xref: /freebsd/lib/geom/part/gpart.8 (revision 9768746b)
1.\" Copyright (c) 2007, 2008 Marcel Moolenaar
2.\" All rights reserved.
3.\"
4.\" Redistribution and use in source and binary forms, with or without
5.\" modification, are permitted provided that the following conditions
6.\" are met:
7.\" 1. Redistributions of source code must retain the above copyright
8.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer.
9.\" 2. Redistributions in binary form must reproduce the above copyright
10.\"    notice, this list of conditions and the following disclaimer in the
11.\"    documentation and/or other materials provided with the distribution.
12.\"
13.\" THIS SOFTWARE IS PROVIDED BY THE AUTHORS AND CONTRIBUTORS ``AS IS'' AND
14.\" ANY EXPRESS OR IMPLIED WARRANTIES, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE
15.\" IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE
16.\" ARE DISCLAIMED.  IN NO EVENT SHALL THE AUTHORS OR CONTRIBUTORS BE LIABLE
17.\" FOR ANY DIRECT, INDIRECT, INCIDENTAL, SPECIAL, EXEMPLARY, OR CONSEQUENTIAL
18.\" DAMAGES (INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, PROCUREMENT OF SUBSTITUTE GOODS
19.\" OR SERVICES; LOSS OF USE, DATA, OR PROFITS; OR BUSINESS INTERRUPTION)
20.\" HOWEVER CAUSED AND ON ANY THEORY OF LIABILITY, WHETHER IN CONTRACT, STRICT
21.\" LIABILITY, OR TORT (INCLUDING NEGLIGENCE OR OTHERWISE) ARISING IN ANY WAY
22.\" OUT OF THE USE OF THIS SOFTWARE, EVEN IF ADVISED OF THE POSSIBILITY OF
23.\" SUCH DAMAGE.
24.\"
25.\" $FreeBSD$
26.\"
27.Dd January 26, 2022
28.Dt GPART 8
29.Os
30.Sh NAME
31.Nm gpart
32.Nd "control utility for the disk partitioning GEOM class"
33.Sh SYNOPSIS
34.\" ==== ADD ====
35.Nm
36.Cm add
37.Fl t Ar type
38.Op Fl a Ar alignment
39.Op Fl b Ar start
40.Op Fl s Ar size
41.Op Fl i Ar index
42.Op Fl l Ar label
43.Op Fl f Ar flags
44.Ar geom
45.\" ==== BACKUP ====
46.Nm
47.Cm backup
48.Ar geom
49.\" ==== BOOTCODE ====
50.Nm
51.Cm bootcode
52.Op Fl N
53.Op Fl b Ar bootcode
54.Op Fl p Ar partcode Fl i Ar index
55.Op Fl f Ar flags
56.Ar geom
57.\" ==== COMMIT ====
58.Nm
59.Cm commit
60.Ar geom
61.\" ==== CREATE ====
62.Nm
63.Cm create
64.Fl s Ar scheme
65.Op Fl n Ar entries
66.Op Fl f Ar flags
67.Ar provider
68.\" ==== DELETE ====
69.Nm
70.Cm delete
71.Fl i Ar index
72.Op Fl f Ar flags
73.Ar geom
74.\" ==== DESTROY ====
75.Nm
76.Cm destroy
77.Op Fl F
78.Op Fl f Ar flags
79.Ar geom
80.\" ==== MODIFY ====
81.Nm
82.Cm modify
83.Fl i Ar index
84.Op Fl l Ar label
85.Op Fl t Ar type
86.Op Fl f Ar flags
87.Ar geom
88.\" ==== RECOVER ====
89.Nm
90.Cm recover
91.Op Fl f Ar flags
92.Ar geom
93.\" ==== RESIZE ====
94.Nm
95.Cm resize
96.Fl i Ar index
97.Op Fl a Ar alignment
98.Op Fl s Ar size
99.Op Fl f Ar flags
100.Ar geom
101.\" ==== RESTORE ====
102.Nm
103.Cm restore
104.Op Fl lF
105.Op Fl f Ar flags
106.Ar provider
107.Op Ar ...
108.\" ==== SET ====
109.Nm
110.Cm set
111.Fl a Ar attrib
112.Fl i Ar index
113.Op Fl f Ar flags
114.Ar geom
115.\" ==== SHOW ====
116.Nm
117.Cm show
118.Op Fl l | r
119.Op Fl p
120.Op Ar geom ...
121.\" ==== UNDO ====
122.Nm
123.Cm undo
124.Ar geom
125.\" ==== UNSET ====
126.Nm
127.Cm unset
128.Fl a Ar attrib
129.Fl i Ar index
130.Op Fl f Ar flags
131.Ar geom
132.\"
133.Nm
134.Cm list
135.Nm
136.Cm status
137.Nm
138.Cm load
139.Nm
140.Cm unload
141.Sh DESCRIPTION
142The
143.Nm
144utility is used to partition GEOM providers, normally disks.
145The first argument is the action to be taken:
146.Bl -tag -width ".Cm bootcode"
147.\" ==== ADD ====
148.It Cm add
149Add a new partition to the partitioning scheme given by
150.Ar geom .
151The partition type must be specified with
152.Fl t Ar type .
153The partition's location, size, and other attributes will be calculated
154automatically if the corresponding options are not specified.
155.Pp
156The
157.Cm add
158command accepts these options:
159.Bl -tag -width 12n
160.It Fl a Ar alignment
161If specified, then the
162.Nm
163utility tries to align
164.Ar start
165offset and partition
166.Ar size
167to be multiple of
168.Ar alignment
169value.
170.It Fl b Ar start
171The logical block address where the partition will begin.
172An SI unit suffix is allowed.
173.It Fl f Ar flags
174Additional operational flags.
175See the section entitled
176.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
177below for a discussion
178about its use.
179.It Fl i Ar index
180The index in the partition table at which the new partition is to be
181placed.
182The index determines the name of the device special file used
183to represent the partition.
184.It Fl l Ar label
185The label attached to the partition.
186This option is only valid when used on partitioning schemes that support
187partition labels.
188.It Fl s Ar size
189Create a partition of size
190.Ar size .
191An SI unit suffix is allowed.
192.It Fl t Ar type
193Create a partition of type
194.Ar type .
195Partition types are discussed below in the section entitled
196.Sx "PARTITION TYPES" .
197.El
198.\" ==== BACKUP ====
199.It Cm backup
200Dump a partition table to standard output in a special format used by the
201.Cm restore
202action.
