Upgrade gptfdisk to d292ff36a3

Change 2c2deeb032 is reverted in this
merge. Because it conflicts with upstream option "move-main-table".

Change-Id: I2c1cb67a95139879333a430eb0e8b34f6b396c32
This commit is contained in:
Haibo Huang
2020-02-10 11:00:14 -08:00
39 changed files with 1203 additions and 627 deletions

1
LICENSE Symbolic link
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@@ -0,0 +1 @@
COPYING

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@@ -9,10 +9,10 @@ third_party {
type: GIT
value: "https://git.code.sf.net/p/gptfdisk/code"
}
version: "a920398fa393f9d6301b32b191bc01e086ab8bc8"
version: "d292ff36a3b350115835c62462911c3d8721704f"
last_upgrade_date {
year: 2015
year: 2020
month: 2
day: 20
day: 10
}
}

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@@ -1,5 +1,3 @@
CC=gcc
CXX=g++
CFLAGS+=-D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
#CXXFLAGS+=-Wall -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D USE_UTF16
CXXFLAGS+=-Wall -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64
@@ -14,19 +12,22 @@ DEPEND= makedepend $(CXXFLAGS)
all: cgdisk gdisk sgdisk fixparts
gdisk: $(LIB_OBJS) gdisk.o gpttext.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gdisk.o gpttext.o $(LDFLAGS) -luuid -o gdisk
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gdisk.o gpttext.o $(LDFLAGS) -luuid $(LDLIBS) -o gdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gdisk.o gpttext.o $(LDFLAGS) -licuio -licuuc -luuid -o gdisk
cgdisk: $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o $(LDFLAGS) -luuid -lncursesw -o cgdisk
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o $(LDFLAGS) -luuid -lncursesw $(LDLIBS) -o cgdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o $(LDFLAGS) -licuio -licuuc -luuid -lncurses -o cgdisk
sgdisk: $(LIB_OBJS) sgdisk.o gptcl.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) sgdisk.o gptcl.o $(LDFLAGS) -luuid -lpopt -o sgdisk
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) sgdisk.o gptcl.o $(LDFLAGS) -luuid -lpopt $(LDLIBS) -o sgdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) sgdisk.o gptcl.o $(LDFLAGS) -licuio -licuuc -luuid -lpopt -o sgdisk
fixparts: $(MBR_LIB_OBJS) fixparts.o
$(CXX) $(MBR_LIB_OBJS) fixparts.o $(LDFLAGS) -o fixparts
$(CXX) $(MBR_LIB_OBJS) fixparts.o $(LDFLAGS) $(LDLIBS) -o fixparts
test:
./gdisk_test.sh
lint: #no pre-reqs
lint $(SRCS)
@@ -41,4 +42,5 @@ depend: $(SRCS)
$(OBJS):
$(CRITICAL_CXX_FLAGS)
# makedepend dependencies below -- type "makedepend *.cc" to regenerate....
# DO NOT DELETE

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@@ -1,8 +1,10 @@
CC=gcc
CXX=g++
CFLAGS=-O2 -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -g
#CXXFLAGS=-O2 -Wall -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D USE_UTF16 -I/sw/include -I/usr/local/include -I/opt/local/include -g
CXXFLAGS=-O2 -Wall -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -I/sw/include -I /usr/local/include -I/opt/local/include -g
CXX=clang++
FATBINFLAGS=-arch x86_64 -arch i386 -mmacosx-version-min=10.4
THINBINFLAGS=-arch x86_64 -mmacosx-version-min=10.4
CFLAGS=$(FATBINFLAGS) -O2 -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -g
#CXXFLAGS=-O2 -Wall -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -D USE_UTF16 -I/opt/local/include -I/usr/local/include -I/opt/local/include -g
CXXFLAGS=$(FATBINFLAGS) -O2 -Wall -D_FILE_OFFSET_BITS=64 -I/opt/local/include -I /usr/local/include -I/opt/local/include -g
LIB_NAMES=crc32 support guid gptpart mbrpart basicmbr mbr gpt bsd parttypes attributes diskio diskio-unix
MBR_LIBS=support diskio diskio-unix basicmbr mbrpart
#LIB_SRCS=$(NAMES:=.cc)
@@ -14,19 +16,20 @@ DEPEND= makedepend $(CFLAGS)
all: gdisk sgdisk cgdisk fixparts
gdisk: $(LIB_OBJS) gpttext.o gdisk.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gpttext.o gdisk.o -o gdisk
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gpttext.o gdisk.o $(FATBINFLAGS) -o gdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) -L/usr/lib -licucore gpttext.o gdisk.o -o gdisk
cgdisk: $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o $(LDFLAGS) -lncurses -o cgdisk
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o /usr/lib/libncurses.dylib $(LDFLAGS) $(FATBINFLAGS) -o cgdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) cgdisk.o gptcurses.o $(LDFLAGS) -licucore -lncurses -o cgdisk
sgdisk: $(LIB_OBJS) gptcl.o sgdisk.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gptcl.o sgdisk.o -L/sw/lib -lpopt -o sgdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gptcl.o sgdisk.o /opt/local/lib/libiconv.a /opt/local/lib/libintl.a /opt/local/lib/libpopt.a $(FATBINFLAGS) -o sgdisk
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gptcl.o sgdisk.o -L/usr/local/lib -lpopt $(THINBINFLAGS) -o sgdisk
# $(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) gptcl.o sgdisk.o -L/sw/lib -licucore -lpopt -o sgdisk
fixparts: $(MBR_LIB_OBJS) fixparts.o
$(CXX) $(MBR_LIB_OBJS) fixparts.o $(LDFLAGS) -o fixparts
$(CXX) $(MBR_LIB_OBJS) fixparts.o $(LDFLAGS) $(FATBINFLAGS) -o fixparts
testguid: $(LIB_OBJS) testguid.o
$(CXX) $(LIB_OBJS) testguid.o -o testguid
@@ -35,7 +38,7 @@ lint: #no pre-reqs
lint $(SRCS)
clean: #no pre-reqs
rm -f core *.o *~ gdisk sgdisk
rm -f core *.o *~ gdisk sgdisk cgdisk fixparts
# what are the source dependencies
depend: $(SRCS)

222
NEWS
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@@ -1,6 +1,224 @@
0.8.11 (?/?/2014):
1.0.5 (?/?/2020):
-----------------
- Fixed typos and minor formatting issues in man pages
- Changed number of columns in type code output ("sgdisk -L" and equivalents
in gdisk and cgdisk) from 3 to 2, since some descriptions are long enough
that they're ambiguous with three columns.
1.0.4 (7/5/2018):
-----------------
- Added some explicit copy constructors and made some other tweaks to avoid
compiler warnings.
- The macOS binary for sgdisk is now a pure 64-bit build; I'm no longer
supporting 32-bit builds of sgdisk. The gdisk and cgdisk binaries remain
"fat" 32-/64-bit builds. The reason for dropping the 32-bit support from
sgdisk is that I've re-built my macOS development system, and I had
trouble building a "fat" binary with the fresh install of the popt
libraries upon which sgdisk relies. 32-bit support for the other binaries
is now officially deprecated, too.
- Added search feature to partition type list functions ("L" on main menu of
gdisk and "L" when entered in response to the "Hex code or GUID" prompt in
gdisk and sgdisk). This feature filters the partition type list to those
which include the search term in their GPT fdisk descriptions. For
instance, typing "Linux" shows only partitions with "Linux" in their
descriptions. Note that the search/filter is case-sensitive. If <Enter> is
pressed, no filter is applied.
- Change to Makefile.mac to use standard libncurses rather than a 3rd-party
version; should help with cgdisk compatibility.
- Minor bug fix in alignment of internal data structures.
- Minor bug fix in handling of damaged disks. Also, GPT fdisk now reports
more information on what data structures are damaged when a damaged disk
is detected.
- Added type code for Apple APFS (7C3457EF-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC,
0xaf0a).
- Added type code for Atari TOS basic data (0xa200,
734E5AFE-F61A-11E6-BC64-92361F002671).
- Added type codes for Linux dm-crypt (0x8308,
7FFEC5C9-2D00-49B7-8941-3EA10A5586B7) and LUKS (0x8309,
CA7D7CCB-63ED-4C53-861C-1742536059CC) partitions.
- Added 18 Ceph partition type codes.
- Added 52 (yes, 52!) Android partition type codes.
- Changed "Creating new GPT entries" message to read "Creating new
GPT entries in memory" because the latter is clearer, particularly when
using sgdisk with a non-destructive option, like "-p".
1.0.3 (7/27/2017):
------------------
- Fixed a major bug that caused invalid partition tables to be generated
when creating a new partition table (that is, partitioning a blank disk or
converting from MBR).
1.0.2 (7/26/2017):
------------------
- On Linux, the p/-p/--print command now shows the disk's model name, as
reported in /sys/block/sda/device/model (or equivalent filenames for other
disks). This feature does not yet work on other platforms, on which the
model name line is omitted from the output. This line is also not shown
when accessing disk image files, even on Linux.
- GPT fdisk can now report both the physical and logical sector sizes of
disks, but only on 2.6.32 and later Linux kernels. The verify feature now
uses the larger of the set alignment and physical/logical block sizes for
testing alignment, and setting alignment to something other than an exact
multiple of the ratio of the physical to logical block size results in a
warning.
- Addition of new verification checks, mostly (but not exclusively) related
to the new j/-j/--move-main-table option.
- Added new option: 'j' on the experts' menu in gdisk;
'-j/--move-main-table={sector}' in sgdisk. This option enables relocating
the main partition table from sector 2 (the default location) to somewhere
else on the disk. The main reason I know of to do this is if the disk is
to be used with a system-on-chip (SoC) computer, some of which require the
boot loader to be located at sector 2. If you pass this option the default
value of 2, it has the effect of reducing the padding placed between the
main partition table and the first usable sector value created by the
Linux fdisk tool.
- Updated man pages with new recommendations for ESP and BIOS Boot Partition
sizes.
- Added four type codes (AF06 through AF09) for Apple SoftRAID (Status,
Scratch, Volume, and Cache).
- Added two type codes for the Open Network Install Environment (ONIE):
0xe100 (7412F7D5-A156-4B13-81DC-867174929325) and 0xe101
(D4E6E2CD-4469-46F3-B5CB-1BFF57AFC149).
- Added thirteen type codes for Android partitions (0xa000 through
0xa00c).
- Added type code for QNX6 (aka QNX Power-Safe) filesystem: 0xb300, for
CEF5A9AD-73BC-4601-89F3-CDEEEEE321A1.
- Removed stray debug message ("REALLY setting name!") from sgdisk,
when setting new name via -c option.
1.0.1 (10/18/2015):
-------------------
- Created uninstall-fixparts and uninstall-gdisk scripts for OS X. As the
names imply, these scripts remove the files installed by the fixparts and
gdisk packages, respectively.
- Fixed bug that caused -N/--largest-new option to sgdisk to fail when
fed a "0" option.
- Fixed bug that caused input glitches in EFI version of gdisk.
- Fixed bug that caused sgdisk to not return an appropriate error code
when it encountered a write error when saving changes.
- Fixed bug that caused cgdisk's "Info" display to under-report the
partition's size by one sector.
- OS X 10.11 includes new security features that prevent GPT fdisk from
working unless these features are disabled. To do so, you must boot to a
Recovery HD system, open a Terminal, type "csrutil disable", and reboot
into the normal system. You can re-enable the security features by
repeating the process, but specify "enable" rather than "disable". I've
added a message pointing users to a Web page explaining how to disable
this feature when gdisk detects that it can't write to the disk under OS
X. If you know of a way around this (including code changes to gdisk),
please contact me.
- I've updated the OS X installation location from the Unix-standard
/usr/sbin (and related locations for documentation) to /usr/local/bin
(and related locations for documentation). This is Just Plain Crazy from
a Unix point of view, but Apple has to be Apple and do things just a
little bit differently.
- I've updated my OS X environment to OS X 10.11 and LLVM 7.0.0. This has
also meant installing fresh versions of popt and ncurses from MacPorts,
which may require upgrading popt to get sgdisk working on some systems.
(gdisk, cgdisk, and fixparts should continue to work normally on all
systems.) The OS X binaries are now "fat" (32- and 64-bit) versions,
which should have no noticeable effect unless you have a Mac with broken
32-bit support, in which case the binaries will now work.
- Changed the default name of 0xab00 partitions from "Apple boot" to
"Recovery HD", since the latter is the name that Apple gives these
partitions. Also, I discovered through painful experience that OS X
flakes out and won't boot if the name is something other than "Recovery
HD", so it really has to have the right name!
- Changed the OpenBSD type codes (0xa600 and 0xa601): 0xa600 is now
824CC7A0-36A8-11E3-890A-952519AD3F61 (OpenBSD disklabel) and 0xa601 is
now gone. Previously, 0xa600 was 516E7CB4-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B, a
duplicate of the FreeBSD disklabel, and 0xa601 was
824CC7A0-36A8-11E3-890A-952519AD3F61. OpenBSD is now officially
supporting 824CC7A0-36A8-11E3-890A-952519AD3F61 as a disklabel type,
though. It's unclear what, if anything, OpenBSD will use for
non-disklabel type codes at the moment.
- Added GUID 0311FC50-01CA-4725-AD77-9ADBB20ACE98 (0xbc00) for
Acronis Secure Zone backup partitions.
- Fixed bug that caused random crashes on ppc64el systems (and perhaps
others).
- Added GUID C91818F9-8025-47AF-89D2-F030D7000C2C (0x3900) for Plan 9.
- Added GUID 69DAD710-2CE4-4E3C-B16C-21A1D49ABED3 (0x8307) for 32-bit ARM
Linux root (/) partition, as per the Freedesktop.org Discoverable
Partition Spec
(http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/DiscoverablePartitionsSpec/).
- Edited man pages to clarify that default alignment is to 1MiB boundaries;
this translates to 2048 sectors on disks with 512-byte sectors, but it
will be something else on disks with other sector sizes.
- Changed behavior of -z/--zap and -Z/--zap-all options to sgdisk so that
if a subsequent command causes changes, they'll be written to disk.
Previously, doing something like "sgdisk --zap-all --clear /dev/sdd"
would wipe the disk but not create a partition table; to create a blank
table you'd need to do "sgdisk --zap-all --clear --mbrtogpt /dev/sdd",
which is a bit odd and counter-intuitive, to the point of arguably being
a bug.
1.0.0 (3/16/2015):
------------------
- I'm now building a binary package of gdisk_x64.efi, using the UEFI GPT
fdisk package.
- Added partition type for OpenBSD data
(824CC7A0-36A8-11E3-890A-952519AD3F61/0xa601). Also mapped 0xa600 to the
FreeBSD disklabel type code (516E7CB4-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B). I'm
not sure that's 100% correct, but since I can't find references to an
OpenBSD disklabel GPT type code, it seems the best choice at the moment.
- Added partition type for Windows Storage Spaces
(E75CAF8F-F680-4CEE-AFA3-B001E56EFC2D/0x4202)
- Added -O/--print-mbr option to sgdisk, enabling easier display of MBR
data structures without invoking gdisk.
- Updated warning message: "EBR describes a logical partition" now reads
"EBR points to an EBR," which is more technically correct.
- Altered warning displayed when run from Windows on non-GPT disk, because
Windows on UEFI-based systems is becoming more common.
- Fixed spurious "1" return value in gdisk.
- Small code changes to support compilation as EFI application with the
UEFI GPT fdisk library
(http://sourceforge.net/projects/uefigptfdisk/?source=directory)
@@ -9,7 +227,7 @@
(https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/9bcc42a3e6b08521694b5c0228b2c6ed7b3d312e/src/ceph-disk#L76-L81):
4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-062C0CEFF05D/0xf800 (Ceph OSD),
4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-5EC00CEFF05D/0xf801 (Ceph dm-crypt OSD),
BFBFAFE7-A34F-448A-9A5B-6213EB736C22/0xf802 (Ceph journal),
45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-B4B80CEFF106/0xf802 (Ceph journal),
45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-5EC00CEFF106/0xf803 (Ceph dm-crypt journal),
89C57F98-2FE5-4DC0-89C1-F3AD0CEFF2BE/0xf804 (Ceph disk in creation), and
89C57F98-2FE5-4DC0-89C1-5EC00CEFF2BE/0xf805 (Ceph dm-crypt disk in

