Manual Page Result
0
Command: gpt | Section: 8 | Source: NetBSD | File: gpt.8
GPT(8) FreeBSD System Manager's Manual GPT(8)
NAME
gpt - GUID partition table maintenance utility
SYNOPSIS
gpt [-Hnqrv] [-m mediasize] [-s sectorsize] [-T timestamp] command
[command_options] device
gpt set -l
gpt unset -l
gpt type -l
DESCRIPTION
The gpt utility provides the necessary functionality to manipulate GUID
partition tables (GPTs), but see BUGS below for how and where
functionality is missing. The basic usage model of the gpt tool follows
that of the cvs(1) tool. The general options are described in the
following paragraph. The remaining paragraphs describe the individual
commands with their options. Here we conclude by mentioning that a
device is either a special file corresponding to a disk-like device or a
regular file. The command is applied to each device listed on the
command line.
General Options
The general options allow the user to change default settings or
otherwise change the behaviour that is applicable to all commands. Not
all commands use all default settings, so some general options may not
have an effect on all commands.
-H Ignore existing MBR (Hybrid MBR/GPT mode).
-m mediasize
Override the default media size for the device (obtained from the
kernel if possible) or defaulting to the file size for plain files.
-n Do not update the wedge information that gpt changed. You need to
use the dkctl(8) command manually update the device's wedge
configuration if you do that.
-q Do not print error messages. This is not implemented completely
yet.
-r Open the device for reading only. gpt Currently this option is
primarily useful for the show command, but the intent is to use it
to implement dry-run behaviour.
-s sectorsize
Override the default sector size for the device (obtained from the
kernel if possible) or 512 for plain files.
-T timestamp
Specify a timestamp to be used for uuid generation so that uuids
are not random and can be consistent for reproducible builds. The
timestamp can be a pathname, where the timestamps are derived from
that file, a parseable date for parsedate(3) (this option is not
yet available in the tools build), or an integer value interpreted
as the number of seconds from the Epoch.
-v Controls the verbosity level. The level increases with every
occurrence of this option. There is no formalized definition of
the different levels yet.
Commands
gpt add [-a alignment] [-b blocknr] [-i index] [-l label] [-s size] [-t
type]
The add command allows the user to add a new partition to an
existing table. By default, it will create a UFS partition
covering the first available block of an unused disk space. The
command-specific options can be used to control this behaviour.
The -a alignment option allows the user to specify an alignment
for the start and size. The alignment is given in bytes and may
have a suffix to indicate its magnitude. gpt will attempt to
align the partition.
The -b blocknr option allows the user to specify the starting
(beginning) sector number of the partition. The minimum sector
number is 1, but has to fall inside an unused region of disk
space that is covered by the GPT.
The -i index option allows the user to specify which (free) entry
in the GPT table is to be used for the new partition. By
default, the first free entry is selected.
The -l label option allows the user to specify a label for the
partition.
The -s size option allows the user to specify the size of the
partition. If there is no suffix, or the suffix is `s' or `S'
then size is in sectors, otherwise size is in bytes which must be
a multiple of the device's sector size. Accepted suffix units
(case insensitive) are `b' to denote bytes, `k' to denote
kilobytes, `m' to denote megabytes and `g' to denote gigabytes,
`t' to denote terabytes, `p' to denote petabytes, and `e' to
denote exabytes. The minimum size is 1 sector.
The -t type option allows the user to specify the partition type.
The type is given as an UUID, but gpt accepts
apple Apple HFS
apple-ufs Apple UFS
bios BIOS Boot
efi EFI System
fbsd-legacy FreeBSD legacy
fbsd-swap FreeBSD swap
fbsd-ufs FreeBSD UFS/UFS2
fbsd-vinum FreeBSD vinum
zfs FreeBSD, NetBSD ZFS
linux-data Linux data
linux-raid Linux RAID
linux-swap Linux swap
linux-lvm Linux LVM
windows Microsoft basic data - NTFS, FAT32
("msdos"), FAT16, also used for UDF
windows-reserved Microsoft reserved
ccd NetBSD ccd component
cgd NetBSD Cryptographic Disk
ffs NetBSD FFSv1/FFSv2
lfs NetBSD LFS
raid NetBSD RAIDFrame component
swap NetBSD swap
as aliases for the most commonly used partition types.
gpt backup [-o outfile]
The backup command dumps the MBR or (PMBR) and GPT partition
tables to standard output or to a file specified by the outfile
argument in a format to be used by the restore command. The
format is a plist. It should not be modified.
gpt biosboot [-A] [-c bootcode] [-b startsec] [-i index] [-L label]
The biosboot command allows the user to configure the partition
that contains the primary bootstrap program, used during boot(8).
