xref: /dragonfly/sbin/gpt/gpt.8 (revision 757c006e)
1.\" Copyright (c) 2002 Marcel Moolenaar
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25.\" $FreeBSD: src/sbin/gpt/gpt.8,v 1.17 2006/06/22 22:22:32 marcel Exp $
26.\"
27.Dd September 28, 2009
28.Dt GPT 8
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm gpt
32.Nd "GUID partition table maintenance utility"
33.Sh SYNOPSIS
34.Nm
35.Op Ar general_options
36.Ar command
37.Op Ar command_options
38.Ar device ...
39.Sh DESCRIPTION
40The
41.Nm
42utility provides the necessary functionality to manipulate GUID partition
43tables (GPTs), but see
44.Sx BUGS
45below for how and where functionality is missing.
46GPT partitions are accessed as
47.Dx
48disk slices, with same number as GPT partition,
49127 slices per disk device are supported.
50The basic usage model of the
51.Nm
52tool follows that of the
53.Xr cvs 1
54tool.
55The general options are described in the following paragraph.
56The remaining paragraphs describe the individual commands with their options.
57Here we conclude by mentioning that a
58.Ar device
59is either a special file
60corresponding to a disk-like device or a regular file.
61The command is applied to each
62.Ar device
63listed on the command line.
64.Ss General Options
65The general options allow the user to change default settings or otherwise
66change the behaviour that is applicable to all commands.
67Not all commands use all default settings, so some general options may not
68have an effect on all commands.
69.Pp
70The
71.Fl p Ar count
72option allows the user to change the number of partitions the GPT can
73accommodate.
74This is used whenever a new GPT is created.
75By default, the
76.Nm
77utility will create space for 128 partitions (or 32 sectors of 512 bytes).
78.Pp
79The
80.Fl r
81option causes the
82.Nm
83utility to open the device for reading only.
84Currently this option is primarily useful for the
85.Ic show
86command, but the intent
87is to use it to implement dry-run behaviour.
88.Pp
89The
90.Fl v
91option controls the verbosity level.
92The level increases with every occurrence of this option.
93There is no formalized definition of the different levels yet.
94.Ss Commands
95.Bl -tag -width indent
96.\" ==== add ====
97.It Xo
98.Nm
99.Ic add
100.Op Fl b Ar number
101.Op Fl i Ar index
102.Op Fl s Ar count
103.Op Fl t Ar type
104.Ar device ...
105.Xc
106The
107.Ic add
108command allows the user to add a new partition to an existing table,
109the name of the disk slice for the added partition is printed.
110By default, it will create a
111.Cm dfly
112partition covering the first available block
113of an unused disk space.
114The command-specific options can be used to control this behaviour.
115.Pp
116The
117.Fl b Ar number
118option allows the user to specify the starting (beginning) sector number of
119the partition.
120The minimum sector number is 1, but has to fall inside an unused region of
121disk space that is covered by the GPT.
122.Pp
123The
124.Fl i Ar index
125option allows the user to specify which (free) entry in the GPT table is to
126be used for the new partition.
127By default, the first free entry is selected.
128Entries start at index 0 representing partition 0 of the GPT.
129.Pp
130The
131.Fl s Ar count
132option allows the user to specify the size of the partition in sectors.
133The minimum size is 1.
134.Pp
135The
136.Fl t Ar type
137option allows the user to specify the partition type.
138The type is given as an UUID, but
139.Nm
140accepts
141.Cm efi , swap , ufs , hfs , linux , dfly , hammer, hammer2
142and
143.Cm windows
144as aliases for the most commonly used partition types.
145.Cm ufs
146is a
147.Fx
148UFS UUID.
149.Cm dfly
150has the alias
151.Cm dragonfly
152and is a
153.Dx
154.Xr disklabel64 5
155UUID.
156You may also specify any symbolic name in the system
157.Xr uuids 5
158files.
159.Pp
160.Em NOTE!
161If you don't specify a beginning sector with
162.Fl b Ar number
163, the new partition will be aligned to 1MiB in size and position
164(in case of 512 byte sector sizes).
