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Command: disklabel | Section: 5 | Source: OpenBSD | File: disklabel.5
DISKLABEL(5) FreeBSD File Formats Manual DISKLABEL(5)
NAME
disklabel - disk pack label
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/disklabel.h>
DESCRIPTION
Each disk or disk pack on a system may contain a disk label which
provides detailed information about the geometry of the disk and the
partitions into which the disk is divided. It should be initialized when
the disk is formatted, and may be changed later with the disklabel(8)
program. This information is used by the system disk driver and by the
bootstrap program to determine how to program the drive and where to find
the filesystems on the disk partitions. Additional information is used
by the filesystem in order to use the disk most efficiently and to locate
important filesystem information. The description of each partition
contains an identifier for the partition type (standard filesystem, swap
area, etc.). The filesystem updates the in-core copy of the label if it
contains incomplete information about the filesystem.
The label is located in sector number LABELSECTOR of the drive, usually
sector 0 where it may be found without any information about the disk
geometry. It is at an offset LABELOFFSET from the beginning of the
sector, to allow room for the initial bootstrap.
A copy of the in-core label for a disk can be obtained with the
DIOCGDINFO ioctl; this works with a file descriptor for a block or
character ("raw") device for any partition of the disk. The in-core copy
of the label is set by the DIOCSDINFO ioctl. The offset of a partition
cannot generally be changed while it is open, nor can it be made smaller
while it is open. One exception is that any change is allowed if no
label was found on the disk, and the driver was able to construct only a
skeletal label without partition information. The DIOCWDINFO ioctl
operation sets the in-core label and then updates the on-disk label;
there must be an existing label on the disk for this operation to
succeed. Thus, the initial label for a disk or disk pack must be
installed by writing to the raw disk. The DIOCGPDINFO ioctl operation
gets the default label for a disk. This simulates the case where there
is no physical label on the disk itself and can be used to see the label
the kernel would construct in that case. The DIOCRLDINFO ioctl operation
causes the kernel to update its copy of the label based on the physical
label on the disk. It can be used when the on-disk version of the label
was changed directly or, if there is no physical label, to update the
kernel's skeletal label if some variable affecting label generation has
changed (e.g. the fdisk partition table). All of these operations are
normally done using disklabel(8).
Note that when a disk has no real BSD disklabel the kernel creates a
default label so that the disk can be used. This default label will
include other partitions found on the disk if they are supported on your
architecture. For example, on systems that support fdisk(8) partitions
the default label will also include DOS and Linux partitions. However,
these entries are not dynamic, they are fixed at the time disklabel(8) is
run. That means that subsequent changes that affect non-OpenBSD
partitions will not be present in the default label, though you may
update them by hand. To see the default label, run disklabel(8) with the
-d flag. You can then run disklabel(8) with the -e flag and paste any
entries you want from the default label into the real one.
SEE ALSO
disktab(5), disklabel(8)
CAVEATS
disklabel only supports up to a maximum of 15 partitions, `a' through
`p', excluding `c'. The `c' partition is reserved for the entire
physical disk. By convention, the `a' partition of the boot disk is the
root partition, and the `b' partition of the boot disk is the swap
partition, but all other letters can be used in any order for any other
partitions as desired.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 September 10, 2015 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8