203.\" ==== BOOTCODE ====
204.It Cm bootcode
205Embed bootstrap code into the partitioning scheme's metadata on the
206.Ar geom
207(using
208.Fl b Ar bootcode )
209or write bootstrap code into a partition (using
210.Fl p Ar partcode
211and
212.Fl i Ar index ) .
213.Pp
214The
215.Cm bootcode
216command accepts these options:
217.Bl -tag -width 10n
218.It Fl N
219Do not preserve the Volume Serial Number for MBR.
220MBR bootcode contains Volume Serial Number by default, and
221.Nm
222tries to preserve it when installing new bootstrap code.
223This option skips preservation to help with some versions of
224.Xr boot0cfg 8
225that do not support Volume Serial Number.
226.It Fl b Ar bootcode
227Embed bootstrap code from the file
228.Ar bootcode
229into the partitioning scheme's metadata for
230.Ar geom .
231Not all partitioning schemes have embedded bootstrap code, so the
232.Fl b Ar bootcode
233option is scheme-specific in nature (see the section entitled
234.Sx BOOTSTRAPPING
235below).
236The
237.Ar bootcode
238file must match the partitioning scheme's requirements for file content
239and size.
240.It Fl f Ar flags
241Additional operational flags.
242See the section entitled
243.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
244below for a discussion
245about its use.
246.It Fl i Ar index
247Specify the target partition for
248.Fl p Ar partcode .
249.It Fl p Ar partcode
250Write the bootstrap code from the file
251.Ar partcode
252into the
253.Ar geom
254partition specified by
255.Fl i Ar index .
256The size of the file must be smaller than the size of the partition.
257.El
258.\" ==== COMMIT ====
259.It Cm commit
260Commit any pending changes for geom
261.Ar geom .
262All actions are committed by default and will not result in
263pending changes.
264Actions can be modified with the
265.Fl f Ar flags
266option so that they are not committed, but become pending.
267Pending changes are reflected by the geom and the
268.Nm
269utility, but they are not actually written to disk.
270The
271.Cm commit
272action will write all pending changes to disk.
273.\" ==== CREATE ====
274.It Cm create
275Create a new partitioning scheme on a provider given by
276.Ar provider .
277The scheme to use must be specified with the
278.Fl s Ar scheme
279option.
280.Pp
281The
282.Cm create
283command accepts these options:
284.Bl -tag -width 10n
285.It Fl f Ar flags
286Additional operational flags.
287See the section entitled
288.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
289below for a discussion
290about its use.
291.It Fl n Ar entries
292The number of entries in the partition table.
293Every partitioning scheme has a minimum and maximum number of entries.
294This option allows tables to be created with a number of entries
295that is within the limits.
296Some schemes have a maximum equal to the minimum and some schemes have
297a maximum large enough to be considered unlimited.
298By default, partition tables are created with the minimum number of
299entries.
300.It Fl s Ar scheme
301Specify the partitioning scheme to use.
302The kernel must have support for a particular scheme before
303that scheme can be used to partition a disk.
304.El
305.\" ==== DELETE ====
306.It Cm delete
307Delete a partition from geom
308.Ar geom
309and further identified by the
310.Fl i Ar index
311option.
312The partition cannot be actively used by the kernel.
313.Pp
314The
315.Cm delete
316command accepts these options:
317.Bl -tag -width 10n
318.It Fl f Ar flags
319Additional operational flags.
320See the section entitled
321.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
322below for a discussion
323about its use.
324.It Fl i Ar index
325Specifies the index of the partition to be deleted.
326.El
327.\" ==== DESTROY ====
328.It Cm destroy
329Destroy the partitioning scheme as implemented by geom
330.Ar geom .
331.Pp
332The
333.Cm destroy
334command accepts these options:
335.Bl -tag -width 10n
336.It Fl F
337Forced destroying of the partition table even if it is not empty.
338.It Fl f Ar flags
339Additional operational flags.
340See the section entitled
341.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
342below for a discussion
343about its use.
344.El
345.\" ==== MODIFY ====
346.It Cm modify
347Modify a partition from geom
348.Ar geom
349and further identified by the
350.Fl i Ar index
351option.
352Only the type and/or label of the partition can be modified.
353Not all partitioning schemes support labels and it is invalid to
354try to change a partition label in such cases.
355.Pp
356The
357.Cm modify
358command accepts these options:
359.Bl -tag -width 10n
360.It Fl f Ar flags
361Additional operational flags.
362See the section entitled
363.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
364below for a discussion
365about its use.
366.It Fl i Ar index
367Specifies the index of the partition to be modified.
368.It Fl l Ar label
369Change the partition label to
370.Ar label .
371.It Fl t Ar type
372Change the partition type to
373.Ar type .
374.El
375.\" ==== RECOVER ====
376.It Cm recover
377Recover a corrupt partition's scheme metadata on the geom
378.Ar geom .
379See the section entitled
380.Sx RECOVERING
381below for the additional information.
382.Pp
383The
384.Cm recover
385command accepts these options:
386.Bl -tag -width 10n
387.It Fl f Ar flags
388Additional operational flags.
389See the section entitled
390.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
391below for a discussion
392about its use.
393.El
394.\" ==== RESIZE ====
395.It Cm resize
396Resize a partition from geom
397.Ar geom
398and further identified by the
399.Fl i Ar index
400option.
401If the new size is not specified it is automatically calculated
402to be the maximum available from
403.Ar geom .
404.Pp
405The
406.Cm resize
407command accepts these options:
408.Bl -tag -width 12n
409.It Fl a Ar alignment
410If specified, then the
411.Nm
412utility tries to align partition
413.Ar size
414to be a multiple of the
415.Ar alignment
416value.
417.It Fl f Ar flags
418Additional operational flags.
419See the section entitled
420.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
421below for a discussion
422about its use.
423.It Fl i Ar index
424Specifies the index of the partition to be resized.
425.It Fl s Ar size
426Specifies the new size of the partition, in logical blocks.
427An SI unit suffix is allowed.
428.El
429.\" ==== RESTORE ====
430.It Cm restore
431Restore the partition table from a backup previously created by the
432.Cm backup
433action and read from standard input.
434Only the partition table is restored.
435This action does not affect the content of partitions.
436After restoring the partition table and writing bootcode if needed,
437user data must be restored from backup.
438.Pp
439The
440.Cm restore
441command accepts these options:
442.Bl -tag -width 10n
443.It Fl F
444Destroy partition table on the given
445.Ar provider
446before doing restore.