340
NOTICE
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@@ -1,340 +0,0 @@
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impose that choice.
This section is intended to make thoroughly clear what is believed to
be a consequence of the rest of this License.
8. If the distribution and/or use of the Program is restricted in
certain countries either by patents or by copyrighted interfaces, the
original copyright holder who places the Program under this License
may add an explicit geographical distribution limitation excluding
those countries, so that distribution is permitted only in or among
countries not thus excluded. In such case, this License incorporates
the limitation as if written in the body of this License.
9. The Free Software Foundation may publish revised and/or new versions
of the General Public License from time to time. Such new versions will
be similar in spirit to the present version, but may differ in detail to
address new problems or concerns.
Each version is given a distinguishing version number. If the Program
specifies a version number of this License which applies to it and "any
later version", you have the option of following the terms and conditions
either of that version or of any later version published by the Free
Software Foundation. If the Program does not specify a version number of
this License, you may choose any version ever published by the Free Software
Foundation.
10. If you wish to incorporate parts of the Program into other free
programs whose distribution conditions are different, write to the author
to ask for permission. For software which is copyrighted by the Free
Software Foundation, write to the Free Software Foundation; we sometimes
make exceptions for this. Our decision will be guided by the two goals
of preserving the free status of all derivatives of our free software and
of promoting the sharing and reuse of software generally.
NO WARRANTY
11. BECAUSE THE PROGRAM IS LICENSED FREE OF CHARGE, THERE IS NO WARRANTY
FOR THE PROGRAM, TO THE EXTENT PERMITTED BY APPLICABLE LAW. EXCEPT WHEN
OTHERWISE STATED IN WRITING THE COPYRIGHT HOLDERS AND/OR OTHER PARTIES
PROVIDE THE PROGRAM "AS IS" WITHOUT WARRANTY OF ANY KIND, EITHER EXPRESSED
OR IMPLIED, INCLUDING, BUT NOT LIMITED TO, THE IMPLIED WARRANTIES OF
MERCHANTABILITY AND FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. THE ENTIRE RISK AS
TO THE QUALITY AND PERFORMANCE OF THE PROGRAM IS WITH YOU. SHOULD THE
PROGRAM PROVE DEFECTIVE, YOU ASSUME THE COST OF ALL NECESSARY SERVICING,
REPAIR OR CORRECTION.
12. IN NO EVENT UNLESS REQUIRED BY APPLICABLE LAW OR AGREED TO IN WRITING
WILL ANY COPYRIGHT HOLDER, OR ANY OTHER PARTY WHO MAY MODIFY AND/OR
REDISTRIBUTE THE PROGRAM AS PERMITTED ABOVE, BE LIABLE TO YOU FOR DAMAGES,
INCLUDING ANY GENERAL, SPECIAL, INCIDENTAL OR CONSEQUENTIAL DAMAGES ARISING
OUT OF THE USE OR INABILITY TO USE THE PROGRAM (INCLUDING BUT NOT LIMITED
TO LOSS OF DATA OR DATA BEING RENDERED INACCURATE OR LOSSES SUSTAINED BY
YOU OR THIRD PARTIES OR A FAILURE OF THE PROGRAM TO OPERATE WITH ANY OTHER
PROGRAMS), EVEN IF SUCH HOLDER OR OTHER PARTY HAS BEEN ADVISED OF THE
POSSIBILITY OF SUCH DAMAGES.
END OF TERMS AND CONDITIONS
How to Apply These Terms to Your New Programs
If you develop a new program, and you want it to be of the greatest
possible use to the public, the best way to achieve this is to make it
free software which everyone can redistribute and change under these terms.
To do so, attach the following notices to the program. It is safest
to attach them to the start of each source file to most effectively
convey the exclusion of warranty; and each file should have at least
the "copyright" line and a pointer to where the full notice is found.
<one line to give the program's name and a brief idea of what it does.>
Copyright (C) <year> <name of author>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
(at your option) any later version.
This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See the
GNU General Public License for more details.
You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
Foundation, Inc., 51 Franklin Street, Fifth Floor, Boston, MA 02110-1301 USA
Also add information on how to contact you by electronic and paper mail.
If the program is interactive, make it output a short notice like this
when it starts in an interactive mode:
Gnomovision version 69, Copyright (C) year name of author
Gnomovision comes with ABSOLUTELY NO WARRANTY; for details type `show w'.
This is free software, and you are welcome to redistribute it
under certain conditions; type `show c' for details.
The hypothetical commands `show w' and `show c' should show the appropriate
parts of the General Public License. Of course, the commands you use may
be called something other than `show w' and `show c'; they could even be
mouse-clicks or menu items--whatever suits your program.
You should also get your employer (if you work as a programmer) or your
school, if any, to sign a "copyright disclaimer" for the program, if
necessary. Here is a sample; alter the names:
Yoyodyne, Inc., hereby disclaims all copyright interest in the program
`Gnomovision' (which makes passes at compilers) written by James Hacker.
<signature of Ty Coon>, 1 April 1989
Ty Coon, President of Vice
This General Public License does not permit incorporating your program into
proprietary programs. If your program is a subroutine library, you may
consider it more useful to permit linking proprietary applications with the
library. If this is what you want to do, use the GNU Library General
Public License instead of this License.

1
NOTICE Symbolic link
View File

@@ -0,0 +1 @@
LICENSE

18
README
View File

@@ -200,11 +200,13 @@ be used instead. In addition, note these requirements:
(headers). Most Linux distributions install popt by default, but you may
need to install a package called popt-dev, popt-devel, or something
similar to obtain the header files. Mac OS users can find a version of
popt for Mac OS from Darwin Ports (http://popt.darwinports.com) or Fink
(http://www.finkproject.org); however, you'll first need to install
DarwinPorts or Fink (instructions exist on the relevant projects' pages).
Alternatively, you can compile gdisk and/or cgdisk alone, without sgdisk;
gdisk doesn't require popt.
popt for Mac OS from Darwin Ports (http://popt.darwinports.com), MacPorts
(https://trac.macports.org/browser/trunk/dports/devel/popt/Portfile), Fink
(http://www.finkproject.org), or brew (http://macappstore.org/popt/);
however, you'll first need to install the relevant environment
(instructions exist on the relevant projects' pages). Alternatively, you
can compile gdisk and/or cgdisk alone, without sgdisk; gdisk doesn't
require popt.
When all the necessary development tools and libraries are installed, you
can uncompress the package and type "make" at the command prompt in the
@@ -234,9 +236,9 @@ virtual QEMU and VirtualBox disks. I've received user reports of success with
RAID arrays over 2TiB in size, though.
My main development platform is a system running the 64-bit version of
Gentoo Linux. I've also tested on several other 32- and 64-bit Linux
distributions, Intel-based Mac OS X 10.5 and 10.6, 64-bit FreeBSD 7.1, and
Windows 7.
Ubuntu Linux. I've also tested on several other 32- and 64-bit Linux
distributions, Intel-based Mac OS X 10.6 and several later versions, 64-bit
FreeBSD 7.1, and Windows 7 and 10.
Redistribution
--------------

132
README-efi.txt Normal file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,132 @@
README for EFI version of GPT fdisk
===================================
GPT fdisk for EFI is a binary build of gdisk to run as a pre-boot EFI
application. It's OS-independent and may be used to check or recover
partition tables before installing or booting an OS. It may be used to
overcome boot problems caused by partition table damage or to prepare a
partition table prior to installing an OS.
Installing GPT fdisk for EFI
----------------------------
The contents of this archive are:
- COPYING -- The GNU GPL
- gdisk.html -- The gdisk man page, in HTML form
- gdisk_x64.efi -- The gdisk binary, built for EFI (x86-64 CPU)
- NEWS -- The GPT fdisk changelog
- README-efi.txt -- This file
- refind.cer -- The rEFInd public key, .cer (DER) form
- refind.crt -- The rEFInd public key, .crt form
The gdisk_x64.efi binary included here is built using the UEFI GPT fdisk
library (https://sourceforge.net/p/uefigptfdisk/), which is a beta-level
partial C++ library for UEFI. To use it, you must copy it to your EFI
System Partition (ESP) or some other EFI-accessible location. Under Linux,
the ESP is usually one of the first two or three partitions on /dev/sda.
Under OS X, it's usually the first partition on /dev/disk0 (that is,
/dev/disk0s1). Under Windows, you can mount it to S: by typing "mountvol S:
/S" in an Administrator command prompt. In any of these cases, the
recommended location for gdisk_x64.efi is the EFI/tools directory on the
ESP. In that location, my rEFInd boot manager will detect the gdisk binary
and create a menu option to launch it. If you don't use rEFInd, you can
launch the program using an EFI shell, register it as a boot program with
your firmware, or configure your boot manager (GRUB, gummiboot, etc.) to
launch it. Note that boot LOADERS, such as SYSLINUX and ELILO, can't launch
gdisk.
Alternatively, you can create a USB flash drive that will launch gdisk when
you boot from it. To do so, create a FAT filesystem on a partition on a USB
flash drive and copy gdisk_x64.efi to it as EFI/BOOT/bootx64.efi. (You'll
need to create the EFI/BOOT directory.) Some systems may require the FAT
filesystem to be flagged as an ESP (with a type code of EF00 in gdisk). You
can use your firmware's built-in boot manager to boot from the USB flash
drive. Some such boot managers present two options for booting USB flash
drives. If yours does this, select the option that includes the string
"UEFI" in the description.
The gdisk_x64.efi binary is signed with the rEFInd Secure Boot key. Thus,
if you're launching a rEFInd that I've compiled and distributed myself,
gdisk should launch, too. If you're *NOT* running rEFInd but ARE using
Shim, you'll need to add the refind.cer file to your MOK list by using the
MokManager utility. If you're using Secure Boot and you've signed rEFInd
yourself, you'll need to sign gdisk_x64.efi yourself, too. Note that the
rEFInd PPA distributes unsigned binaries and signs them with a local key
stored in /etc/refind/keys. To copy and sign the gdisk_x64.efi binary, you
should type (as root or using sudo):
sbsign --key /etc/refind.d/keys/refind_local.key \
--cert /etc/refind.d/keys/refind.crt \
--output /boot/efi/EFI/tooks/gdisk_x64.efi ./gdisk_x64.efi
This command assumes you have local rEFInd keys stored in the locations
created by the rEFInd installation script. Substitute your own keys if
you've built them in some other way. Some distributions don't provide the
sbsign binary, so you may need to build it yourself. See the following page
for details:
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/jejb/sbsigntools.git/
Note that you do *NOT* need to sign gdisk if your computer doesn't use
Secure Boot or if you've disabled this feature.
Using gdisk for EFI
-------------------
The EFI version of gdisk is basically the same as using the Linux, OS X, or
other OS versions. One exception is that you do not specify a disk device
on the command line; gdisk for EFI instead displays a list of devices when
you launch and enables you to select one, as in:
List of hard disks found:
1: Disk EFI_HANDLE(3EB5DD98): 108423424 sectors, 51.7 GiB
Acpi(PNP0A03,0)/Pci(1|1)/Ata(Primary,Master)
2: Disk EFI_HANDLE(3EB58289): 105456768 sectors, 50.3 GiB
Acpi(PNP0A03,0)/Pci(D|0)?
Disk number (1-2): 2
Once you've selected your disk, it should operate in much the same way as
any other version of gdisk. (See the next section, though!) Some programs,
including my rEFInd boot manager, complain about the changed partition
table, even if you've made no changes. If you run into problems using other
programs or launching an OS immediately after running gdisk, reboot; that
should cause the firmware to re-load its partition table.
Caveats
-------
I've tested gdisk_x64.efi on several systems. It's worked fine for me on 4
of 6 computers (5 of 7, counting VirtualBox). Two systems gave me problems,
though:
* gdisk presented a never-ending list of options (as if receiving a
never-ending string of "?" or other unrecognized command characters) on a
2014 MacBook Air.
* A computer based on an Intel DG43NB motherboard rebooted as soon as I
launched gdisk.
Both computers have relatively old EFIs. (Despite its newness, the Mac has
a 1.10 EFI, as do all Macs, to the best of my knowledge.) Most of the
computers that worked had 2.31 EFIs, although one had a 2.10 EFI.
The bottom line is that I can't guarantee that this binary will work on all
computers. It's conceivable that recompiling gdisk with the latest version
of the UEFI GPT fdisk library will help. Also, I haven't compiled a 32-bit
version, so if you have a 32-bit EFI, you'll have to compile it yourself or
do without.
References
----------
The following sites have useful additional information:
UEFI GPT fdisk:
https://sourceforge.net/projects/uefigptfdisk/
sbsigntools git repository:
https://git.kernel.org/cgit/linux/kernel/git/jejb/sbsigntools.git/
rEFInd:
http://www.rodsbooks.com/refind/