165.\" ==== boot ====
166.It Nm Ic boot Ar device ...
167The
168.Ic boot
169command allows the user to create a small boot partition in a freshly
170created GPT.
171.Pp
172This command creates a small, 1GB boot partition as partition #0
173and hacks in a special
174.Sq slice 1
175in the PMBR which aliases it.
176The PMBR is further modified to add the necessary boot code.
177You can then disklabel GPT partition #0 and mount it, placing the contents of
178.Pa /boot
179directory within.
180You must add a line to
181.Pa loader.conf ,
182like
183.Bd -literal -offset indent
184vfs.root.mountfrom="ufs:da1s1a"
185.Ed
186.Pp
187which point to the actual root mount.
188.Pp
189Your root partition may be another GPT partition and you may use a 64 bit
190disklabel within that partition if you desire.
191.Pp
192The
193.Sq boot0
194boot manager is used, it can be manipulated with the
195.Xr boot0cfg 8
196command,
197.Sq packet
198option usually needs to be set.
199.Pp
200.Em NOTE!
201A disk setup with the
202.Ar boot
203command may not be shared with another OS,
204as it doesn't use a fully standard GPT.
205.Pp
206.Em WARNING!
207Some BIOSes may not be able to deal with this hack, your mileage may vary.
208.\" ==== create ====
209.It Nm Ic create Oo Fl fp Oc Ar device ...
210The
211.Ic create
212command allows the user to create a new (empty) GPT.
213By default, one cannot create a GPT when the device contains a MBR,
214however this can be overridden with the
215.Fl f
216option.
217If the
218.Fl f
219option is specified, an existing MBR is destroyed and any partitions
220described by the MBR are lost.
221.Pp
222The
223.Fl p
224option tells
225.Nm
226to create only the primary table and not the backup table.
227This option is only useful for debugging and should not be used otherwise.
228.\" ==== destroy ====
229.It Nm Ic destroy Oo Fl r Oc Ar device ...
230The
231.Ic destroy
232command allows the user to destroy an existing, possibly not empty GPT.
233.Pp
234The
235.Fl r
236option instructs
237.Nm
238to destroy the table in a way that it can be recovered.
239.\" ==== init ====
240.It Nm Ic init Fl f Oo Fl B Oc Ar device ...
241The
242.Ic init
243command allows the user to create a new GPT similar
244to the create command, but will also populate it with
245a boot slice (s0) and a
246.Dx
247slice (s1).
248The boot slice will be dos-formatted.
249The disklabel will be left empty and ready to edit.
250.Pp
251Due to the destructive nature of this directive, the
252.Fl f
253option must also be specified.
254.Pp
255If the
256.Fl B
257option is specified, /boot/bootx64.efi will be copied into
258the msdos slice (s0), and the disklabel will be initialized
259with -B in addition to the normal -r -w.
260.\" ==== label ====
261.It Xo
262.Nm
263.Ic label
264.Op Fl a
265.Aq Fl f Ar file | Fl l Ar label
266.Ar device ...
267.Xc
268.It Xo
269.Nm
270.Ic label
271.Op Fl b Ar number
272.Op Fl i Ar index
273.Op Fl s Ar count
274.Op Fl t Ar type
275.Aq Fl f Ar file | Fl l Ar label
276.Ar device ...
277.Xc
278The
279.Ic label
280command allows the user to label any partitions that match the selection.
281At least one of the following selection options must be specified.
282.Pp
283The
284.Fl a
285option specifies that all partitions should be labeled.
286It is mutually exclusive with all other selection options.
287.Pp
288The
289.Fl b Ar number
290option selects the partition that starts at the given block number.
291.Pp
292The
293.Fl i Ar index
294option selects the partition with the given partition number.
295Partition numbers start at 0.
296.Pp
297The
298.Fl s Ar count
299option selects all partitions that have the given size.
300This can cause multiple partitions to be removed.
301.Pp
302The
303.Fl t Ar type
304option selects all partitions that have the given type.