The -A options sets the PMBR partition active. This should not
normally be necessary, but some firmware might require it. If -A
is omitted, the active flag will be cleared from the PMBR label.
The -c option allows the user to specify the filename from which
gpt should read the bootcode. The default is to read from
/usr/mdec/gptmbr.bin.
The partition that should contain the primary bootstrap code,
(similar to that installed via installboot(8)) is selected using
the -i, -L and -b options. One of these three options is
required. The -i option selects the partition given by the
index. The -L option selects the partition by label. If there
are multiple partitions with the same label, the first one found
will be used. The -b option selects the partition starting at
block startsec.
gpt create [-AfP] [-p partitions]
The create command allows the user to create a new (empty) GPT.
By default, one cannot create a GPT when the device contains a
MBR, however this can be overridden with the -f option. If the
-f option is specified, an existing MBR is destroyed and any
partitions described by the MBR are lost.
The -A options sets the PMBR partition active.
The -P option tells gpt to create only the primary table and not
the backup table. This option is only useful for debugging and
should not be used otherwise.
The -p option changes the default number of partitions the GPT
can accommodate. This is used whenever a new GPT is created. By
default, the gpt utility will create space for 128 partitions (or
32 sectors of 512 bytes).
gpt destroy [-r]
The destroy command allows the user to destroy an existing,
possibly not empty GPT.
The -r option instructs gpt to destroy the table in a way that it
can be recovered.
gpt header
The header command displays size information about the media and
information from the GPT header if it exists.
gpt label [-a] <-f file | -l label>
gpt label [-b blocknr] [-i index] [-L label] [-s sectors] [-t type] <-f
file | -l label>
The label command allows the user to label any partitions that
match the selection. At least one of the following selection
options must be specified.
The -a option specifies that all partitions should be labeled.
It is mutually exclusive with all other selection options.
The -b blocknr option selects the partition that starts at the
given block number.
The -i index option selects the partition with the given
partition number.
The -L label option selects all partitions that have the given
label. This can cause multiple partitions to be relabeled.
The -s sectors option selects all partitions that have the given
size. This can cause multiple partitions to be labeled.
The -t type option selects all partitions that have the given
type. The type is given as an UUID or by the aliases that the
add command accepts. This can cause multiple partitions to be
labeled.
The -f file or -l label options specify the new label to be
assigned to the selected partitions. The -f file option is used
to read the label from the specified file. Only the first line
is read from the file and the trailing newline character is
stripped. If the file name is the dash or minus sign (-), the
label is read from the standard input. The -l label option is
used to specify the label in the command line. The label is
assumed to be encoded in UTF-8.
gpt migrate [-Afs] [-p partitions]
The migrate command allows the user to migrate an MBR-based disk
partitioning into a GPT-based partitioning. By default, the MBR
is not migrated when it contains partitions of an unknown type.
This can be overridden with the -f option. Specifying the -f
option will cause unknown partitions to be ignored and any data
in it to be lost.
The -A options sets the PMBR partition active.
The -s option prevents migrating BSD disk labels into GPT
partitions by creating the GPT equivalent of a slice. Note that
the -s option is not applicable to NetBSD partitions.
The -p option changes the default number of partitions the GPT
can accommodate. This is used whenever a new GPT is created. By
default, the gpt utility will create space for 128 partitions (or
32 sectors of 512 bytes).