View File

@@ -45,6 +45,36 @@ BasicMBRData::BasicMBRData(void) {
EmptyMBR();
} // BasicMBRData default constructor
BasicMBRData::BasicMBRData(const BasicMBRData & orig) {
int i;
if (&orig != this) {
memcpy(code, orig.code, 440);
diskSignature = orig.diskSignature;
nulls = orig.nulls;
MBRSignature = orig.MBRSignature;
blockSize = orig.blockSize;
diskSize = orig.diskSize;
numHeads = orig.numHeads;
numSecspTrack = orig.numSecspTrack;
canDeleteMyDisk = orig.canDeleteMyDisk;
device = orig.device;
state = orig.state;
myDisk = new DiskIO;
if (myDisk == NULL) {
cerr << "Unable to allocate memory in BasicMBRData copy constructor! Terminating!\n";
exit(1);
} // if
if (orig.myDisk != NULL)
myDisk->OpenForRead(orig.myDisk->GetName());
for (i = 0; i < MAX_MBR_PARTS; i++) {
partitions[i] = orig.partitions[i];
} // for
} // if
} // BasicMBRData copy constructor
BasicMBRData::BasicMBRData(string filename) {
blockSize = SECTOR_SIZE;
diskSize = 0;
@@ -75,29 +105,31 @@ BasicMBRData::~BasicMBRData(void) {
BasicMBRData & BasicMBRData::operator=(const BasicMBRData & orig) {
int i;
memcpy(code, orig.code, 440);
diskSignature = orig.diskSignature;
nulls = orig.nulls;
MBRSignature = orig.MBRSignature;
blockSize = orig.blockSize;
diskSize = orig.diskSize;
numHeads = orig.numHeads;
numSecspTrack = orig.numSecspTrack;
canDeleteMyDisk = orig.canDeleteMyDisk;
device = orig.device;
state = orig.state;
if (&orig != this) {
memcpy(code, orig.code, 440);
diskSignature = orig.diskSignature;
nulls = orig.nulls;
MBRSignature = orig.MBRSignature;
blockSize = orig.blockSize;
diskSize = orig.diskSize;
numHeads = orig.numHeads;
numSecspTrack = orig.numSecspTrack;
canDeleteMyDisk = orig.canDeleteMyDisk;
device = orig.device;
state = orig.state;
myDisk = new DiskIO;
if (myDisk == NULL) {
cerr << "Unable to allocate memory in BasicMBRData::operator=()! Terminating!\n";
exit(1);
myDisk = new DiskIO;
if (myDisk == NULL) {
cerr << "Unable to allocate memory in BasicMBRData::operator=()! Terminating!\n";
exit(1);
} // if
if (orig.myDisk != NULL)
myDisk->OpenForRead(orig.myDisk->GetName());
for (i = 0; i < MAX_MBR_PARTS; i++) {
partitions[i] = orig.partitions[i];
} // for
} // if
if (orig.myDisk != NULL)
myDisk->OpenForRead(orig.myDisk->GetName());
for (i = 0; i < MAX_MBR_PARTS; i++) {
partitions[i] = orig.partitions[i];
} // for
return *this;
} // BasicMBRData::operator=()
@@ -298,7 +330,7 @@ int BasicMBRData::ReadLogicalParts(uint64_t extendedStart, int partNum) {
// the logical partition when this is the case....
ebrType = ebr.partitions[0].partitionType;
if ((ebrType == 0x05) || (ebrType == 0x0f) || (ebrType == 0x85)) {
cout << "EBR describes a logical partition!\n";
cout << "EBR points to an EBR!\n";
offset = extendedStart + ebr.partitions[0].firstLBA;
} else {
// Copy over the basic data....
@@ -1499,11 +1531,11 @@ uint64_t BasicMBRData::GetFirstSector(int i) {
uint64_t retval;
thePart = GetPartition(i);
if (thePart != NULL) {
if (thePart != NULL)
retval = thePart->GetStartLBA();
} else
else
retval = UINT32_C(0);
return retval;
return retval;
} // BasicMBRData::GetFirstSector()
uint64_t BasicMBRData::GetLength(int i) {
@@ -1511,11 +1543,11 @@ uint64_t BasicMBRData::GetLength(int i) {
uint64_t retval;
thePart = GetPartition(i);
if (thePart != NULL) {
if (thePart != NULL)
retval = thePart->GetLengthLBA();
} else
else
retval = UINT64_C(0);
return retval;
return retval;
} // BasicMBRData::GetLength()
/***********************

View File

@@ -34,6 +34,7 @@ struct TempMBR {
struct MBRRecord partitions[4];
uint16_t MBRSignature;
}; // struct TempMBR
#pragma pack ()
// Possible states of the MBR
enum MBRValidity {invalid, gpt, hybrid, mbr};
@@ -62,6 +63,7 @@ protected:
public:
BasicMBRData(void);
BasicMBRData(string deviceFilename);
BasicMBRData(const BasicMBRData &);
~BasicMBRData(void);
BasicMBRData & operator=(const BasicMBRData & orig);

1
bsd.h
View File

@@ -89,5 +89,6 @@ class BSDData {
int GetNumParts(void);
GPTPart AsGPT(int i); // Return BSD part. as GPT part.
}; // struct MBRData
#pragma pack ()
#endif

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
.\" Copyright 2011-2013 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" Copyright 2011-2018 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License
.TH "CGDISK" "8" "0.8.10" "Roderick W. Smith" "GPT fdisk Manual"
.TH "CGDISK" "8" "1.0.4" "Roderick W. Smith" "GPT fdisk Manual"
.SH "NAME"
cgdisk \- Curses-based GUID partition table (GPT) manipulator
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
@@ -181,12 +181,13 @@ Change the sector alignment value. Disks with more logical sectors than
physical sectors (such as modern Advanced Format drives), some RAID
configurations, and many SSD devices, can suffer performance problems if
partitions are not aligned properly for their internal data structures. On
new disks, GPT fdisk attempts to align partitions on 2048\-sector (1MiB)
boundaries by default, which optimizes performance for all of these disk
types. On pre\-partitioned disks, GPT fdisk attempts to identify the
alignment value used on that disk, but will set 8-sector alignment on disks
larger than 300 GB even if lesser alignment values are detected. In either
case, it can be changed by using this option.
new disks, GPT fdisk attempts to align partitions on 1 MiB boundaries
(2048\-sectors on disks with 512-byte sectors) by default, which optimizes
performance for all of these disk types. On pre\-partitioned disks, GPT
fdisk attempts to identify the alignment value used on that disk, but will
set 8-sector alignment on disks larger than 300 GB even if lesser alignment
values are detected. In either case, it can be changed by using this
option.
.TP
.B Backup
@@ -261,6 +262,10 @@ Change a single partition's type code. You enter the type code using a
two\-byte hexadecimal number. You may also enter a GUID directly, if you
have one and \fBcgdisk\fR doesn't know it. If you don't know the type code
for your partition, you can type \fBL\fR to see a list of known type codes.
The type code list may optionally be filtered by a search string; for
instance, entering \fI\fBLinux\fR\fR shows only partition type codes with
descriptions that include the string \fILinux\fR. This search is performed
case\-sensitively.
.TP
.B Verify
@@ -276,10 +281,7 @@ Write data. Use this command to save your changes.
.SH "BUGS"
As of March 2014 (version 0.8.10), \fBcgdisk\fR should be considered
beta software. Although the underlying partition manipulation code is much
older, the \fBcgdisk\fR ncurses user interface is brand new with GPT fdisk
version 0.8.0. Known bugs and limitations include:
Known bugs and limitations include:
.TP
.B *
@@ -367,20 +369,20 @@ Contributors:
* Justin Maggard (justin.maggard@netgear.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@ti.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@gmail.com)
* Florian Zumbiehl (florz@florz.de)
.SH "SEE ALSO"
\fBcfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBgdisk (8)\fR,
\fBmkfs (8)\fR,
\fBparted (8)\fR,
\fBsfdisk (8)\fR
\fBsgdisk (8)\fR
\fBfixparts (8)\fR
.BR cfdisk (8),
.BR fdisk (8),
.BR gdisk (8),
.BR mkfs (8),
.BR parted (8),
.BR sfdisk (8),
.BR sgdisk (8),
.BR fixparts (8).
\fIhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table\fR

View File

@@ -1,12 +1,12 @@
Summary: GPT partitioning and MBR repair software
Name: gptfdisk
Version: 0.8.10
Version: 1.0.4
Release: 1%{?dist}
License: GPLv2
URL: http://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk
Group: Applications/System
Source: http://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk/gptfdisk-0.8.10.tar.gz
Source: http://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk/gptfdisk-1.0.4.tar.gz
BuildRoot: %(mktemp -ud %{_tmppath}/%{name}-%{version}-%{release}-XXXXXX)
%description
@@ -81,5 +81,5 @@ provides a few additional partition manipulation features.
%changelog
* Sun Mar 2 2014 R Smith <rodsmith@rodsbooks.com> - 0.8.10
- Created spec file for 0.8.10 release
* Thu Jul 5 2018 R Smith <rodsmith@rodsbooks.com> - 1.0.4
- Created spec file for 1.0.4 release

View File

@@ -32,6 +32,8 @@
#endif
#include <iostream>
#include <fstream>
#include <sstream>
#include "diskio.h"
@@ -68,6 +70,7 @@ int DiskIO::OpenForRead(void) {
cerr << "The specified file does not exist!\n";
realFilename = "";
userFilename = "";
modelName = "";
isOpen = 0;
openForWrite = 0;
} else {
@@ -76,7 +79,8 @@ int DiskIO::OpenForRead(void) {
if (fstat64(fd, &st) == 0) {
if (S_ISDIR(st.st_mode))
cerr << "The specified path is a directory!\n";
#if !defined(__FreeBSD__) && !defined(__APPLE__)
#if !(defined(__FreeBSD__) || defined(__FreeBSD_kernel__)) \
&& !defined(__APPLE__)
else if (S_ISCHR(st.st_mode))
cerr << "The specified path is a character device!\n";
#endif
@@ -87,6 +91,16 @@ int DiskIO::OpenForRead(void) {
else
isOpen = 1;
} // if (fstat64()...)
#if defined(__linux__) && !defined(EFI)
if (isOpen && realFilename.substr(0,4) == "/dev") {
ostringstream modelNameFilename;
modelNameFilename << "/sys/block" << realFilename.substr(4,512) << "/device/model";
ifstream modelNameFile(modelNameFilename.str().c_str());
if (modelNameFile.is_open()) {
getline(modelNameFile, modelName);
} // if
} // if
#endif
} // if/else
} // if
@@ -178,6 +192,27 @@ int DiskIO::GetBlockSize(void) {
return (blockSize);
} // DiskIO::GetBlockSize()
// Returns the physical block size of the device, if possible. If this is
// not supported, or if an error occurs, this function returns 0.
// TODO: Get this working in more OSes than Linux.
int DiskIO::GetPhysBlockSize(void) {
int err = -1, physBlockSize = 0;
// If disk isn't open, try to open it....
if (!isOpen) {
OpenForRead();
} // if
if (isOpen) {
#if defined __linux__ && !defined(EFI)
err = ioctl(fd, BLKPBSZGET, &physBlockSize);
#endif
} // if (isOpen)
if (err == -1)
physBlockSize = 0;
return (physBlockSize);
} // DiskIO::GetPhysBlockSize(void)
// Returns the number of heads, according to the kernel, or 255 if the
// correct value can't be determined.
uint32_t DiskIO::GetNumHeads(void) {
@@ -255,7 +290,8 @@ int DiskIO::DiskSync(void) {
i = ioctl(fd, BLKRRPART);
if (i) {
cout << "Warning: The kernel is still using the old partition table.\n"
<< "The new table will be used at the next reboot.\n";
<< "The new table will be used at the next reboot or after you\n"
<< "run partprobe(8) or kpartx(8)\n";
} else {
retval = 1;
} // if/else