305The type is given as an UUID or by the aliases that the
306.Ic add
307command accepts.
308This can cause multiple partitions to be removed.
309.Pp
310The
311.Fl f Ar file
312or
313.Fl l Ar label
314options specify the new label to be assigned to the selected partitions.
315The
316.Fl f Ar file
317option is used to read the label from the specified file.
318Only the first line is read from the file and the trailing newline
319character is stripped.
320If the file name is the dash or minus sign
321.Pq Fl ,
322the label is read from
323the standard input.
324The
325.Fl l Ar label
326option is used to specify the label in the command line.
327The label is assumed to be encoded in UTF-8.
328.\" ==== migrate ====
329.It Nm Ic migrate Oo Fl fs Oc Ar device ...
330The
331.Ic migrate
332command allows the user to migrate an MBR-based disk partitioning into a
333GPT-based partitioning.
334By default, the MBR is not migrated when it contains partitions of an unknown
335type.
336This can be overridden with the
337.Fl f
338option.
339Specifying the
340.Fl f
341option will cause unknown partitions to be ignored and any data in it
342to be lost.
343.Pp
344The
345.Fl s
346option prevents migrating
347.Bx
348disk labels into GPT partitions by creating
349the GPT equivalent of a slice.
350.\" ==== remove ====
351.It Nm Ic remove Oo Fl a Oc Ar device ...
352.It Xo
353.Nm
354.Ic remove
355.Op Fl b Ar number
356.Op Fl i Ar index
357.Op Fl s Ar count
358.Op Fl t Ar type
359.Ar device ...
360.Xc
361The
362.Ic remove
363command allows the user to remove any and all partitions that match the
364selection.
365It uses the same selection options as the
366.Ic label
367command.
368See above for a description of these options.
369Partitions are removed by clearing the partition type.
370No other information is changed.
371.\" ==== show ====
372.It Nm Ic show Oo Fl lu Oc Ar device ...
373The
374.Ic show
375command displays the current partitioning on the listed devices and gives
376an overall view of the disk contents.
377With the
378.Fl l
379option the GPT partition label will be displayed instead of the GPT partition
380type.
381The option has no effect on non-GPT partitions.
382With the
383.Fl u
384option the GPT partition type is displayed as an UUID instead of in a
385user friendly form.
386The
387.Fl l
388option takes precedence over the
389.Fl u
390option.
391.El
392.Sh FILES
393.Bl -tag -width ".Pa /etc/defaults/uuids"
394.It Pa /boot/boot0
395The default
396.Sq boot0
397image.
398.It Pa /etc/defaults/uuids
399A list of UUIDs
400and their symbolic names provided by the OS vendor.
401.It Pa /etc/uuids
402A list of UUIDs
403and their symbolic names provided by the system administrator.
404.El
405.Sh EXAMPLES
406To install an empty GPT on
407.Pa ad6 :
408.Pp
409.Dl "gpt create ad6"
410.Pp
411GPT partitions are defined in number of sectors, the sector size is usually 512B,
412which is assumed in the examples below, it can be found using:
413.Pp
414.Dl "gpt -v show ad6"
415.Pp
416To add a dummy GPT partition 0:
417.Pp
418.Dl "gpt add -i0 -s16 ad6"
419.Pp
420You might want to do this to not use slice 0 for data;
421when GPT is not used on a disk, slice 0 is the compatibility slice,
422which is used for
423.Dq dangerously dedicated
424disks.
425For GPT slice 0 has no special meaning, it is just the first slice on the disk.
426.Pp
427To add a GPT partition of size approx. 100GB:
428.Pp
429.Dl "gpt add -s200000000 ad6"
430.Pp
431This will be GPT partition 1 as it is the first one free,
432it will be accessible as
433.Pa ad6s1 ,
434which is also printed by the command.
435The type will be
436.Dq DragonFly Label64 ,
437it will have to be set up by
438.Xr disklabel64 8 .