447.It Fl f Ar flags
448Additional operational flags.
449See the section entitled
450.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
451below for a discussion
452about its use.
453.It Fl l
454Restore partition labels for partitioning schemes that support them.
455.El
456.\" ==== SET ====
457.It Cm set
458Set the named attribute on the partition entry.
459See the section entitled
460.Sx ATTRIBUTES
461below for a list of available attributes.
462.Pp
463The
464.Cm set
465command accepts these options:
466.Bl -tag -width 10n
467.It Fl a Ar attrib
468Specifies the attribute to set.
469.It Fl f Ar flags
470Additional operational flags.
471See the section entitled
472.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
473below for a discussion
474about its use.
475.It Fl i Ar index
476Specifies the index of the partition on which the attribute will be set.
477.El
478.\" ==== SHOW ====
479.It Cm show
480Show current partition information for the specified geoms, or all
481geoms if none are specified.
482The default output includes the logical starting block of each
483partition, the partition size in blocks, the partition index number,
484the partition type, and a human readable partition size.
485Block sizes and locations are based on the device's Sectorsize
486as shown by
487.Cm gpart list .
488.Pp
489The
490.Cm show
491command accepts these options:
492.Bl -tag -width 10n
493.It Fl l
494For partitioning schemes that support partition labels, print them
495instead of partition type.
496.It Fl p
497Show provider names instead of partition indexes.
498.It Fl r
499Show raw partition type instead of symbolic name.
500.El
501.\" ==== UNDO ====
502.It Cm undo
503Revert any pending changes for geom
504.Ar geom .
505This action is the opposite of the
506.Cm commit
507action and can be used to undo any changes that have not been committed.
508.\" ==== UNSET ====
509.It Cm unset
510Clear the named attribute on the partition entry.
511See the section entitled
512.Sx ATTRIBUTES
513below for a list of available attributes.
514.Pp
515The
516.Cm unset
517command accepts these options:
518.Bl -tag -width 10n
519.It Fl a Ar attrib
520Specifies the attribute to clear.
521.It Fl f Ar flags
522Additional operational flags.
523See the section entitled
524.Sx "OPERATIONAL FLAGS"
525below for a discussion
526about its use.
527.It Fl i Ar index
528Specifies the index of the partition on which the attribute will be cleared.
529.El
530.It Cm list
531See
532.Xr geom 8 .
533.It Cm status
534See
535.Xr geom 8 .
536.It Cm load
537See
538.Xr geom 8 .
539.It Cm unload
540See
541.Xr geom 8 .
542.El
543.Sh PARTITIONING SCHEMES
544Several partitioning schemes are supported by the
545.Nm
546utility:
547.Bl -tag -width ".Cm VTOC8"
548.It Cm APM
549Apple Partition Map, used by PowerPC(R) Macintosh(R) computers.
550Requires the
551.Cd GEOM_PART_APM
552kernel option.
553.It Cm BSD
554Traditional BSD disklabel, usually used to subdivide MBR partitions.
555.Po
556This scheme can also be used as the sole partitioning method, without
557an MBR.
558Partition editing tools from other operating systems often do not
559understand the bare disklabel partition layout, so this is sometimes
560called
561.Dq dangerously dedicated .
562.Pc
563Requires the
564.Cm GEOM_PART_BSD
565kernel option.
566.It Cm BSD64
56764-bit implementation of BSD disklabel used in DragonFlyBSD to subdivide MBR
568or GPT partitions.
569Requires the
570.Cm GEOM_PART_BSD64
571kernel option.
572.It Cm LDM
573The Logical Disk Manager is an implementation of volume manager for
574Microsoft Windows NT.
575Requires the
576.Cd GEOM_PART_LDM
577kernel option.
578.It Cm GPT
579GUID Partition Table is used on Intel-based Macintosh computers and
580gradually replacing MBR on most PCs and other systems.
581Requires the
582.Cm GEOM_PART_GPT
583kernel option.
584.It Cm MBR
585Master Boot Record is used on PCs and removable media.
586Requires the
587.Cm GEOM_PART_MBR
588kernel option.
589The
590.Cm GEOM_PART_EBR
591option adds support for the Extended Boot Record (EBR),
592which is used to define a logical partition.
593The
594.Cm GEOM_PART_EBR_COMPAT
595option enables backward compatibility for partition names
596in the EBR scheme.
597It also prevents any type of actions on such partitions.
598.It Cm VTOC8
599Sun's SMI Volume Table Of Contents, used by
600.Tn SPARC64
601and
602.Tn UltraSPARC
603computers.
604Requires the
605.Cm GEOM_PART_VTOC8
606kernel option.
607.El
608.Pp
609See
610.Xr glabel 8
611for additional information on labelization of devices and partitions.
612.Sh PARTITION TYPES
613Partition types are identified on disk by particular strings or magic
614values.
615The
616.Nm
617utility uses symbolic names for common partition types so the user
618does not need to know these values or other details of the partitioning
619scheme in question.
620The
621.Nm
622utility also allows the user to specify scheme-specific partition types
623for partition types that do not have symbolic names.
624Symbolic names currently understood and used by
625.Fx
626are:
627.Bl -tag -width ".Cm dragonfly-disklabel64"
628.It Cm apple-boot
629The system partition dedicated to storing boot loaders on some Apple
630systems.
631The scheme-specific types are
632.Qq Li "!171"
633for MBR,
634.Qq Li "!Apple_Bootstrap"
635for APM, and
636.Qq Li "!426f6f74-0000-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
637for GPT.
638.It Cm bios-boot
639The system partition dedicated to second stage of the boot loader program.
640Usually it is used by the GRUB 2 loader for GPT partitioning schemes.
641The scheme-specific type is
642.Qq Li "!21686148-6449-6E6F-744E-656564454649" .
643.It Cm efi
644The system partition for computers that use the Extensible Firmware
645Interface (EFI).
646The scheme-specific types are
647.Qq Li "!239"
648for MBR, and
649.Qq Li "!c12a7328-f81f-11d2-ba4b-00a0c93ec93b"
650for GPT.
651.It Cm freebsd
652A
653.Fx
654partition subdivided into filesystems with a
655.Bx
656disklabel.
657This is a legacy partition type and should not be used for the APM
658or GPT schemes.
659The scheme-specific types are
660.Qq Li "!165"
661for MBR,
662.Qq Li "!FreeBSD"
663for APM, and
664.Qq Li "!516e7cb4-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b"
665for GPT.