View File

@@ -144,6 +144,13 @@ int DiskIO::GetBlockSize(void) {
return (blockSize);
} // DiskIO::GetBlockSize()
// In theory, returns the physical block size. In practice, this is only
// supported in Linux, as of yet.
// TODO: Get this working in Windows.
int DiskIO::GetPhysBlockSize(void) {
return 0;
} // DiskIO::GetPhysBlockSize()
// Returns the number of heads, according to the kernel, or 255 if the
// correct value can't be determined.
uint32_t DiskIO::GetNumHeads(void) {

View File

@@ -43,6 +43,7 @@ using namespace std;
DiskIO::DiskIO(void) {
userFilename = "";
realFilename = "";
modelName = "";
isOpen = 0;
openForWrite = 0;
} // constructor

View File

@@ -49,6 +49,7 @@ class DiskIO {
protected:
string userFilename;
string realFilename;
string modelName;
int isOpen;
int openForWrite;
#ifdef _WIN32
@@ -71,6 +72,8 @@ class DiskIO {
int Write(void* buffer, int numBytes);
int DiskSync(void); // resync disk caches to use new partitions
int GetBlockSize(void);
int GetPhysBlockSize(void);
string GetModel(void) {return modelName;}
uint32_t GetNumHeads(void);
uint32_t GetNumSecsPerTrack(void);
int IsOpen(void) {return isOpen;}

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
.\" Copyright 2011-2013 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" Copyright 2011-2018 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License
.TH "FIXPARTS" "8" "0.8.10" "Roderick W. Smith" "FixParts Manual"
.TH "FIXPARTS" "8" "1.0.4" "Roderick W. Smith" "FixParts Manual"
.SH "NAME"
fixparts \- MBR partition table repair utility
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
@@ -202,8 +202,7 @@ see a summary of available options.
.PP
.SH "BUGS"
As of March 2014 (version 0.8.10), \fBfixparts\fR
should be considered beta software. Known bugs and limitations include:
Known bugs and limitations include:
.TP
.B *
@@ -259,20 +258,20 @@ Contributors:
* Justin Maggard (justin.maggard@netgear.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@ti.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@gmail.com)
* Florian Zumbiehl (florz@florz.de)
.SH "SEE ALSO"
\fBcfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBcgdisk (8)\fR,
\fBfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBmkfs (8)\fR,
\fBparted (8)\fR,
\fBsfdisk (8)\fR
\fBgdisk (8)\fR
\fBsgdisk (8)\fR
.BR cfdisk (8),
.BR cgdisk (8),
.BR fdisk (8),
.BR mkfs (8),
.BR parted (8),
.BR sfdisk (8),
.BR gdisk (8),
.BR sgdisk (8).
\fIhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Master_boot_record\fR

81
gdisk.8
View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
.\" Copyright 2011-2013 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" Copyright 2011-2018 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License
.TH "GDISK" "8" "0.8.10" "Roderick W. Smith" "GPT fdisk Manual"
.TH "GDISK" "8" "1.0.4" "Roderick W. Smith" "GPT fdisk Manual"
.SH "NAME"
gdisk \- Interactive GUID partition table (GPT) manipulator
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
@@ -91,11 +91,12 @@ and in whatever sizes are desired.
.TP
.B *
Boot disks for EFI\-based systems require an \fIEFI System
Partition\fR (\fBgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF00) formatted as FAT\-32.
The recommended size of this partition is between 100 and 300 MiB.
Boot\-related files are stored here. (Note that GNU Parted identifies
such partitions as having the "boot flag" set.)
Boot disks for EFI\-based systems require an \fIEFI System Partition\fR
(\fBgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF00) formatted as FAT\-32. I recommended
making this partition 550 MiB. (Smaller ESPs are common, but some EFIs have
flaky FAT drivers that necessitate a larger partition for reliable
operation.) Boot\-related files are stored here. (Note that GNU Parted
identifies such partitions as having the "boot flag" set.)
.TP
.B *
@@ -103,8 +104,8 @@ Some boot loaders for BIOS\-based systems make use of a \fIBIOS Boot
Partition\fR (\fBgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF02), in which the secondary
boot loader is stored, possibly without the benefit of a filesystem. (GRUB2
may optionally use such a partition.) This partition can typically be quite
small (roughly 32 to 200 KiB), but you should consult your boot loader
documentation for details.
small (roughly 32 to 200 KiB, although 1 MiB is more common in practice),
but you should consult your boot loader documentation for details.
.TP
.B *
@@ -184,16 +185,19 @@ related to their equivalent MBR codes. Specifically, the MBR code is
multiplied by hexadecimal 0x0100. For instance, the code for Linux swap
space in MBR is 0x82, and it's 0x8200 in \fBgdisk\fR. A one\-to\-one
correspondence is impossible, though. Most notably, the codes for all
varieties of FAT and NTFS partition correspond to a single GPT code
(entered as 0x0700 in \fBsgdisk\fR). Some OSes use a single MBR code but
employ many more codes in GPT. For these, \fBgdisk\fR adds code numbers
sequentially, such as 0xa500 for a FreeBSD disklabel, 0xa501 for FreeBSD
boot, 0xa502 for FreeBSD swap, and so on. Note that these two\-byte codes
are unique to \fBgdisk\fR.
varieties of FAT and NTFS partition correspond to a single GPT code (entered
as 0x0700 in \fBgdisk\fR). Some OSes use a single MBR code but employ many
more codes in GPT. For these, \fBgdisk\fR adds code numbers sequentially,
such as 0xa500 for a FreeBSD disklabel, 0xa501 for FreeBSD boot, 0xa502 for
FreeBSD swap, and so on. Note that these two\-byte codes are unique to
\fBgdisk\fR. The type code list may optionally be filtered by a search
string; for instance, entering \fI\fBLinux\fR\fR shows only partition type
codes with descriptions that include the string \fILinux\fR. This search is
performed case\-sensitively.
.TP
.B n
Create a new partition. This command is modelled after the equivalent
Create a new partition. This command is modeled after the equivalent
\fBfdisk\fR option, although some differences exist. You enter a partition
number, starting sector, and an ending sector. Both start and end sectors
can be specified in absolute terms as sector numbers or as positions
@@ -212,7 +216,8 @@ sector.
.B o
Clear out all partition data. This includes GPT header data,
all partition definitions, and the protective MBR. The sector alignment
is reset to the default (2048 sectors, or 1MB).
is reset to the default (1 MiB, or 2048 sectors on a disk with 512-byte
sectors).
.TP
.B p
@@ -464,18 +469,27 @@ boot.
Show detailed partition information. This option is identical to the 'i'
option on the main menu.
.TP
.B j
Adjust the location of the main partition table. This value is normally 2,
but it may need to be increased in some cases, such as when a
system\-on\-chip (SoC) is hard\-coded to read boot code from sector 2. I
recommend against adjusting this value unless doing so is absolutely
necessary.
.TP
.B l
Change the sector alignment value. Disks with more logical sectors per
physical sectors (such as modern Advanced Format drives), some RAID
configurations, and many SSD devices, can suffer performance problems if
partitions are not aligned properly for their internal data structures. On
new disks, GPT fdisk attempts to align partitions on 2048\-sector (1MiB)
boundaries by default, which optimizes performance for all of these disk
types. On pre\-partitioned disks, GPT fdisk attempts to identify the
alignment value used on that disk, but will set 8-sector alignment on disks
larger than 300 GB even if lesser alignment values are detected. In either
case, it can be changed by using this option.
new disks, GPT fdisk attempts to align partitions on 1 MiB boundaries
(2048\-sectors on disks with 512-byte sectors) by default, which optimizes
performance for all of these disk types. On pre\-partitioned disks, GPT
fdisk attempts to identify the alignment value used on that disk, but will
set 8-sector alignment on disks larger than 300 GB even if lesser alignment
values are detected. In either case, it can be changed by using this
option.
.TP
.B m
@@ -561,8 +575,7 @@ entering data. When only one option is possible, \fBgdisk\fR
usually bypasses the prompt entirely.
.SH "BUGS"
As of March 2014 (version 0.8.10), \fBgdisk\fR
should be considered beta software. Known bugs and limitations include:
Known bugs and limitations include:
.TP
.B *
@@ -660,20 +673,20 @@ Contributors:
* Justin Maggard (justin.maggard@netgear.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@ti.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@gmail.com)
* Florian Zumbiehl (florz@florz.de)
.SH "SEE ALSO"
\fBcfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBcgdisk (8)\fR,
\fBfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBmkfs (8)\fR,
\fBparted (8)\fR,
\fBsfdisk (8)\fR
\fBsgdisk (8)\fR
\fBfixparts (8)\fR
.BR cfdisk (8),
.BR cgdisk (8),
.BR fdisk (8),
.BR mkfs (8),
.BR parted (8),
.BR sfdisk (8),
.BR sgdisk (8),
.BR fixparts (8).
\fIhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table\fR

View File

@@ -115,9 +115,23 @@ Y
w
Y
EOF
ret=$?
if [ $ret -ne 0 ]
then
pretty_print "FAILED" "gdisk return $ret when creating partition table"
exit 1
fi
;;
sgdisk)
$SGDISK_BIN $TEMP_DISK -${OPT_CLEAR}
ret=$?
if [ $ret -ne 0 ]
then
pretty_print "FAILED" "sgdisk return $ret when creating partition table"
exit 1
fi
;;
esac
@@ -147,7 +161,7 @@ EOF
;;
sgdisk)
$SGDISK_BIN $TEMP_DISK -${OPT_NEW} 1 -${OPT_CHANGE_NAME} 1:"${TEST_PART_DEFAULT_NAME}"
$SGDISK_BIN $TEMP_DISK -${OPT_NEW} 1 -${OPT_CHANGE_NAME} 1:"${TEST_PART_DEFAULT_NAME}" -${OPT_CHANGE_TYPE} 1:$TEST_PART_TYPE
;;
esac
@@ -311,6 +325,7 @@ EOF
pretty_print "SUCCESS" "GUID of disk has been sucessfully changed"
else
pretty_print "FAILED" "GUID of disk is the same as the previous one"
exit 1
fi
}
@@ -353,7 +368,7 @@ EOF
###################################
# create a file to simulate a real device
dd if=/dev/zero of=$TEMP_DISK bs=1024 count=$TEMP_DISK_SIZE
dd if=/dev/zero of=$TEMP_DISK bs=1024 count=$TEMP_DISK_SIZE > /dev/null 2>&1
if [ -s $TEMP_DISK ]
then