439.Pp
440To add GPT partition 5 with type
441.Dq DragonFly HAMMER
442using the remaining free space:
443.Bd -literal -offset indent
444gpt add -i5 -t "DragonFly HAMMER" ad6
445.Ed
446.Pp
447To print the contents of the GPT:
448.Pp
449.Dl "gpt show ad6"
450.Ss Boot Setup
451To setup a disk using GPT for booting, the steps below can be used.
452System is copied from an already installed disk,
453e.g.\& a hard disk or an install CD.
454This example will setup disk
455.Pa da1
456with GPT for booting, using the
457.Ic boot
458command.
459.Pp
460.Em WARNING!
461Any previous data on disk installed to will be deleted.
462.Bd -literal -offset indent
463gpt create -f da1
464gpt boot da1
465boot0cfg -s 2 da1
466disklabel -B -r -w da1s0 auto
467disklabel -e da1s0	# add `a: * * 4.2BSD', to add `a' partition
468			#   with fstype `4.2BSD' covering whole slice
469
470gpt add da1
471disklabel64 -r -w da1s1 auto
472disklabel64 -e da1s1	# add `b: 4G * swap', to add `b' partition
473			#   with fstype `swap' and size 4GB,
474			# add `a: * * HAMMER', to add `a' partition
475			#   with fstype `HAMMER' covering rest of slice
476newfs_hammer -L ROOT /dev/da1s1a
477mount_hammer /dev/da1s1a /mnt
478
479newfs /dev/da1s0a
480mkdir /mnt/boot
481mount /dev/da1s0a /mnt/boot
482
483cpdup / /mnt		# copy each file system you need, e.g.
484cpdup /boot /mnt/boot
485cpdup /var /mnt/var
486cpdup /var/tmp /mnt/var/tmp
487cpdup /usr /mnt/usr
488
489cd /mnt
490vi etc/fstab		# add `/dev/da1s1a / hammer rw',
491			# add `/dev/da1s1b none swap sw',
492			# add `/dev/da1s0a /boot ufs rw 1 1',
493			# delete lines for file systems cpdup'ed above
494vi boot/loader.conf	# add `vfs.root.mountfrom="hammer:da1s1a"'
495cd
496umount /mnt/boot
497umount /mnt
498.Ed
499.Sh COMPATIBILITY
500The GPT that
501.Nm
502manipulates is part of the EFI standard and is supported by many OSs.
503GPT uses 64 bits to store number of sectors, this supports very large disks.
504With the prevalent sector size of 512B this is 8 billion TB.
505.Sh SEE ALSO
506.Xr uuid 3 ,
507.Xr disklabel64 5 ,
508.Xr uuids 5 ,
509.Xr boot0cfg 8 ,
510.Xr disklabel 8 ,
511.Xr disklabel64 8 ,
512.Xr fdisk 8 ,
513.Xr mount 8 ,
514.Xr newfs 8 ,
515.Xr newfs_hammer 8 ,
516.Xr swapon 8
517.Sh HISTORY
518The
519.Nm
520utility appeared in
521.Fx 5.0
522for ia64.
523It was imported to
524.Dx 1.9 .
525.Sh BUGS
526The development of the
527.Nm
528utility is still work in progress.
529Many necessary features are missing or partially implemented.
530In practice this means that the manual page, supposed to describe these
531features, is farther removed from being complete or useful.
532As such, missing functionality is not even documented as missing.
533However, it is believed that the currently present functionality is reliable
534and stable enough that this tool can be used without bullet-proof footware if
535one thinks one does not make mistakes.
536.Pp
537It is expected that the basic usage model does not change, but it is
538possible that future versions will not be compatible in the strictest sense
539of the word.
540For example, the
541.Fl p Ar count
542option may be changed to a command option rather than a generic option.
543There are only two commands that use it so there is a chance that the natural
544tendency for people is to use it as a command option.
545Also, options primarily intended for diagnostic or debug purposes may be
546removed in future versions.
547.Pp
548Another possibility is that the current usage model is accompanied by
549other interfaces to make the tool usable as a back-end.
550This all depends on demand and thus feedback.
551.Pp
552The
553.Ic migrate
554command doesn't support
555.Dx
556partition types.
557