The migrate command requires space at the beginning and the end
of the device outside any partitions to store the GPTs. Space is
required for the GPT header (which takes one sector) and the GPT
partition table. See the -p option for the size of the GPT
partition table. By default, just about all devices have a
minimum of 62 sectors free at the beginning of the device, but do
not have any free space at the end. For the default GPT
partition table size on a 512 byte sector size device, 33 sectors
at the end of the device would need to be freed.
gpt recover
The recover command tries to restore the GPT partition label from
the backup near the end of the disk. It is very useful in case
the primary label was deleted.
gpt remove [-a]
gpt remove [-b blocknr] [-i index] [-L label] [-s sectors] [-t type]
The remove command allows the user to remove any and all
partitions that match the selection. It uses the same selection
options as the label command. See above for a description of
these options. Partitions are removed by clearing the partition
type. No other information is changed.
gpt resize [-i index] [-b startsec] [-a alignment] [-s size] [-q]
The resize command allows the user to resize a partition. The
partition may be shrunk and if there is sufficient free space
immediately after it then it may be expanded. The -s option
allows the new size to be specified, otherwise the partition will
be increased to the maximum available size. If there is no
suffix, or the suffix is `s' or `S' then size is in sectors,
otherwise size is in bytes which must be a multiple of the
device's sector size. Accepted suffix units are `b' to denote
bytes, `k' to denote kilobytes, `m' to denote megabytes and `g'
to denote gigabytes. The minimum size is 1 sector. If the -a
option is specified then the size will be adjusted to be a
multiple of alignment if possible. If the -q option is specified
then the utility will not print output when a resize is not
required.
gpt resizedisk [-s size] [-q]
The resizedisk command allows the user to resize a disk. With
GPTs, a backup copy is stored at the end of the disk. If the
underlying medium changes size (or is going to change size), then
the backup copy needs to be moved to the new end of the disk, and
the last sector available for data storage needs to be adjusted.
This command does that. If the backup copy no longer exists due
to the medium shrinking, then a new backup copy will be created
using the primary copy.
The -s option allows the new size to be specified, otherwise the
backup copy will automatically be placed at the current end of
the disk. If there is no suffix, or the suffix is `s' or `S'
then size is in sectors, otherwise size is in bytes which must be
a multiple of the device's sector size. Accepted suffix units
are `b' to denote bytes, `k' to denote kilobytes, `m' to denote
megabytes and `g' to denote gigabytes. Using the -s option
allows you to move the backup copy prior to resizing the medium.
This is primarily useful when shrinking the medium. If the -q
option is specified then the utility will not print output when a
resize is not required.
gpt restore [-F] [-i infile]
The restore command restores a partition table that was
previously saved using the backup command. The partition table
is read from standard input or a file specified in the infile
argument and is expected to be in the format of a plist. It
assumes an empty disk. The -F option can be used to blank the
disk. The new disk does not have to be the same size as the old
disk as long as all the partitions fit, as restore will
automatically adjust. However, the new disk must use the same
sector size as the old disk.
gpt set [-a attribute] [-N] [-i index] [-b startsec]
gpt set -l
The set command sets various partition attributes. The -l flag
lists all available attributes. The -a option specifies which
attributes to set and may be specified more than once, or the
attributes can be comma-separated. If the -N option and no -a
option are specified, all attributes are removed. The -i or the
-b option specify which entry to update. The possible attributes
are "biosboot", "bootme", "bootonce", "bootfailed", "noblockio",
and "required". The biosboot flag is used to indicate which
partition should be booted by legacy BIOS boot code. See the
biosboot command for more information. The bootme flag is used
to indicate which partition should be booted by UEFI boot code.
The other attributes are for compatibility with FreeBSD and are
not currently used by NetBSD. They may be used by NetBSD in the
future.
gpt show [-aglu] [-i index] [-b startsec]
The show command displays the current partitioning on the listed
devices and gives an overall view of the disk contents. With the
-g option the GPT partition GUID will be displayed instead of the
GPT partition type. With the -l option the GPT partition label
will be displayed instead of the GPT partition type. With the -u
option the GPT partition type is displayed as an UUID instead of
in a user friendly form. With the -i or the -b option, all the
details of a particular GPT partition will be displayed. The
format of this display is subject to change. With the -a option,
all information for all GPT partitions (just like with -i index)
will be printed. None of the options have any effect on non-GPT
partitions. The order of precedence for the options are: -a, -i,
-l, -g, -u.
gpt type [-a] -T newtype
gpt type [-b blocknr] [-i index] [-L label] [-s sectors] [-t type] -T
newtype
gpt type -l
The type command allows the user to change the type of any and
all partitions that match the selection. It uses the same
selection options as the label command. See above for a
description of these options. The -l flag lists available types.
gpt unset -a attribute [-i index] [-b startsec]
gpt unset -l
The unset command unsets various partition attributes. The -l
flag lists all available attributes. The -a option specifies
which attributes to unset and may be specified more than once.