257
gpt.cc
View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
/* By Rod Smith, initial coding January to February, 2009 */
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2013 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2018 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
under the terms of the GNU GPL version 2, as detailed in the COPYING file. */
#define __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS
@@ -66,12 +66,12 @@ static inline uint32_t log2_32(uint32_t v) {
// Default constructor
GPTData::GPTData(void) {
blockSize = SECTOR_SIZE; // set a default
physBlockSize = 0; // 0 = can't be determined
diskSize = 0;
partitions = NULL;
state = gpt_valid;
device = "";
justLooking = 0;
syncing = 1;
mainCrcOk = 0;
secondCrcOk = 0;
mainPartsCrcOk = 0;
@@ -88,6 +88,45 @@ GPTData::GPTData(void) {
chksum_crc32gentab();
} // GPTData default constructor
GPTData::GPTData(const GPTData & orig) {
uint32_t i;
if (&orig != this) {
mainHeader = orig.mainHeader;
numParts = orig.numParts;
secondHeader = orig.secondHeader;
protectiveMBR = orig.protectiveMBR;
device = orig.device;
blockSize = orig.blockSize;
physBlockSize = orig.physBlockSize;
diskSize = orig.diskSize;
state = orig.state;
justLooking = orig.justLooking;
mainCrcOk = orig.mainCrcOk;
secondCrcOk = orig.secondCrcOk;
mainPartsCrcOk = orig.mainPartsCrcOk;
secondPartsCrcOk = orig.secondPartsCrcOk;
apmFound = orig.apmFound;
bsdFound = orig.bsdFound;
sectorAlignment = orig.sectorAlignment;
beQuiet = orig.beQuiet;
whichWasUsed = orig.whichWasUsed;
myDisk.OpenForRead(orig.myDisk.GetName());
delete[] partitions;
partitions = new GPTPart [numParts];
if (partitions == NULL) {
cerr << "Error! Could not allocate memory for partitions in GPTData::operator=()!\n"
<< "Terminating!\n";
exit(1);
} // if
for (i = 0; i < numParts; i++) {
partitions[i] = orig.partitions[i];
} // for
} // if
} // GPTData copy constructor
// The following constructor loads GPT data from a device file
GPTData::GPTData(string filename) {
blockSize = SECTOR_SIZE; // set a default
@@ -96,7 +135,6 @@ GPTData::GPTData(string filename) {
state = gpt_invalid;
device = "";
justLooking = 0;
syncing = 1;
mainCrcOk = 0;
secondCrcOk = 0;
mainPartsCrcOk = 0;
@@ -123,38 +161,40 @@ GPTData::~GPTData(void) {
GPTData & GPTData::operator=(const GPTData & orig) {
uint32_t i;
mainHeader = orig.mainHeader;
numParts = orig.numParts;
secondHeader = orig.secondHeader;
protectiveMBR = orig.protectiveMBR;
device = orig.device;
blockSize = orig.blockSize;
diskSize = orig.diskSize;
state = orig.state;
justLooking = orig.justLooking;
syncing = orig.syncing;
mainCrcOk = orig.mainCrcOk;
secondCrcOk = orig.secondCrcOk;
mainPartsCrcOk = orig.mainPartsCrcOk;
secondPartsCrcOk = orig.secondPartsCrcOk;
apmFound = orig.apmFound;
bsdFound = orig.bsdFound;
sectorAlignment = orig.sectorAlignment;
beQuiet = orig.beQuiet;
whichWasUsed = orig.whichWasUsed;
if (&orig != this) {
mainHeader = orig.mainHeader;
numParts = orig.numParts;
secondHeader = orig.secondHeader;
protectiveMBR = orig.protectiveMBR;
device = orig.device;
blockSize = orig.blockSize;
physBlockSize = orig.physBlockSize;
diskSize = orig.diskSize;
state = orig.state;
justLooking = orig.justLooking;
mainCrcOk = orig.mainCrcOk;
secondCrcOk = orig.secondCrcOk;
mainPartsCrcOk = orig.mainPartsCrcOk;
secondPartsCrcOk = orig.secondPartsCrcOk;
apmFound = orig.apmFound;
bsdFound = orig.bsdFound;
sectorAlignment = orig.sectorAlignment;
beQuiet = orig.beQuiet;
whichWasUsed = orig.whichWasUsed;
myDisk.OpenForRead(orig.myDisk.GetName());
myDisk.OpenForRead(orig.myDisk.GetName());
delete[] partitions;
partitions = new GPTPart [numParts];
if (partitions == NULL) {
cerr << "Error! Could not allocate memory for partitions in GPTData::operator=()!\n"
<< "Terminating!\n";
exit(1);
delete[] partitions;
partitions = new GPTPart [numParts];
if (partitions == NULL) {
cerr << "Error! Could not allocate memory for partitions in GPTData::operator=()!\n"
<< "Terminating!\n";
exit(1);
} // if
for (i = 0; i < numParts; i++) {
partitions[i] = orig.partitions[i];
} // for
} // if
for (i = 0; i < numParts; i++) {
partitions[i] = orig.partitions[i];
} // for
return *this;
} // GPTData::operator=()
@@ -171,7 +211,7 @@ GPTData & GPTData::operator=(const GPTData & orig) {
// problems identified.
int GPTData::Verify(void) {
int problems = 0, alignProbs = 0;
uint32_t i, numSegments;
uint32_t i, numSegments, testAlignment = sectorAlignment;
uint64_t totalFree, largestSegment;
// First, check for CRC errors in the GPT data....
@@ -281,6 +321,45 @@ int GPTData::Verify(void) {
<< "The 'e' option on the experts' menu may fix this problem.\n";
} // if
// Check the main and backup partition tables for overlap with things and unusual gaps
if (mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA + GetTableSizeInSectors() > mainHeader.firstUsableLBA) {
problems++;
cout << "\nProblem: Main partition table extends past the first usable LBA.\n"
<< "Using 'j' on the experts' menu may enable fixing this problem.\n";
} // if
if (mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA < 2) {
problems++;
cout << "\nProblem: Main partition table appears impossibly early on the disk.\n"
<< "Using 'j' on the experts' menu may enable fixing this problem.\n";
} // if
if (secondHeader.partitionEntriesLBA + GetTableSizeInSectors() > secondHeader.currentLBA) {
problems++;
cout << "\nProblem: The backup partition table overlaps the backup header.\n"
<< "Using 'e' on the experts' menu may fix this problem.\n";
} // if
if (mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA != 2) {
cout << "\nWarning: There is a gap between the main metadata (sector 1) and the main\n"
<< "partition table (sector " << mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA
<< "). This is helpful in some exotic configurations,\n"
<< "but is generally ill-advised. Using 'j' on the experts' menu can adjust this\n"
<< "gap.\n";
} // if
if (mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA + GetTableSizeInSectors() != mainHeader.firstUsableLBA) {
cout << "\nWarning: There is a gap between the main partition table (ending sector "
<< mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA + GetTableSizeInSectors() - 1 << ")\n"
<< "and the first usable sector (" << mainHeader.firstUsableLBA << "). This is helpful in some exotic configurations,\n"
<< "but is unusual. The util-linux fdisk program often creates disks like this.\n"
<< "Using 'j' on the experts' menu can adjust this gap.\n";
} // if
if (mainHeader.sizeOfPartitionEntries * mainHeader.numParts < 16384) {
cout << "\nWarning: The size of the partition table (" << mainHeader.sizeOfPartitionEntries * mainHeader.numParts
<< " bytes) is less than the minimum\n"
<< "required by the GPT specification. Most OSes and tools seem to work fine on\n"
<< "such disks, but this is a violation of the GPT specification and so may cause\n"
<< "problems.\n";
} // if
if ((mainHeader.lastUsableLBA >= diskSize) || (mainHeader.lastUsableLBA > mainHeader.backupLBA)) {
problems++;
cout << "\nProblem: GPT claims the disk is larger than it is! (Claimed last usable\n"
@@ -321,10 +400,15 @@ int GPTData::Verify(void) {
// Check that partitions are aligned on proper boundaries (for WD Advanced
// Format and similar disks)....
if ((physBlockSize != 0) && (blockSize != 0))
testAlignment = physBlockSize / blockSize;
testAlignment = max(testAlignment, sectorAlignment);
if (testAlignment == 0) // Should not happen; just being paranoid.
testAlignment = sectorAlignment;
for (i = 0; i < numParts; i++) {
if ((partitions[i].IsUsed()) && (partitions[i].GetFirstLBA() % sectorAlignment) != 0) {
if ((partitions[i].IsUsed()) && (partitions[i].GetFirstLBA() % testAlignment) != 0) {
cout << "\nCaution: Partition " << i + 1 << " doesn't begin on a "
<< sectorAlignment << "-sector boundary. This may\nresult "
<< testAlignment << "-sector boundary. This may\nresult "
<< "in degraded performance on some modern (2009 and later) hard disks.\n";
alignProbs++;
} // if
@@ -557,8 +641,8 @@ void GPTData::RebuildMainHeader(void) {
mainHeader.firstUsableLBA = secondHeader.firstUsableLBA;
mainHeader.lastUsableLBA = secondHeader.lastUsableLBA;
mainHeader.diskGUID = secondHeader.diskGUID;
mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA = UINT64_C(2);
mainHeader.numParts = secondHeader.numParts;
mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA = secondHeader.firstUsableLBA - GetTableSizeInSectors();
mainHeader.sizeOfPartitionEntries = secondHeader.sizeOfPartitionEntries;
mainHeader.partitionEntriesCRC = secondHeader.partitionEntriesCRC;
memcpy(mainHeader.reserved2, secondHeader.reserved2, sizeof(mainHeader.reserved2));
@@ -663,7 +747,7 @@ int GPTData::FindInsanePartitions(void) {
} // if
if (partitions[i].GetLastLBA() >= diskSize) {
problems++;
cout << "\nProblem: partition " << i + 1 << " is too big for the disk.\n";
cout << "\nProblem: partition " << i + 1 << " is too big for the disk.\n";
} // if
} // if
} // for
@@ -688,6 +772,7 @@ int GPTData::SetDisk(const string & deviceFilename) {
// store disk information....
diskSize = myDisk.DiskSize(&err);
blockSize = (uint32_t) myDisk.GetBlockSize();
physBlockSize = (uint32_t) myDisk.GetPhysBlockSize();
} // if
protectiveMBR.SetDisk(&myDisk);
protectiveMBR.SetDiskSize(diskSize);
@@ -753,7 +838,12 @@ int GPTData::LoadPartitions(const string & deviceFilename) {
<< "'sysctl kern.geom.debugflags=16' at a shell prompt, and re-running this\n"
<< "program.\n";
#endif
cout << "\n";
#if defined (__APPLE__)
cout << "You may need to deactivate System Integrity Protection to use this program. See\n"
<< "https://www.quora.com/How-do-I-turn-off-the-rootless-in-OS-X-El-Capitan-10-11\n"
<< "for more information.\n";
#endif
cout << "\n";
} // if
myDisk.Close(); // Close and re-open read-only in case of bugs
} else allOK = 0; // if
@@ -762,6 +852,7 @@ int GPTData::LoadPartitions(const string & deviceFilename) {
// store disk information....
diskSize = myDisk.DiskSize(&err);
blockSize = (uint32_t) myDisk.GetBlockSize();
physBlockSize = (uint32_t) myDisk.GetPhysBlockSize();
device = deviceFilename;
PartitionScan(); // Check for partition types, load GPT, & print summary
@@ -851,9 +942,8 @@ int GPTData::ForceLoadGPTData(void) {
} // if/else/if
// Figure out which partition table to load....
// Load the main partition table, since either its header's CRC is OK or the
// backup header's CRC is not OK....
if (mainCrcOk || !secondCrcOk) {
// Load the main partition table, if its header's CRC is OK
if (validHeaders != 2) {
if (LoadMainTable() == 0)
allOK = 0;
} else { // bad main header CRC and backup header CRC is OK
@@ -887,9 +977,27 @@ int GPTData::ForceLoadGPTData(void) {
} // if */
// Check for valid CRCs and warn if there are problems
if ((mainCrcOk == 0) || (secondCrcOk == 0) || (mainPartsCrcOk == 0) ||
if ((validHeaders != 3) || (mainPartsCrcOk == 0) ||
(secondPartsCrcOk == 0)) {
cerr << "Warning! One or more CRCs don't match. You should repair the disk!\n\n";
cerr << "Warning! One or more CRCs don't match. You should repair the disk!\n";
// Show detail status of header and table
if (validHeaders & 0x1)
cerr << "Main header: OK\n";
else
cerr << "Main header: ERROR\n";
if (validHeaders & 0x2)
cerr << "Backup header: OK\n";
else
cerr << "Backup header: ERROR\n";
if (mainPartsCrcOk)
cerr << "Main partition table: OK\n";
else
cerr << "Main partition table: ERROR\n";
if (secondPartsCrcOk)
cerr << "Backup partition table: OK\n";
else
cerr << "Backup partition table: ERROR\n";
cerr << "\n";
state = gpt_corrupt;
} // if
} else {
@@ -1147,7 +1255,7 @@ int GPTData::SaveGPTData(int quiet) {
// original partition table from its cache. OTOH, such restoration might be
// desirable if the error occurs later; but that seems unlikely unless the initial
// write fails....
if (syncIt && syncing)
if (syncIt)
myDisk.DiskSync();
if (allOK) { // writes completed OK
@@ -1379,9 +1487,7 @@ int GPTData::DestroyGPT(void) {
allOK = 0;
} // if
} // if
if (syncing) {
myDisk.DiskSync();
}
myDisk.DiskSync();
myDisk.Close();
cout << "GPT data structures destroyed! You may now partition the disk using fdisk or\n"
<< "other utilities.\n";
@@ -1440,9 +1546,16 @@ void GPTData::DisplayGPTData(void) {
cout << "Disk " << device << ": " << diskSize << " sectors, "
<< BytesToIeee(diskSize, blockSize) << "\n";
cout << "Logical sector size: " << blockSize << " bytes\n";
if (myDisk.GetModel() != "")
cout << "Model: " << myDisk.GetModel() << "\n";
if (physBlockSize > 0)
cout << "Sector size (logical/physical): " << blockSize << "/" << physBlockSize << " bytes\n";
else
cout << "Sector size (logical): " << blockSize << " bytes\n";
cout << "Disk identifier (GUID): " << mainHeader.diskGUID << "\n";
cout << "Partition table holds up to " << numParts << " entries\n";
cout << "Main partition table begins at sector " << mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA
<< " and ends at sector " << mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA + GetTableSizeInSectors() - 1 << "\n";
cout << "First usable sector is " << mainHeader.firstUsableLBA
<< ", last usable sector is " << mainHeader.lastUsableLBA << "\n";
totalFree = FindFreeBlocks(&i, &temp);
@@ -1540,7 +1653,7 @@ WhichToUse GPTData::UseWhichPartitions(void) {
} // if GPT corrupt
if (which == use_new)
cout << "Creating new GPT entries.\n";
cout << "Creating new GPT entries in memory.\n";
return which;
} // UseWhichPartitions()
@@ -1734,7 +1847,7 @@ int GPTData::SetGPTSize(uint32_t numEntries, int fillGPTSectors) {
partitions = newParts;
} // if/else existing partitions
numParts = numEntries;
mainHeader.firstUsableLBA = ((numEntries * GPT_SIZE) / blockSize) + (((numEntries * GPT_SIZE) % blockSize) != 0) + 2 ;
mainHeader.firstUsableLBA = GetTableSizeInSectors() + mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA;
secondHeader.firstUsableLBA = mainHeader.firstUsableLBA;
MoveSecondHeaderToEnd();
if (diskSize > 0)
@@ -1749,6 +1862,23 @@ int GPTData::SetGPTSize(uint32_t numEntries, int fillGPTSectors) {
return (allOK);
} // GPTData::SetGPTSize()
// Change the start sector for the main partition table.
// Returns 1 on success, 0 on failure
int GPTData::MoveMainTable(uint64_t pteSector) {
uint64_t pteSize = GetTableSizeInSectors();
int retval = 1;
if ((pteSector >= 2) && ((pteSector + pteSize) <= FindFirstUsedLBA())) {
mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA = pteSector;
mainHeader.firstUsableLBA = pteSector + pteSize;
RebuildSecondHeader();
} else {
cerr << "Unable to set the main partition table's location to " << pteSector << "!\n";
retval = 0;
} // if/else
return retval;
} // GPTData::MoveMainTable()
// Blank the partition array
void GPTData::BlankPartitions(void) {
uint32_t i;
@@ -1854,6 +1984,7 @@ int GPTData::ClearGPTData(void) {
mainHeader.currentLBA = UINT64_C(1);
mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA = (uint64_t) 2;
mainHeader.sizeOfPartitionEntries = GPT_SIZE;
mainHeader.firstUsableLBA = GetTableSizeInSectors() + mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA;
for (i = 0; i < GPT_RESERVED; i++) {
mainHeader.reserved2[i] = '\0';
} // for
@@ -2123,6 +2254,20 @@ uint64_t GPTData::FindFirstAvailable(uint64_t start) {
return (first);
} // GPTData::FindFirstAvailable()
// Returns the LBA of the start of the first partition on the disk (by
// sector number), or 0 if there are no partitions defined.
uint64_t GPTData::FindFirstUsedLBA(void) {
uint32_t i;
uint64_t firstFound = UINT64_MAX;
for (i = 0; i < numParts; i++) {
if ((partitions[i].IsUsed()) && (partitions[i].GetFirstLBA() < firstFound)) {
firstFound = partitions[i].GetFirstLBA();
} // if
} // for
return firstFound;
} // GPTData::FindFirstUsedLBA()
// Finds the first available sector in the largest block of unallocated
// space on the disk. Returns 0 if there are no available blocks left
uint64_t GPTData::FindFirstInLargest(void) {
@@ -2264,10 +2409,18 @@ int GPTData::IsUsedPartNum(uint32_t partNum) {
// Set partition alignment value; partitions will begin on multiples of
// the specified value
void GPTData::SetAlignment(uint32_t n) {
if (n > 0)
if (n > 0) {
sectorAlignment = n;
else
if ((physBlockSize > 0) && (n % (physBlockSize / blockSize) != 0)) {
cout << "Warning: Setting alignment to a value that does not match the disk's\n"
<< "physical block size! Performance degradation may result!\n"
<< "Physical block size = " << physBlockSize << "\n"
<< "Logical block size = " << blockSize << "\n"
<< "Optimal alignment = " << physBlockSize / blockSize << " or multiples thereof.\n";
} // if
} else {
cerr << "Attempt to set partition alignment to 0!\n";
} // if/else
} // GPTData::SetAlignment()
// Compute sector alignment based on the current partitions (if any). Each