666.It Cm freebsd-boot
667A
668.Fx
669partition dedicated to bootstrap code.
670The scheme-specific type is
671.Qq Li "!83bd6b9d-7f41-11dc-be0b-001560b84f0f"
672for GPT.
673.It Cm freebsd-swap
674A
675.Fx
676partition dedicated to swap space.
677The scheme-specific types are
678.Qq Li "!FreeBSD-swap"
679for APM,
680.Qq Li "!516e7cb5-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b"
681for GPT, and tag 0x0901 for VTOC8.
682.It Cm freebsd-ufs
683A
684.Fx
685partition that contains a UFS or UFS2 filesystem.
686The scheme-specific types are
687.Qq Li "!FreeBSD-UFS"
688for APM,
689.Qq Li "!516e7cb6-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b"
690for GPT, and tag 0x0902 for VTOC8.
691.It Cm freebsd-vinum
692A
693.Fx
694partition that contains a Vinum volume.
695The scheme-specific types are
696.Qq Li "!FreeBSD-Vinum"
697for APM,
698.Qq Li "!516e7cb8-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b"
699for GPT, and tag 0x0903 for VTOC8.
700.It Cm freebsd-zfs
701A
702.Fx
703partition that contains a ZFS volume.
704The scheme-specific types are
705.Qq Li "!FreeBSD-ZFS"
706for APM,
707.Qq Li "!516e7cba-6ecf-11d6-8ff8-00022d09712b"
708for GPT, and 0x0904 for VTOC8.
709.El
710.Pp
711Other symbolic names that can be used with the
712.Nm
713utility are:
714.Bl -tag -width ".Cm dragonfly-disklabel64"
715.It Cm apple-apfs
716An Apple macOS partition used for the Apple file system, APFS.
717.It Cm apple-core-storage
718An Apple Mac OS X partition used by logical volume manager known as
719Core Storage.
720The scheme-specific type is
721.Qq Li "!53746f72-6167-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
722for GPT.
723.It Cm apple-hfs
724An Apple Mac OS X partition that contains a HFS or HFS+ filesystem.
725The scheme-specific types are
726.Qq Li "!175"
727for MBR,
728.Qq Li "!Apple_HFS"
729for APM and
730.Qq Li "!48465300-0000-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
731for GPT.
732.It Cm apple-label
733An Apple Mac OS X partition dedicated to partition metadata that descibes
734disk device.
735The scheme-specific type is
736.Qq Li "!4c616265-6c00-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
737for GPT.
738.It Cm apple-raid
739An Apple Mac OS X partition used in a software RAID configuration.
740The scheme-specific type is
741.Qq Li "!52414944-0000-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
742for GPT.
743.It Cm apple-raid-offline
744An Apple Mac OS X partition used in a software RAID configuration.
745The scheme-specific type is
746.Qq Li "!52414944-5f4f-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
747for GPT.
748.It Cm apple-tv-recovery
749An Apple Mac OS X partition used by Apple TV.
750The scheme-specific type is
751.Qq Li "!5265636f-7665-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
752for GPT.
753.It Cm apple-ufs
754An Apple Mac OS X partition that contains a UFS filesystem.
755The scheme-specific types are
756.Qq Li "!168"
757for MBR,
758.Qq Li "!Apple_UNIX_SVR2"
759for APM and
760.Qq Li "!55465300-0000-11aa-aa11-00306543ecac"
761for GPT.
762.It Cm apple-zfs
763An Apple Mac OS X partition that contains a ZFS volume.
764The scheme-specific type is
765.Qq Li "!6a898cc3-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
766for GPT.
767The same GUID is being used also for
768.Sy illumos/Solaris /usr partition .
769See
770.Sx CAVEATS
771section below.
772.It Cm dragonfly-label32
773A DragonFlyBSD partition subdivided into filesystems with a
774.Bx
775disklabel.
776The scheme-specific type is
777.Qq Li "!9d087404-1ca5-11dc-8817-01301bb8a9f5"
778for GPT.
779.It Cm dragonfly-label64
780A DragonFlyBSD partition subdivided into filesystems with a
781disklabel64.
782The scheme-specific type is
783.Qq Li "!3d48ce54-1d16-11dc-8696-01301bb8a9f5"
784for GPT.
785.It Cm dragonfly-legacy
786A legacy partition type used in DragonFlyBSD.
787The scheme-specific type is
788.Qq Li "!bd215ab2-1d16-11dc-8696-01301bb8a9f5"
789for GPT.
790.It Cm dragonfly-ccd
791A DragonFlyBSD partition used with Concatenated Disk driver.
792The scheme-specific type is
793.Qq Li "!dbd5211b-1ca5-11dc-8817-01301bb8a9f5"
794for GPT.
795.It Cm dragonfly-hammer
796A DragonFlyBSD partition that contains a Hammer filesystem.
797The scheme-specific type is
798.Qq Li "!61dc63ac-6e38-11dc-8513-01301bb8a9f5"
799for GPT.
800.It Cm dragonfly-hammer2
801A DragonFlyBSD partition that contains a Hammer2 filesystem.
802The scheme-specific type is
803.Qq Li "!5cbb9ad1-862d-11dc-a94d-01301bb8a9f5"
804for GPT.
805.It Cm dragonfly-swap
806A DragonFlyBSD partition dedicated to swap space.
807The scheme-specific type is
808.Qq Li "!9d58fdbd-1ca5-11dc-8817-01301bb8a9f5"
809for GPT.
810.It Cm dragonfly-ufs
811A DragonFlyBSD partition that contains an UFS1 filesystem.
812The scheme-specific type is
813.Qq Li "!9d94ce7c-1ca5-11dc-8817-01301bb8a9f5"
814for GPT.
815.It Cm dragonfly-vinum
816A DragonFlyBSD partition used with Logical Volume Manager.
817The scheme-specific type is
818.Qq Li "!9dd4478f-1ca5-11dc-8817-01301bb8a9f5"
819for GPT.
820.It Cm ebr
821A partition subdivided into filesystems with a EBR.
822The scheme-specific type is
823.Qq Li "!5"
824for MBR.
825.It Cm fat16
826A partition that contains a FAT16 filesystem.
827The scheme-specific type is
828.Qq Li "!6"
829for MBR.
830.It Cm fat32
831A partition that contains a FAT32 filesystem.
832The scheme-specific type is
833.Qq Li "!11"
834for MBR.
835.It Cm fat32lba
836A partition that contains a FAT32 (LBA) filesystem.