Alternatively a comma separated list of attributes can be used.
The -i or the -b option specifies which entry to update. The
possible attributes are "biosboot", "bootme", "bootonce",
"bootfailed", "noblockio", and "required". The biosboot flag is
used to indicate which partition should be booted by legacy BIOS
boot code. See the biosboot command for more information. The
other attributes are for compatibility with FreeBSD and are not
currently used by any NetBSD code. They may be used by NetBSD
code in the future.
gpt uuid [-a]
gpt uuid [-b blocknr] [-i index] [-L label] [-s sectors] [-t type]
The uuid command allows the user to change the UUID of any and
all partitions that match the selection. It uses the same
selection options as the label command. See above for a
description of these options. If -a is used, then the header
UUID is changed as well.
The primary purpose of this command is for use after cloning a
disk to prevent collisions when both disks are used in the same
system.
EXIT STATUS
The gpt command exits with a failure status (1) when the header command
is used and no GPT header is found. This can be used to check for the
existence of a GPT in shell scripts.
EXAMPLES
nas# gpt show wd3
start size index contents
0 1 PMBR
1 3907029167
nas# gpt create wd3
nas# gpt show wd3
start size index contents
0 1 PMBR
1 1 Pri GPT header
2 32 Pri GPT table
34 3907029101
3907029135 32 Sec GPT table
3907029167 1 Sec GPT header
nas# gpt add -s 10486224 -t swap -i 1 wd3
nas# gpt label -i 1 -l swap_1 wd3
partition 1 on rwd3d labeled swap_1
nas# gpt show wd3
start size index contents
0 1 PMBR
1 1 Pri GPT header
2 32 Pri GPT table
34 10486224 1 GPT part - NetBSD swap
10486258 3896542877
3907029135 32 Sec GPT table
3907029167 1 Sec GPT header
nas# gpt show -l wd3
start size index contents
0 1 PMBR
1 1 Pri GPT header
2 32 Pri GPT table
34 10486224 1 GPT part - "swap_1"
10486258 3896542877
3907029135 32 Sec GPT table
3907029167 1 Sec GPT header
nas#
Booting from GPT on a BIOS system: this creates a bootable partition.
xotica# gpt create wd1
xotica# gpt add -b 1024 -l bootroot -t ffs -s 1g wd1
/dev/rwd1: Partition 1 added: 49f48d5a-b10e-11dc-b99b-0019d1879648 1024 2097152
xotica ~# dmesg | tail -2
wd1: GPT GUID: 660e0630-0a3f-47c0-bc52-c88bcec79392
dk0 at wd1: "bootroot", 2097152 blocks at 1024, type: ffs
xotica# gpt biosboot -L bootroot wd1
xotica# newfs dk0
xotica# installboot /dev/rdk0 /usr/mdec/bootxx_ffsv1
xotica# mount /dev/dk0 /mnt
xotica# cp /usr/mdec/boot /mnt
Note that biosboot is not needed for UEFI systems.
SEE ALSO
boot(8), dkctl(8), fdisk(8), installboot(8), mount(8), newfs(8),
swapctl(8)
HISTORY
The gpt utility appeared in FreeBSD 5.0 for ia64. gpt utility first
appeared in NetBSD 5.0.
BUGS
The development of the gpt utility is still work in progress. Many
necessary features are missing or partially implemented. In practice
this means that the manual page, supposed to describe these features, is
farther removed from being complete or useful. As such, missing
functionality is not even documented as missing. However, it is believed
that the currently present functionality is reliable and stable enough
that this tool can be used without bullet-proof footware if one thinks
one does not make mistakes.
It is expected that the basic usage model does not change, but it is
possible that future versions will not be compatible in the strictest
sense of the word. Also, options primarily intended for diagnostic or
debug purposes may be removed in future versions.
Another possibility is that the current usage model is accompanied by
other interfaces to make the tool usable as a back-end. This all depends
on demand and thus feedback.
FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8 April 7, 2022 FreeBSD 14.1-RELEASE-p8