13
gpt.h
View File

@@ -57,6 +57,7 @@ struct GPTHeader {
uint32_t partitionEntriesCRC;
unsigned char reserved2[GPT_RESERVED];
}; // struct GPTHeader
#pragma pack ()
// Data in GPT format
class GPTData {
@@ -68,11 +69,11 @@ protected:
MBRData protectiveMBR;
string device; // device filename
DiskIO myDisk;
uint32_t blockSize; // device block size
uint64_t diskSize; // size of device, in blocks
uint32_t blockSize; // device logical block size
uint32_t physBlockSize; // device physical block size (or 0 if it can't be determined)
uint64_t diskSize; // size of device, in logical blocks
GPTValidity state; // is GPT valid?
int justLooking; // Set to 1 if program launched with "-l" or if read-only
bool syncing; // Set to true if we should sync and reload the partition table
int mainCrcOk;
int secondCrcOk;
int mainPartsCrcOk;
@@ -91,6 +92,7 @@ protected:
public:
// Basic necessary functions....
GPTData(void);
GPTData(const GPTData &);
GPTData(string deviceFilename);
virtual ~GPTData(void);
GPTData & operator=(const GPTData & orig);
@@ -141,6 +143,7 @@ public:
// Adjust GPT structures WITHOUT user interaction...
int SetGPTSize(uint32_t numEntries, int fillGPTSectors = 1);
int MoveMainTable(uint64_t pteSector);
void BlankPartitions(void);
int DeletePartition(uint32_t partNum);
uint32_t CreatePartition(uint32_t partNum, uint64_t startSector, uint64_t endSector);
@@ -163,6 +166,8 @@ public:
int GetPartRange(uint32_t* low, uint32_t* high);
int FindFirstFreePart(void);
uint32_t GetNumParts(void) {return mainHeader.numParts;}
uint64_t GetTableSizeInSectors(void) {return (((numParts * GPT_SIZE) / blockSize) +
(((numParts * GPT_SIZE) % blockSize) != 0)); }
uint64_t GetMainHeaderLBA(void) {return mainHeader.currentLBA;}
uint64_t GetSecondHeaderLBA(void) {return secondHeader.currentLBA;}
uint64_t GetMainPartsLBA(void) {return mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA;}
@@ -177,6 +182,7 @@ public:
// Find information about free space
uint64_t FindFirstAvailable(uint64_t start = 0);
uint64_t FindFirstUsedLBA(void);
uint64_t FindFirstInLargest(void);
uint64_t FindLastAvailable();
uint64_t FindLastInFree(uint64_t start);
@@ -190,7 +196,6 @@ public:
uint32_t ComputeAlignment(void); // Set alignment based on current partitions
uint32_t GetAlignment(void) {return sectorAlignment;}
void JustLooking(int i = 1) {justLooking = i;}
void TurnOffSyncing() {syncing = 0;}
void BeQuiet(int i = 1) {beQuiet = i;}
WhichToUse WhichWasUsed(void) {return whichWasUsed;}

View File

@@ -63,7 +63,7 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
GPTData secondDevice;
int opt, numOptions = 0, saveData = 0, neverSaveData = 0;
int partNum = 0, newPartNum = -1, saveNonGPT = 1, retval = 0, pretend = 0;
uint64_t low, high, startSector, endSector, sSize;
uint64_t low, high, startSector, endSector, sSize, mainTableLBA;
uint64_t temp; // temporary variable; free to use in any case
char *device;
string cmd, typeGUID, name;
@@ -71,7 +71,8 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
struct poptOption theOptions[] =
{
{"attributes", 'A', POPT_ARG_STRING, &attributeOperation, 'A', "operate on partition attributes", "list|[partnum:show|or|nand|xor|=|set|clear|toggle|get[:bitnum|hexbitmask]]"},
{"attributes", 'A', POPT_ARG_STRING, &attributeOperation, 'A', "operate on partition attributes",
"list|[partnum:show|or|nand|xor|=|set|clear|toggle|get[:bitnum|hexbitmask]]"},
{"set-alignment", 'a', POPT_ARG_INT, &alignment, 'a', "set sector alignment", "value"},
{"backup", 'b', POPT_ARG_STRING, &backupFile, 'b', "backup GPT to file", "file"},
{"change-name", 'c', POPT_ARG_STRING, &partName, 'c', "change partition's name", "partnum:name"},
@@ -84,15 +85,16 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
{"first-aligned-in-largest", 'F', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'F', "show start of the largest free block, aligned", ""},
{"mbrtogpt", 'g', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'g', "convert MBR to GPT", ""},
{"randomize-guids", 'G', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'G', "randomize disk and partition GUIDs", ""},
{"hybrid", 'h', POPT_ARG_STRING, &hybrids, 'h', "create hybrid MBR", "partnum[:partnum...]"},
{"hybrid", 'h', POPT_ARG_STRING, &hybrids, 'h', "create hybrid MBR", "partnum[:partnum...][:EE]"},
{"info", 'i', POPT_ARG_INT, &infoPartNum, 'i', "show detailed information on partition", "partnum"},
{"skip-sync", 'j', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'j', "Don't atempt to sync and update the parittion table", ""},
{"move-main-table", 'j', POPT_ARG_INT, &mainTableLBA, 'j', "adjust the location of the main partition table", "sector"},
{"load-backup", 'l', POPT_ARG_STRING, &backupFile, 'l', "load GPT backup from file", "file"},
{"list-types", 'L', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'L', "list known partition types", ""},
{"gpttombr", 'm', POPT_ARG_STRING, &mbrParts, 'm', "convert GPT to MBR", "partnum[:partnum...]"},
{"new", 'n', POPT_ARG_STRING, &newPartInfo, 'n', "create new partition", "partnum:start:end"},
{"largest-new", 'N', POPT_ARG_INT, &largestPartNum, 'N', "create largest possible new partition", "partnum"},
{"clear", 'o', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'o', "clear partition table", ""},
{"print-mbr", 'O', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'O', "print MBR partition table", ""},
{"print", 'p', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'p', "print partition table", ""},
{"pretend", 'P', POPT_ARG_NONE, NULL, 'P', "make changes in memory, but don't write them", ""},
{"transpose", 'r', POPT_ARG_STRING, &twoParts, 'r', "transpose two partitions", "partnum:partnum"},
@@ -155,7 +157,7 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
if (LoadPartitions((string) device)) {
if ((WhichWasUsed() == use_mbr) || (WhichWasUsed() == use_bsd))
saveNonGPT = 0; // flag so we don't overwrite unless directed to do so
sSize = GetBlockSize();
sSize = GetBlockSize();
while ((opt = poptGetNextOpt(poptCon)) > 0) {
switch (opt) {
case 'A': {
@@ -200,7 +202,6 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
partNum = newPartNum;
cout << "partNum is " << partNum << "\n";
if ((partNum >= 0) && (partNum < (int) GetNumParts())) {
cout << "REALLY setting name!\n";
name = GetString(partName, 2);
if (SetName(partNum, (UnicodeString) name.c_str())) {
saveData = 1;
@@ -262,8 +263,13 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
ShowPartDetails(infoPartNum - 1);
break;
case 'j':
TurnOffSyncing();
break;
if (MoveMainTable(mainTableLBA)) {
JustLooking(0);
saveData = 1;
} else {
neverSaveData = 1;
} // if/else
break;
case 'l':
LoadBackupFile(backupFile, saveData, neverSaveData);
free(backupFile);
@@ -308,8 +314,8 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
startSector = FindFirstInLargest();
Align(&startSector);
endSector = FindLastInFree(startSector);
if (largestPartNum < 0)
largestPartNum = FindFirstFreePart();
if (largestPartNum <= 0)
largestPartNum = FindFirstFreePart() + 1;
if (CreatePartition(largestPartNum - 1, startSector, endSector)) {
saveData = 1;
} else {
@@ -323,6 +329,9 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
ClearGPTData();
saveData = 1;
break;
case 'O':
DisplayMBRData();
break;
case 'p':
DisplayGPTData();
break;
@@ -408,7 +417,7 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
if (!pretend) {
DestroyGPT();
} // if
saveNonGPT = 0;
saveNonGPT = 1;
saveData = 0;
break;
case 'Z':
@@ -416,7 +425,7 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
DestroyGPT();
DestroyMBR();
} // if
saveNonGPT = 0;
saveNonGPT = 1;
saveData = 0;
break;
default:
@@ -450,7 +459,7 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
if (!pretend) {
DestroyGPT();
} // if
saveNonGPT = 0;
saveNonGPT = 1;
saveData = 0;
break;
case 'Z':
@@ -458,7 +467,7 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
DestroyGPT();
DestroyMBR();
} // if
saveNonGPT = 0;
saveNonGPT = 1;
saveData = 0;
break;
} // switch
@@ -466,7 +475,8 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
retval = 2;
} // if/else loaded OK
if ((saveData) && (!neverSaveData) && (saveNonGPT) && (!pretend)) {
SaveGPTData(1);
if (!SaveGPTData(1))
retval = 4;
}
if (saveData && (!saveNonGPT)) {
cout << "Non-GPT disk; not saving changes. Use -g to override.\n";
@@ -484,16 +494,25 @@ int GPTDataCL::DoOptions(int argc, char* argv[]) {
// Create a hybrid or regular MBR from GPT data structures
int GPTDataCL::BuildMBR(char* argument, int isHybrid) {
int numParts, allOK = 1, i, origPartNum;
int eeLast, mbrNum = 0;
MBRPart newPart;
BasicMBRData newMBR;
if (argument != NULL) {
numParts = CountColons(argument) + 1;
if (isHybrid) {
eeLast = GetString(argument, numParts) == "EE";
if (eeLast) {
numParts--;
}
}
if (numParts <= (4 - isHybrid)) {
newMBR.SetDisk(GetDisk());
for (i = 0; i < numParts; i++) {
origPartNum = GetInt(argument, i + 1) - 1;
if (IsUsedPartNum(origPartNum) && (partitions[origPartNum].IsSizedForMBR() == MBR_SIZED_GOOD)) {
mbrNum = i + (isHybrid && ! eeLast);
newPart.SetInclusion(PRIMARY);
newPart.SetLocation(operator[](origPartNum).GetFirstLBA(),
operator[](origPartNum).GetLengthLBA());
@@ -504,18 +523,23 @@ int GPTDataCL::BuildMBR(char* argument, int isHybrid) {
if (typeRaw.count(origPartNum) == 1) {
newPart.SetType(typeRaw[origPartNum]);
}
newMBR.AddPart(i + isHybrid, newPart);
newMBR.AddPart(mbrNum, newPart);
} else {
cerr << "Original partition " << origPartNum + 1 << " does not exist or is too big! Aborting operation!\n";
allOK = 0;
} // if/else
} // for
if (isHybrid) {
if (eeLast) {
mbrNum = i;
} else {
mbrNum = 0;
}
newPart.SetInclusion(PRIMARY);
newPart.SetLocation(1, newMBR.FindLastInFree(1));
newPart.SetStatus(0);
newPart.SetType(0xEE);
newMBR.AddPart(0, newPart);
newMBR.AddPart(mbrNum, newPart);
} // if
if (allOK)
SetProtectiveMBR(newMBR);

