block out. .It Cm abort Quit program without saving current changes. .El .Sh FILES .Bl -tag -width /usr/mdec/mbr -compact .It Pa /usr/mdec/mbr default MBR template .El .Sh SEE ALSO .Xr fstab 5 , .Xr boot_amd64 8 , .Xr boot_armish 8 , .Xr boot_i386 8 , .Xr boot_landisk 8 , .Xr boot_macppc 8 , .Xr boot_zaurus 8 , .Xr disklabel 8 .Sh CAVEATS Hand crafted disk layouts are highly error prone. It is common practice, though by no means required, that MBR partitions start on a cylinder boundary (generally head 0, sector 1, but head 1, sector 1 for track 0), and that MBR partitions also end at cylinder boundaries.