837The scheme-specific type is
838.Qq Li "!12"
839for MBR.
840.It Cm hifive-fsbl
841A raw partition containing a HiFive first stage bootloader.
842The scheme-specific type is
843.Qq Li "!5b193300-fc78-40cd-8002-e86c45580b47"
844for GPT.
845.It Cm hifive-bbl
846A raw partition containing a HiFive second stage bootloader.
847The scheme-specific type is
848.Qq Li "!2e54b353-1271-4842-806f-e436d6af6985"
849for GPT.
850.It Cm linux-data
851A Linux partition that contains some filesystem with data.
852The scheme-specific types are
853.Qq Li "!131"
854for MBR and
855.Qq Li "!0fc63daf-8483-4772-8e79-3d69d8477de4"
856for GPT.
857.It Cm linux-lvm
858A Linux partition dedicated to Logical Volume Manager.
859The scheme-specific types are
860.Qq Li "!142"
861for MBR and
862.Qq Li "!e6d6d379-f507-44c2-a23c-238f2a3df928"
863for GPT.
864.It Cm linux-raid
865A Linux partition used in a software RAID configuration.
866The scheme-specific types are
867.Qq Li "!253"
868for MBR and
869.Qq Li "!a19d880f-05fc-4d3b-a006-743f0f84911e"
870for GPT.
871.It Cm linux-swap
872A Linux partition dedicated to swap space.
873The scheme-specific types are
874.Qq Li "!130"
875for MBR and
876.Qq Li "!0657fd6d-a4ab-43c4-84e5-0933c84b4f4f"
877for GPT.
878.It Cm mbr
879A partition that is sub-partitioned by a Master Boot Record (MBR).
880This type is known as
881.Qq Li "!024dee41-33e7-11d3-9d69-0008c781f39f"
882by GPT.
883.It Cm ms-basic-data
884A basic data partition (BDP) for Microsoft operating systems.
885In the GPT this type is the equivalent to partition types
886.Cm fat16 , fat32
887and
888.Cm ntfs
889in MBR.
890This type is used for GPT exFAT partitions.
891The scheme-specific type is
892.Qq Li "!ebd0a0a2-b9e5-4433-87c0-68b6b72699c7"
893for GPT.
894.It Cm ms-ldm-data
895A partition that contains Logical Disk Manager (LDM) volumes.
896The scheme-specific types are
897.Qq Li "!66"
898for MBR,
899.Qq Li "!af9b60a0-1431-4f62-bc68-3311714a69ad"
900for GPT.
901.It Cm ms-ldm-metadata
902A partition that contains Logical Disk Manager (LDM) database.
903The scheme-specific type is
904.Qq Li "!5808c8aa-7e8f-42e0-85d2-e1e90434cfb3"
905for GPT.
906.It Cm netbsd-ccd
907A NetBSD partition used with Concatenated Disk driver.
908The scheme-specific type is
909.Qq Li "!2db519c4-b10f-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648"
910for GPT.
911.It Cm netbsd-cgd
912An encrypted NetBSD partition.
913The scheme-specific type is
914.Qq Li "!2db519ec-b10f-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648"
915for GPT.
916.It Cm netbsd-ffs
917A NetBSD partition that contains an UFS filesystem.
918The scheme-specific type is
919.Qq Li "!49f48d5a-b10e-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648"
920for GPT.
921.It Cm netbsd-lfs
922A NetBSD partition that contains an LFS filesystem.
923The scheme-specific type is
924.Qq Li "!49f48d82-b10e-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648"
925for GPT.
926.It Cm netbsd-raid
927A NetBSD partition used in a software RAID configuration.
928The scheme-specific type is
929.Qq Li "!49f48daa-b10e-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648"
930for GPT.
931.It Cm netbsd-swap
932A NetBSD partition dedicated to swap space.
933The scheme-specific type is
934.Qq Li "!49f48d32-b10e-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648"
935for GPT.
936.It Cm ntfs
937A partition that contains a NTFS or exFAT filesystem.
938The scheme-specific type is
939.Qq Li "!7"
940for MBR.
941.It Cm prep-boot
942The system partition dedicated to storing boot loaders on some PowerPC systems,
943notably those made by IBM.
944The scheme-specific types are
945.Qq Li "!65"
946for MBR and
947.Qq Li "!9e1a2d38-c612-4316-aa26-8b49521e5a8b"
948for GPT.
949.It Cm solaris-boot
950A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to boot loader.
951The scheme-specific type is
952.Qq Li "!6a82cb45-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
953for GPT.
954.It Cm solaris-root
955A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to root filesystem.
956The scheme-specific type is
957.Qq Li "!6a85cf4d-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
958for GPT.
959.It Cm solaris-swap
960A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to swap.
961The scheme-specific type is
962.Qq Li "!6a87c46f-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
963for GPT.
964.It Cm solaris-backup
965A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to backup.
966The scheme-specific type is
967.Qq Li "!6a8b642b-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
968for GPT.
969.It Cm solaris-var
970A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to /var filesystem.
971The scheme-specific type is
972.Qq Li "!6a8ef2e9-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
973for GPT.
974.It Cm solaris-home
975A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to /home filesystem.
976The scheme-specific type is
977.Qq Li "!6a90ba39-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
978for GPT.
979.It Cm solaris-altsec
980A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to alternate sector.
981The scheme-specific type is
982.Qq Li "!6a9283a5-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
983for GPT.
984.It Cm solaris-reserved
985A illumos/Solaris partition dedicated to reserved space.
986The scheme-specific type is
987.Qq Li "!6a945a3b-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631"
988for GPT.
989.It Cm vmware-vmfs
990A partition that contains a VMware File System (VMFS).
991The scheme-specific types are
992.Qq Li "!251"
993for MBR and
994.Qq Li "!aa31e02a-400f-11db-9590-000c2911d1b8"
995for GPT.
996.It Cm vmware-vmkdiag
997A partition that contains a VMware diagostic filesystem.
998The scheme-specific types are
999.Qq Li "!252"
1000for MBR and
1001.Qq Li "!9d275380-40ad-11db-bf97-000c2911d1b8"
1002for GPT.
1003.It Cm vmware-reserved
1004A VMware reserved partition.
1005The scheme-specific type is
1006.Qq Li "!9198effc-31c0-11db-8f-78-000c2911d1b8"
1007for GPT.
1008.It Cm vmware-vsanhdr
1009A partition claimed by VMware VSAN.
1010The scheme-specific type is
1011.Qq Li "!381cfccc-7288-11e0-92ee-000c2911d0b2"
1012for GPT.
1013.El
1014.Sh ATTRIBUTES
1015The scheme-specific attributes for EBR:
1016.Bl -tag -width ".Cm active"
1017.It Cm active
1018.El
1019.Pp
1020The scheme-specific attributes for GPT:
1021.Bl -tag -width ".Cm bootfailed"
1022.It Cm bootme
1023When set, the
1024.Nm gptboot
1025stage 1 boot loader will try to boot the system from this partition.
1026Multiple partitions can be marked with the
1027.Cm bootme
1028attribute.
1029See
1030.Xr gptboot 8
1031for more details.
1032.It Cm bootonce
1033Setting this attribute automatically sets the
1034.Cm bootme
1035attribute.
1036When set, the
1037.Nm gptboot
1038stage 1 boot loader will try to boot the system from this partition only once.
1039Multiple partitions can be marked with the
1040.Cm bootonce
1041and
1042.Cm bootme
1043attribute pairs.
1044See
1045.Xr gptboot 8
1046for more details.
1047.It Cm bootfailed
1048This attribute should not be manually managed.
1049It is managed by the
1050.Nm gptboot
1051stage 1 boot loader and the
1052.Pa /etc/rc.d/gptboot
1053start-up script.
1054See
1055.Xr gptboot 8
1056for more details.
1057.It Cm lenovofix
1058Setting this attribute overwrites the Protective MBR with a new one where
1059the 0xee partition is the second, rather than the first record.
1060This resolves a BIOS compatibility issue with some Lenovo models including the
1061X220, T420, and T520, allowing them to boot from GPT partitioned disks
1062without using EFI.
1063.El
1064.Pp
1065The scheme-specific attributes for MBR:
1066.Bl -tag -width ".Cm active"
1067.It Cm active
1068.El
1069.Sh BOOTSTRAPPING
1070.Fx
1071supports several partitioning schemes and each scheme uses different
1072bootstrap code.
1073The bootstrap code is located in a specific disk area for each partitioning
1074scheme, and may vary in size for different schemes.
1075.Pp
1076Bootstrap code can be separated into two types.
1077The first type is embedded in the partitioning scheme's metadata, while the
1078second type is located on a specific partition.
1079Embedding bootstrap code should only be done with the
1080.Cm gpart bootcode
1081command with the
1082.Fl b Ar bootcode
1083option.
1084The GEOM PART class knows how to safely embed bootstrap code into
1085specific partitioning scheme metadata without causing any damage.
1086.Pp
1087The Master Boot Record (MBR) uses a 512-byte bootstrap code image, embedded
1088into the partition table's metadata area.
1089There are two variants of this bootstrap code:
1090.Pa /boot/mbr
1091and
1092.Pa /boot/boot0 .
1093.Pa /boot/mbr
1094searches for a partition with the
1095.Cm active
1096attribute (see the
1097.Sx ATTRIBUTES
1098section) in the partition table.
1099Then it runs next bootstrap stage.
1100The
1101.Pa /boot/boot0
1102image contains a boot manager with some additional interactive functions
1103for multi-booting from a user-selected partition.
1104.Pp
1105A BSD disklabel is usually created inside an MBR partition (slice)
1106with type
1107.Cm freebsd
1108(see the
1109.Sx "PARTITION TYPES"
1110section).
1111It uses 8 KB size bootstrap code image
1112.Pa /boot/boot ,
1113embedded into the partition table's metadata area.
1114.Pp
1115Both types of bootstrap code are used to boot from the GUID Partition Table.
1116First, a protective MBR is embedded into the first disk sector from the
1117.Pa /boot/pmbr
1118image.
1119It searches through the GPT for a
1120.Cm freebsd-boot
1121partition (see the
1122.Sx "PARTITION TYPES"
1123section) and runs the next bootstrap stage from it.
1124The
1125.Cm freebsd-boot
1126partition should be smaller than 545 KB.
1127It can be located either before or after other
1128.Fx
1129partitions on the disk.
1130There are two variants of bootstrap code to write to this partition:
1131.Pa /boot/gptboot
1132and
1133.Pa /boot/gptzfsboot .
1134.Pp
1135.Pa /boot/gptboot
1136is used to boot from UFS partitions.
1137.Cm gptboot
1138searches through
1139.Cm freebsd-ufs
1140partitions in the GPT and selects one to boot based on the
1141.Cm bootonce
1142and
1143.Cm bootme
1144attributes.
1145If neither attribute is found,
1146.Pa /boot/gptboot
1147boots from the first
1148.Cm freebsd-ufs
1149partition.
1150.Pa /boot/loader
1151.Pq the third bootstrap stage
1152is loaded from the first partition that matches these conditions.
1153See
1154.Xr gptboot 8
1155for more information.
1156.Pp
1157.Pa /boot/gptzfsboot
1158is used to boot from ZFS.
1159It searches through the GPT for
1160.Cm freebsd-zfs
1161partitions, trying to detect ZFS pools.
1162After all pools are detected,
1163.Pa /boot/loader
1164is started from the first one found set as bootable.
1165.Pp
1166The VTOC8 scheme does not support embedding bootstrap code.
1167Instead, the 8 KBytes bootstrap code image
1168.Pa /boot/boot1
1169should be written with the
1170.Cm gpart bootcode
1171command with the
1172.Fl p Ar bootcode
1173option to all sufficiently large VTOC8 partitions.
1174To do this the
1175.Fl i Ar index
1176option could be omitted.
1177.Pp
1178The APM scheme also does not support embedding bootstrap code.
1179Instead, the 800 KBytes bootstrap code image
1180.Pa /boot/boot1.hfs
1181should be written with the
1182.Cm gpart bootcode
1183command to a partition of type
1184.Cm apple-boot ,
1185which should also be 800 KB in size.
1186.Sh OPERATIONAL FLAGS
1187Actions other than the
1188.Cm commit
1189and
1190.Cm undo
1191actions take an optional
1192.Fl f Ar flags
1193option.
1194This option is used to specify action-specific operational flags.
1195By default, the
1196.Nm
1197utility defines the
1198.Ql C
1199flag so that the action is immediately
1200committed.
1201The user can specify
1202.Dq Fl f Cm x
1203to have the action result in a pending change that can later, with
1204other pending changes, be committed as a single compound change with
1205the
1206.Cm commit
1207action or reverted with the
1208.Cm undo
1209action.
1210.Sh RECOVERING
1211The GEOM PART class supports recovering of partition tables only for GPT.
1212The GPT primary metadata is stored at the beginning of the device.
1213For redundancy, a secondary
1214.Pq backup
1215copy of the metadata is stored at the end of the device.
1216As a result of having two copies, some corruption of metadata is not
1217fatal to the working of GPT.
1218When the kernel detects corrupt metadata, it marks this table as corrupt
1219and reports the problem.
1220.Cm destroy
1221and
1222.Cm recover
1223are the only operations allowed on corrupt tables.
1224.Pp
1225If one GPT header appears to be corrupt but the other copy remains intact,
1226the kernel will log the following:
1227.Bd -literal -offset indent
1228GEOM: provider: the primary GPT table is corrupt or invalid.
1229GEOM: provider: using the secondary instead -- recovery strongly advised.
1230.Ed
1231.Pp
1232or
1233.Bd -literal -offset indent
1234GEOM: provider: the secondary GPT table is corrupt or invalid.
1235GEOM: provider: using the primary only -- recovery suggested.
1236.Ed
1237.Pp
1238Also
1239.Nm
1240commands such as
1241.Cm show , status
1242and
1243.Cm list
1244will report about corrupt tables.
1245.Pp
1246If the size of the device has changed (e.g.,\& volume expansion) the
1247secondary GPT header will no longer be located in the last sector.
1248This is not a metadata corruption, but it is dangerous because any
1249corruption of the primary GPT will lead to loss of the partition table.
1250This problem is reported by the kernel with the message:
1251.Bd -literal -offset indent
1252GEOM: provider: the secondary GPT header is not in the last LBA.
1253.Ed
1254.Pp
1255This situation can be recovered with the
1256.Cm recover
1257command.
1258This command reconstructs the corrupt metadata using known valid
1259metadata and relocates the secondary GPT to the end of the device.
1260.Pp
1261.Em NOTE :
1262The GEOM PART class can detect the same partition table visible through
1263different GEOM providers, and some of them will be marked as corrupt.
1264Be careful when choosing a provider for recovery.
1265If you choose incorrectly you can destroy the metadata of another GEOM class,
1266e.g.,\& GEOM MIRROR or GEOM LABEL.
1267.Sh SYSCTL VARIABLES
1268The following
1269.Xr sysctl 8
1270variables can be used to control the behavior of the
1271.Nm PART
1272GEOM class.
1273The default value is shown next to each variable.
1274.Bl -tag -width indent
1275.It Va kern.geom.part.allow_nesting : No 0
1276By default, some schemes (currently BSD, BSD64 and VTOC8) do not permit
1277further nested partitioning.
1278This variable overrides this restriction and allows arbitrary nesting (except
1279within partitions created at offset 0).
1280Some schemes have their own separate checks, for which see below.
1281.It Va kern.geom.part.auto_resize : No 1
1282This variable controls automatic resize behavior of the
1283.Nm PART
1284GEOM class.
1285When this variable is enable and new size of provider is detected, the schema
1286metadata is resized but all changes are not saved to disk, until
1287.Cm gpart commit
1288is run to confirm changes.
1289This behavior is also reported with diagnostic message:
1290.Sy "GEOM_PART: (provider) was automatically resized."
1291.Sy "Use `gpart commit (provider)` to save changes or `gpart undo (provider)`"
1292.Sy "to revert them."
1293.It Va kern.geom.part.check_integrity : No 1
1294This variable controls the behaviour of metadata integrity checks.
1295When integrity checks are enabled, the
1296.Nm PART
1297GEOM class verifies all generic partition parameters obtained from the
1298disk metadata.
1299If some inconsistency is detected, the partition table will be
1300rejected with a diagnostic message:
1301.Sy "GEOM_PART: Integrity check failed (provider, scheme)" .
1302.It Va kern.geom.part.gpt.allow_nesting : No 0
1303By default the GPT scheme is allowed only at the outermost nesting level.
1304This variable allows this restriction to be removed.
1305.It Va kern.geom.part.ldm.debug : No 0
1306Debug level of the Logical Disk Manager (LDM) module.
1307This can be set to a number between 0 and 2 inclusive.
1308If set to 0 minimal debug information is printed,
1309and if set to 2 the maximum amount of debug information is printed.
1310.It Va kern.geom.part.ldm.show_mirrors : No 0
1311This variable controls how the Logical Disk Manager (LDM) module handles
1312mirrored volumes.
1313By default mirrored volumes are shown as partitions with type
1314.Cm ms-ldm-data
1315(see the
1316.Sx "PARTITION TYPES"
1317section).
1318If this variable set to 1 each component of the mirrored volume will be
1319present as independent partition.
1320.Em NOTE :
1321This may break a mirrored volume and lead to data damage.
1322.It Va kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs : No 0
1323Specify how the Master Boot Record (MBR) module does alignment.
1324If this variable is set to a non-zero value, the module will automatically
1325recalculate the user-specified offset and size for alignment with the CHS
1326geometry.
1327Otherwise the values will be left unchanged.
1328.It Va kern.geom.part.separator : No ""
1329Specify an optional separator that will be inserted between the GEOM name
1330and partition name.
1331This variable is a
1332.Xr loader 8
1333tunable.
1334Note that setting this variable may break software which assumes a particular
1335naming scheme.
1336.El
1337.Sh EXIT STATUS
1338Exit status is 0 on success, and 1 if the command fails.
1339.Sh EXAMPLES
1340The examples below assume that the disk's logical block size is 512
1341bytes, regardless of its physical block size.
1342.Ss GPT
1343In this example, we will format
1344.Pa ada0
1345with the GPT scheme and create boot, swap and root partitions.
1346First, we need to create the partition table:
1347.Bd -literal -offset indent
1348/sbin/gpart create -s GPT ada0
1349.Ed
1350.Pp
1351Next, we install a protective MBR with the first-stage bootstrap code.
1352The protective MBR lists a single, bootable partition spanning the
1353entire disk, thus allowing non-GPT-aware BIOSes to boot from the disk
1354and preventing tools which do not understand the GPT scheme from
1355considering the disk to be unformatted.
1356.Bd -literal -offset indent
1357/sbin/gpart bootcode -b /boot/pmbr ada0
1358.Ed
1359.Pp
1360We then create a dedicated
1361.Cm freebsd-boot
1362partition to hold the second-stage boot loader, which will load the
1363.Fx
1364kernel and modules from a UFS or ZFS filesystem.
1365This partition must be larger than the bootstrap code
1366.Po
1367either
1368.Pa /boot/gptboot
1369for UFS or
1370.Pa /boot/gptzfsboot
1371for ZFS
1372.Pc ,
1373but smaller than 545 kB since the first-stage loader will load the
1374entire partition into memory during boot, regardless of how much data
1375it actually contains.
1376We create a 472-block (236 kB) boot partition at offset 40, which is
1377the size of the partition table (34 blocks or 17 kB) rounded up to the
1378nearest 4 kB boundary.
1379.Bd -literal -offset indent
1380/sbin/gpart add -b 40 -s 472 -t freebsd-boot ada0
1381/sbin/gpart bootcode -p /boot/gptboot -i 1 ada0
1382.Ed
1383.Pp
1384We now create a 4 GB swap partition at the first available offset,
1385which is 40 + 472 = 512 blocks (256 kB).
1386.Bd -literal -offset indent
1387/sbin/gpart add -s 4G -t freebsd-swap ada0
1388.Ed
1389.Pp
1390Aligning the swap partition and all subsequent partitions on a 256 kB
1391boundary ensures optimal performance on a wide range of media, from
1392plain old disks with 512-byte blocks, through modern
1393.Dq advanced format
1394disks with 4096-byte physical blocks, to RAID volumes with stripe
1395sizes of up to 256 kB.
1396.Pp
1397Finally, we create and format an 8 GB
1398.Cm freebsd-ufs
1399partition for the root filesystem, leaving the rest of the slice free
1400for additional filesystems:
1401.Bd -literal -offset indent
1402/sbin/gpart add -s 8G -t freebsd-ufs ada0
1403/sbin/newfs -Uj /dev/ada0p3
1404.Ed
1405.Ss MBR
1406In this example, we will format
1407.Pa ada0
1408with the MBR scheme and create a single partition which we subdivide
1409using a traditional
1410.Bx
1411disklabel.
1412.Pp
1413First, we create the partition table and a single 64 GB partition,
1414then we mark that partition active (bootable) and install the
1415first-stage boot loader:
1416.Bd -literal -offset indent
1417/sbin/gpart create -s MBR ada0
1418/sbin/gpart add -t freebsd -s 64G ada0
1419/sbin/gpart set -a active -i 1 ada0
1420/sbin/gpart bootcode -b /boot/boot0 ada0
1421.Ed
1422.Pp
1423Next, we create a disklabel in that partition
1424.Po
1425.Dq slice
1426in disklabel terminology
1427.Pc
1428with room for up to 20 partitions:
1429.Bd -literal -offset indent
1430/sbin/gpart create -s BSD -n 20 ada0s1
1431.Ed
1432.Pp
1433We then create an 8 GB root partition and a 4 GB swap partition:
1434.Bd -literal -offset indent
1435/sbin/gpart add -t freebsd-ufs -s 8G ada0s1
1436/sbin/gpart add -t freebsd-swap -s 4G ada0s1
1437.Ed
1438.Pp
1439Finally, we install the appropriate boot loader for the
1440.Bx
1441label:
1442.Bd -literal -offset indent
1443/sbin/gpart bootcode -b /boot/boot ada0s1
1444.Ed
1445.Ss VTOC8
1446.Pp
1447Create a VTOC8 scheme on
1448.Pa da0 :
1449.Bd -literal -offset indent
1450/sbin/gpart create -s VTOC8 da0
1451.Ed
1452.Pp
1453Create a 512MB-sized
1454.Cm freebsd-ufs
1455partition to contain a UFS filesystem from which the system can boot.
1456.Bd -literal -offset indent
1457/sbin/gpart add -s 512M -t freebsd-ufs da0
1458.Ed
1459.Pp
1460Create a 15GB-sized
1461.Cm freebsd-ufs
1462partition to contain a UFS filesystem and aligned on 4KB boundaries:
1463.Bd -literal -offset indent
1464/sbin/gpart add -s 15G -t freebsd-ufs -a 4k da0
1465.Ed
1466.Pp
1467After creating all required partitions, embed bootstrap code into them:
1468.Bd -literal -offset indent
1469/sbin/gpart bootcode -p /boot/boot1 da0
1470.Ed
1471.Ss Deleting Partitions and Destroying the Partitioning Scheme
1472If a
1473.Em "Device busy"
1474error is shown when trying to destroy a partition table, remember that
1475all of the partitions must be deleted first with the
1476.Cm delete
1477action.
1478In this example,
1479.Pa da0
1480has three partitions:
1481.Bd -literal -offset indent
1482/sbin/gpart delete -i 3 da0
1483/sbin/gpart delete -i 2 da0
1484/sbin/gpart delete -i 1 da0
1485/sbin/gpart destroy da0
1486.Ed
1487.Pp
1488Rather than deleting each partition and then destroying the partitioning
1489scheme, the
1490.Fl F
1491option can be given with
1492.Cm destroy
1493to delete all of the partitions before destroying the partitioning scheme.
1494This is equivalent to the previous example:
1495.Bd -literal -offset indent
1496/sbin/gpart destroy -F da0
1497.Ed
1498.Ss Backup and Restore
1499.Pp
1500Create a backup of the partition table from
1501.Pa da0 :
1502.Bd -literal -offset indent
1503/sbin/gpart backup da0 > da0.backup
1504.Ed
1505.Pp
1506Restore the partition table from the backup to
1507.Pa da0 :
1508.Bd -literal -offset indent
1509/sbin/gpart restore -l da0 < /mnt/da0.backup
1510.Ed
1511.Pp
1512Clone the partition table from
1513.Pa ada0
1514to
1515.Pa ada1
1516and
1517.Pa ada2 :
1518.Bd -literal -offset indent
1519/sbin/gpart backup ada0 | /sbin/gpart restore -F ada1 ada2
1520.Ed
1521.Sh SEE ALSO
1522.Xr geom 4 ,
1523.Xr boot0cfg 8 ,
1524.Xr geom 8 ,
1525.Xr glabel 8 ,
1526.Xr gptboot 8
1527.Sh HISTORY
1528The
1529.Nm
1530utility appeared in
1531.Fx 7.0 .
1532.Sh AUTHORS
1533.An Marcel Moolenaar Aq Mt marcel@FreeBSD.org
1534.Sh CAVEATS
1535Partition type
1536.Em apple-zfs
1537(6a898cc3-1dd2-11b2-99a6-080020736631) is also being used
1538on illumos/Solaris platforms for ZFS volumes.
1539