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
/*
* Implementation of GPTData class derivative with curses-based text-mode
* interaction
* Copyright (C) 2011-2013 Roderick W. Smith
* Copyright (C) 2011-2018 Roderick W. Smith
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
@@ -19,6 +19,7 @@
*
*/
#include <clocale>
#include <iostream>
#include <string>
#include <sstream>
@@ -332,7 +333,7 @@ void GPTDataCurses::ShowInfo(int partNum) {
BytesToIeee(partitions[partNum].GetFirstLBA(), blockSize).c_str());
printw("Last sector: %lld (at %s)\n", partitions[partNum].GetLastLBA(),
BytesToIeee(partitions[partNum].GetLastLBA(), blockSize).c_str());
size = partitions[partNum].GetLastLBA() - partitions[partNum].GetFirstLBA();
size = partitions[partNum].GetLastLBA() - partitions[partNum].GetFirstLBA() + 1;
printw("Partition size: %lld sectors (%s)\n", size, BytesToIeee(size, blockSize).c_str());
printw("Attribute flags: %016x\n", partitions[partNum].GetAttributes().GetAttributes());
#ifdef USE_UTF16
@@ -394,6 +395,7 @@ void GPTDataCurses::ChangeType(int partNum) {
// Sets the partition alignment value
void GPTDataCurses::SetAlignment(void) {
int alignment;
char conversion_specifier[] = "%d";
move(LINES - 4, 0);
clrtobot();
@@ -402,7 +404,7 @@ void GPTDataCurses::SetAlignment(void) {
move(LINES - 3, 0);
printw("Type new alignment value, in sectors: ");
echo();
scanw("%d", &alignment);
scanw(conversion_specifier, &alignment);
noecho();
} while ((alignment == 0) || (alignment > MAX_ALIGNMENT));
GPTData::SetAlignment(alignment);

View File

@@ -1,7 +1,7 @@
/*
* Implementation of GPTData class derivative with curses-based text-mode
* interaction
* Copyright (C) 2011-2013 Roderick W. Smith
* Copyright (C) 2011-2018 Roderick W. Smith
*
* This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
* it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by

View File

@@ -4,7 +4,7 @@
// Description: Class to implement a SINGLE GPT partition
//
//
// Author: Rod Smith <rodsmith@rodsbooks.com>, (C) 2009-2013
// Author: Rod Smith <rodsmith@rodsbooks.com>, (C) 2009-2018
//
// Copyright: See COPYING file that comes with this distribution
//
@@ -40,6 +40,15 @@ GPTPart::GPTPart(void) {
memset(name, 0, NAME_SIZE * sizeof(name[0]) );
} // Default constructor
GPTPart::GPTPart(const GPTPart & orig) {
partitionType = orig.partitionType;
uniqueGUID = orig.uniqueGUID;
firstLBA = orig.firstLBA;
lastLBA = orig.lastLBA;
attributes = orig.attributes;
memcpy(name, orig.name, NAME_SIZE * sizeof( name[ 0 ] ) );
} // Copy constructor
GPTPart::~GPTPart(void) {
} // destructor

View File

@@ -53,6 +53,7 @@ class GPTPart {
uint16_t name[NAME_SIZE];
public:
GPTPart(void);
GPTPart(const GPTPart &);
~GPTPart(void);
// Simple data retrieval:

View File

@@ -1,5 +1,5 @@
/*
Copyright (C) 2010-2013 <Roderick W. Smith>
Copyright (C) 2010-2018 <Roderick W. Smith>
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
@@ -132,7 +132,7 @@ int GPTDataTextUI::XFormDisklabel(void) {
numDone = GPTData::XFormDisklabel(partNum);
return numDone;
} // GPTData::XFormDisklabel(void)
} // GPTDataTextUI::XFormDisklabel(void)
/*********************************************************************
@@ -179,6 +179,24 @@ void GPTDataTextUI::ResizePartitionTable(void) {
SetGPTSize(newSize);
} // GPTDataTextUI::ResizePartitionTable()
// Move the main partition table (to enable some SoC boot loaders to place
// code at sector 2, for instance).
void GPTDataTextUI::MoveMainTable(void) {
uint64_t newStart, pteSize = GetTableSizeInSectors();
uint64_t maxValue = FindFirstUsedLBA() - pteSize;
ostringstream prompt;
cout << "Currently, main partition table begins at sector " << mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA
<< " and ends at sector " << mainHeader.partitionEntriesLBA + pteSize - 1 << "\n";
prompt << "Enter new starting location (2 to " << maxValue << "; default is 2; 1 to abort): ";
newStart = GetNumber(1, maxValue, 2, prompt.str());
if (newStart != 1) {
GPTData::MoveMainTable(newStart);
} else {
cout << "Aborting change!\n";
} // if
} // GPTDataTextUI::MoveMainTable()
// Interactively create a partition
void GPTDataTextUI::CreatePartition(void) {
uint64_t firstBlock, firstInLargest, lastBlock, sector, origSector;
@@ -811,6 +829,9 @@ void GPTDataTextUI::ExpertsMenu(string filename) {
case 'i': case 'I':
ShowDetails();
break;
case 'j': case 'J':
MoveMainTable();
break;
case 'l': case 'L':
prompt.seekp(0);
prompt << "Enter the sector alignment value (1-" << MAX_ALIGNMENT << ", default = "
@@ -878,9 +899,11 @@ void GPTDataTextUI::ShowExpertCommands(void) {
cout << "c\tchange partition GUID\n";
cout << "d\tdisplay the sector alignment value\n";
cout << "e\trelocate backup data structures to the end of the disk\n";
cout << "f\trandomize disk and partition unique GUIDs\n";
cout << "g\tchange disk GUID\n";
cout << "h\trecompute CHS values in protective/hybrid MBR\n";
cout << "i\tshow detailed information on a partition\n";
cout << "j\tmove the main partition table\n";
cout << "l\tset the sector alignment value\n";
cout << "m\treturn to main menu\n";
cout << "n\tcreate a new protective MBR\n";

View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
/*
Implementation of GPTData class derivative with basic text-mode interaction
Copyright (C) 2010-2013 Roderick W. Smith
Copyright (C) 2010-2018 Roderick W. Smith
This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
@@ -42,6 +42,7 @@ class GPTDataTextUI : public GPTData {
// Request information from the user (& possibly do something with it)
uint32_t GetPartNum(void);
void ResizePartitionTable(void);
void MoveMainTable(void);
void CreatePartition(void);
void DeletePartition(void);
void ChangePartType(void);

7
mbr.cc
View File

@@ -30,11 +30,8 @@ using namespace std;
* *
****************************************/
/* // Assignment operator -- copy entire set of MBR data.
MBRData & MBRData::operator=(const MBRData & orig) {
BasicMBRData::operator=(orig);
return *this;
} // MBRData::operator=() */
MBRData::~MBRData(void) {
} // MBRData destructor
// Assignment operator -- copy entire set of MBR data.
MBRData & MBRData::operator=(const BasicMBRData & orig) {

1
mbr.h
View File

@@ -28,6 +28,7 @@ public:
MBRData(void) {}
MBRData(string deviceFilename) : BasicMBRData(deviceFilename) {}
MBRData & operator=(const BasicMBRData & orig);
~MBRData(void);
// Functions to create, delete, or change partitions
// Pass EmptyMBR 1 to clear the boot loader code, 0 to leave it intact

View File

@@ -50,6 +50,7 @@ struct MBRRecord {
uint32_t firstLBA; // see above
uint32_t lengthLBA;
}; // struct MBRRecord
#pragma pack ()
class MBRPart {
protected:

View File

@@ -2,7 +2,7 @@
// Class to manage partition type codes -- a slight variant on MBR type
// codes, GUID type codes, and associated names.
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2014 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2018 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
under the terms of the GNU GPL version 2, as detailed in the COPYING file. */
#define __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS
@@ -22,6 +22,10 @@ int PartType::numInstances = 0;
AType* PartType::allTypes = NULL;
AType* PartType::lastType = NULL;
#define SCREEN_WIDTH 80
#define NUM_COLUMNS 2
#define DESC_LENGTH (SCREEN_WIDTH - (6 * NUM_COLUMNS)) / NUM_COLUMNS
// Constructor. Its main task is to initialize the data list, but only
// if this is the first instance, since it's a static linked list.
// Partition type codes are MBR type codes multiplied by 0x0100, with
@@ -95,16 +99,20 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
// Open Network Install Environment (ONIE) specific types.
// See http://www.onie.org/ and
// https://github.com/onie/onie/blob/master/rootconf/x86_64/sysroot-lib-onie/onie-blkdev-common
// https://github.com/opencomputeproject/onie/blob/master/patches/gptfdisk/add-onie-partition-types.patch
AddType(0x3000, "7412F7D5-A156-4B13-81DC-867174929325", "ONIE boot");
AddType(0x3001, "D4E6E2CD-4469-46F3-B5CB-1BFF57AFC149", "ONIE config");
// Plan 9; see http://man.cat-v.org/9front/8/prep
AddType(0x3900, "C91818F9-8025-47AF-89D2-F030D7000C2C", "Plan 9");
// PowerPC reference platform boot partition
AddType(0x4100, "9E1A2D38-C612-4316-AA26-8B49521E5A8B", "PowerPC PReP boot");
// Windows LDM ("dynamic disk") types
AddType(0x4200, "AF9B60A0-1431-4F62-BC68-3311714A69AD", "Windows LDM data"); // Logical disk manager
AddType(0x4201, "5808C8AA-7E8F-42E0-85D2-E1E90434CFB3", "Windows LDM metadata"); // Logical disk manager
AddType(0x4202, "E75CAF8F-F680-4CEE-AFA3-B001E56EFC2D", "Windows Storage Spaces"); // A newer LDM-type setup
// An oddball IBM filesystem....
AddType(0x7501, "37AFFC90-EF7D-4E96-91C3-2D7AE055B174", "IBM GPFS"); // General Parallel File System (GPFS)
@@ -123,13 +131,24 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
AddType(0x8200, "0657FD6D-A4AB-43C4-84E5-0933C84B4F4F", "Linux swap"); // Linux swap (or Solaris on MBR)
AddType(0x8300, "0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4", "Linux filesystem"); // Linux native
AddType(0x8301, "8DA63339-0007-60C0-C436-083AC8230908", "Linux reserved");
// See http://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-gpt-auto-generator.html
// and http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/DiscoverablePartitionsSpec/
// See https://www.freedesktop.org/software/systemd/man/systemd-gpt-auto-generator.html
// and https://systemd.io/DISCOVERABLE_PARTITIONS
AddType(0x8302, "933AC7E1-2EB4-4F13-B844-0E14E2AEF915", "Linux /home"); // Linux /home (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8303, "44479540-F297-41B2-9AF7-D131D5F0458A", "Linux x86 root (/)"); // Linux / on x86 (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8304, "4F68BCE3-E8CD-4DB1-96E7-FBCAF984B709", "Linux x86-64 root (/)"); // Linux / on x86-64 (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8305, "B921B045-1DF0-41C3-AF44-4C6F280D3FAE", "Linux ARM64 root (/)"); // Linux / on 64-bit ARM (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8306, "3B8F8425-20E0-4F3B-907F-1A25A76F98E8", "Linux /srv"); // Linux /srv (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8307, "69DAD710-2CE4-4E3C-B16C-21A1D49ABED3", "Linux ARM32 root (/)"); // Linux / on 32-bit ARM (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8308, "7FFEC5C9-2D00-49B7-8941-3EA10A5586B7", "Linux dm-crypt");
AddType(0x8309, "CA7D7CCB-63ED-4C53-861C-1742536059CC", "Linux LUKS");
AddType(0x830A, "993D8D3D-F80E-4225-855A-9DAF8ED7EA97", "Linux IA-64 root (/)"); // Linux / on Itanium (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x830B, "D13C5D3B-B5D1-422A-B29F-9454FDC89D76", "Linux x86 root verity");
AddType(0x830C, "2C7357ED-EBD2-46D9-AEC1-23D437EC2BF5", "Linux x86-64 root verity");
AddType(0x830D, "7386CDF2-203C-47A9-A498-F2ECCE45A2D6", "Linux ARM32 root verity");
AddType(0x830E, "DF3300CE-D69F-4C92-978C-9BFB0F38D820", "Linux ARM64 root verity");
AddType(0x830F, "86ED10D5-B607-45BB-8957-D350F23D0571", "Linux IA-64 root verity");
AddType(0x8310, "4D21B016-B534-45C2-A9FB-5C16E091FD2D", "Linux /var"); // Linux /var (auto-mounted by systemd)
AddType(0x8311, "7EC6F557-3BC5-4ACA-B293-16EF5DF639D1", "Linux /var/tmp"); // Linux /var/tmp (auto-mounted by systemd)
// Used by Intel Rapid Start technology
AddType(0x8400, "D3BFE2DE-3DAF-11DF-BA40-E3A556D89593", "Intel Rapid Start");
@@ -137,6 +156,78 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
// Another Linux type code....
AddType(0x8e00, "E6D6D379-F507-44C2-A23C-238F2A3DF928", "Linux LVM");
// Android type codes....
// from Wikipedia, https://gist.github.com/culots/704afd126dec2f45c22d0c9d42cb7fab,
// and my own Android devices' partition tables
AddType(0xa000, "2568845D-2332-4675-BC39-8FA5A4748D15", "Android bootloader");
AddType(0xa001, "114EAFFE-1552-4022-B26E-9B053604CF84", "Android bootloader 2");
AddType(0xa002, "49A4D17F-93A3-45C1-A0DE-F50B2EBE2599", "Android boot 1");
AddType(0xa003, "4177C722-9E92-4AAB-8644-43502BFD5506", "Android recovery 1");
AddType(0xa004, "EF32A33B-A409-486C-9141-9FFB711F6266", "Android misc");
AddType(0xa005, "20AC26BE-20B7-11E3-84C5-6CFDB94711E9", "Android metadata");
AddType(0xa006, "38F428E6-D326-425D-9140-6E0EA133647C", "Android system 1");
AddType(0xa007, "A893EF21-E428-470A-9E55-0668FD91A2D9", "Android cache");
AddType(0xa008, "DC76DDA9-5AC1-491C-AF42-A82591580C0D", "Android data");
AddType(0xa009, "EBC597D0-2053-4B15-8B64-E0AAC75F4DB1", "Android persistent");
AddType(0xa00a, "8F68CC74-C5E5-48DA-BE91-A0C8C15E9C80", "Android factory");
AddType(0xa00b, "767941D0-2085-11E3-AD3B-6CFDB94711E9", "Android fastboot/tertiary");
AddType(0xa00c, "AC6D7924-EB71-4DF8-B48D-E267B27148FF", "Android OEM");
AddType(0xa00d, "C5A0AEEC-13EA-11E5-A1B1-001E67CA0C3C", "Android vendor");
AddType(0xa00e, "BD59408B-4514-490D-BF12-9878D963F378", "Android config");
AddType(0xa00f, "9FDAA6EF-4B3F-40D2-BA8D-BFF16BFB887B", "Android factory (alt)");
AddType(0xa010, "19A710A2-B3CA-11E4-B026-10604B889DCF", "Android meta");
AddType(0xa011, "193D1EA4-B3CA-11E4-B075-10604B889DCF", "Android EXT");
AddType(0xa012, "DEA0BA2C-CBDD-4805-B4F9-F428251C3E98", "Android SBL1");
AddType(0xa013, "8C6B52AD-8A9E-4398-AD09-AE916E53AE2D", "Android SBL2");
AddType(0xa014, "05E044DF-92F1-4325-B69E-374A82E97D6E", "Android SBL3");
AddType(0xa015, "400FFDCD-22E0-47E7-9A23-F16ED9382388", "Android APPSBL");
AddType(0xa016, "A053AA7F-40B8-4B1C-BA08-2F68AC71A4F4", "Android QSEE/tz");
AddType(0xa017, "E1A6A689-0C8D-4CC6-B4E8-55A4320FBD8A", "Android QHEE/hyp");
AddType(0xa018, "098DF793-D712-413D-9D4E-89D711772228", "Android RPM");
AddType(0xa019, "D4E0D938-B7FA-48C1-9D21-BC5ED5C4B203", "Android WDOG debug/sdi");
AddType(0xa01a, "20A0C19C-286A-42FA-9CE7-F64C3226A794", "Android DDR");
AddType(0xa01b, "A19F205F-CCD8-4B6D-8F1E-2D9BC24CFFB1", "Android CDT");
AddType(0xa01c, "66C9B323-F7FC-48B6-BF96-6F32E335A428", "Android RAM dump");
AddType(0xa01d, "303E6AC3-AF15-4C54-9E9B-D9A8FBECF401", "Android SEC");
AddType(0xa01e, "C00EEF24-7709-43D6-9799-DD2B411E7A3C", "Android PMIC");
AddType(0xa01f, "82ACC91F-357C-4A68-9C8F-689E1B1A23A1", "Android misc 1");
AddType(0xa020, "E2802D54-0545-E8A1-A1E8-C7A3E245ACD4", "Android misc 2");
AddType(0xa021, "65ADDCF4-0C5C-4D9A-AC2D-D90B5CBFCD03", "Android device info");
AddType(0xa022, "E6E98DA2-E22A-4D12-AB33-169E7DEAA507", "Android APDP");
AddType(0xa023, "ED9E8101-05FA-46B7-82AA-8D58770D200B", "Android MSADP");
AddType(0xa024, "11406F35-1173-4869-807B-27DF71802812", "Android DPO");
AddType(0xa025, "9D72D4E4-9958-42DA-AC26-BEA7A90B0434", "Android recovery 2");
AddType(0xa026, "6C95E238-E343-4BA8-B489-8681ED22AD0B", "Android persist");
AddType(0xa027, "EBBEADAF-22C9-E33B-8F5D-0E81686A68CB", "Android modem ST1");
AddType(0xa028, "0A288B1F-22C9-E33B-8F5D-0E81686A68CB", "Android modem ST2");
AddType(0xa029, "57B90A16-22C9-E33B-8F5D-0E81686A68CB", "Android FSC");
AddType(0xa02a, "638FF8E2-22C9-E33B-8F5D-0E81686A68CB", "Android FSG 1");
AddType(0xa02b, "2013373E-1AC4-4131-BFD8-B6A7AC638772", "Android FSG 2");
AddType(0xa02c, "2C86E742-745E-4FDD-BFD8-B6A7AC638772", "Android SSD");
AddType(0xa02d, "DE7D4029-0F5B-41C8-AE7E-F6C023A02B33", "Android keystore");
AddType(0xa02e, "323EF595-AF7A-4AFA-8060-97BE72841BB9", "Android encrypt");
AddType(0xa02f, "45864011-CF89-46E6-A445-85262E065604", "Android EKSST");
AddType(0xa030, "8ED8AE95-597F-4C8A-A5BD-A7FF8E4DFAA9", "Android RCT");
AddType(0xa031, "DF24E5ED-8C96-4B86-B00B-79667DC6DE11", "Android spare1");
AddType(0xa032, "7C29D3AD-78B9-452E-9DEB-D098D542F092", "Android spare2");
AddType(0xa033, "379D107E-229E-499D-AD4F-61F5BCF87BD4", "Android spare3");
AddType(0xa034, "0DEA65E5-A676-4CDF-823C-77568B577ED5", "Android spare4");
AddType(0xa035, "4627AE27-CFEF-48A1-88FE-99C3509ADE26", "Android raw resources");
AddType(0xa036, "20117F86-E985-4357-B9EE-374BC1D8487D", "Android boot 2");
AddType(0xa037, "86A7CB80-84E1-408C-99AB-694F1A410FC7", "Android FOTA");
AddType(0xa038, "97D7B011-54DA-4835-B3C4-917AD6E73D74", "Android system 2");
AddType(0xa039, "5594C694-C871-4B5F-90B1-690A6F68E0F7", "Android cache");
AddType(0xa03a, "1B81E7E6-F50D-419B-A739-2AEEF8DA3335", "Android user data");
AddType(0xa03b, "98523EC6-90FE-4C67-B50A-0FC59ED6F56D", "LG (Android) advanced flasher");
AddType(0xa03c, "2644BCC0-F36A-4792-9533-1738BED53EE3", "Android PG1FS");
AddType(0xa03d, "DD7C91E9-38C9-45C5-8A12-4A80F7E14057", "Android PG2FS");
AddType(0xa03e, "7696D5B6-43FD-4664-A228-C563C4A1E8CC", "Android board info");
AddType(0xa03f, "0D802D54-058D-4A20-AD2D-C7A362CEACD4", "Android MFG");
AddType(0xa040, "10A0C19C-516A-5444-5CE3-664C3226A794", "Android limits");
// Atari TOS partition type
AddType(0xa200, "734E5AFE-F61A-11E6-BC64-92361F002671", "Atari TOS basic data");
// FreeBSD partition types....
// Note: Rather than extract FreeBSD disklabel data, convert FreeBSD
// partitions in-place, and let FreeBSD sort out the details....
@@ -155,6 +246,9 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
AddType(0xa584, "85D5E45D-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7", "Midnight BSD ZFS");
AddType(0xa585, "85D5E45C-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7", "Midnight BSD Vinum");
// OpenBSD partition type....
AddType(0xa600, "824CC7A0-36A8-11E3-890A-952519AD3F61", "OpenBSD disklabel");
// A MacOS partition type, separated from others by NetBSD partition types...
AddType(0xa800, "55465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple UFS"); // Mac OS X
@@ -169,13 +263,24 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
AddType(0xa906, "49F48DAA-B10E-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648", "NetBSD RAID");
// Mac OS partition types (See also 0xa800, above)....
AddType(0xab00, "426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple boot");
AddType(0xab00, "426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Recovery HD");
AddType(0xaf00, "48465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple HFS/HFS+");
AddType(0xaf01, "52414944-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple RAID");
AddType(0xaf02, "52414944-5F4F-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple RAID offline");
AddType(0xaf03, "4C616265-6C00-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple label");
AddType(0xaf04, "5265636F-7665-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "AppleTV recovery");
AddType(0xaf05, "53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple Core Storage");
AddType(0xaf06, "B6FA30DA-92D2-4A9A-96F1-871EC6486200", "Apple SoftRAID Status");
AddType(0xaf07, "2E313465-19B9-463F-8126-8A7993773801", "Apple SoftRAID Scratch");
AddType(0xaf08, "FA709C7E-65B1-4593-BFD5-E71D61DE9B02", "Apple SoftRAID Volume");
AddType(0xaf09, "BBBA6DF5-F46F-4A89-8F59-8765B2727503", "Apple SoftRAID Cache");
AddType(0xaf0a, "7C3457EF-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC", "Apple APFS");
// QNX Power-Safe (QNX6)
AddType(0xb300, "CEF5A9AD-73BC-4601-89F3-CDEEEEE321A1", "QNX6 Power-Safe");
// Acronis Secure Zone
AddType(0xbc00, "0311FC50-01CA-4725-AD77-9ADBB20ACE98", "Acronis Secure Zone");
// Solaris partition types (one of which is shared with MacOS)
AddType(0xbe00, "6A82CB45-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631", "Solaris boot");
@@ -197,6 +302,10 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
AddType(0xc001, "75894C1E-3AEB-11D3-B7C1-7B03A0000000", "HP-UX data");
AddType(0xc002, "E2A1E728-32E3-11D6-A682-7B03A0000000", "HP-UX service");
// Open Network Install Environment (ONIE) partitions....
AddType(0xe100, "7412F7D5-A156-4B13-81DC-867174929325", "ONIE boot");
AddType(0xe101, "D4E6E2CD-4469-46F3-B5CB-1BFF57AFC149", "ONIE config");
// See http://www.freedesktop.org/wiki/Specifications/BootLoaderSpec
AddType(0xea00, "BC13C2FF-59E6-4262-A352-B275FD6F7172", "Freedesktop $BOOT");
@@ -208,17 +317,36 @@ void PartType::AddAllTypes(void) {
AddType(0xed01, "BFBFAFE7-A34F-448A-9A5B-6213EB736C22", "Lenovo system partition");
// EFI system and related partitions
AddType(0xef00, "C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B", "EFI System"); // Parted identifies these as having the "boot flag" set
AddType(0xef00, "C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B", "EFI system partition"); // Parted identifies these as having the "boot flag" set
AddType(0xef01, "024DEE41-33E7-11D3-9D69-0008C781F39F", "MBR partition scheme"); // Used to nest MBR in GPT
AddType(0xef02, "21686148-6449-6E6F-744E-656564454649", "BIOS boot partition"); // Used by GRUB
// Ceph type codes; see https://github.com/ceph/ceph/blob/9bcc42a3e6b08521694b5c0228b2c6ed7b3d312e/src/ceph-disk#L76-L81
// and Wikipedia
AddType(0xf800, "4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-062C0CEFF05D", "Ceph OSD"); // Ceph Object Storage Daemon
AddType(0xf801, "4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-5EC00CEFF05D", "Ceph dm-crypt OSD"); // Ceph Object Storage Daemon (encrypted)
AddType(0xf802, "BFBFAFE7-A34F-448A-9A5B-6213EB736C22", "Ceph journal");
AddType(0xf802, "45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-B4B80CEFF106", "Ceph journal");
AddType(0xf803, "45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-5EC00CEFF106", "Ceph dm-crypt journal");
AddType(0xf804, "89C57F98-2FE5-4DC0-89C1-F3AD0CEFF2BE", "Ceph disk in creation");
AddType(0xf805, "89C57F98-2FE5-4DC0-89C1-5EC00CEFF2BE", "Ceph dm-crypt disk in creation");
AddType(0xf806, "CAFECAFE-9B03-4F30-B4C6-B4B80CEFF106", "Ceph block");
AddType(0xf807, "30CD0809-C2B2-499C-8879-2D6B78529876", "Ceph block DB");
AddType(0xf808, "5CE17FCE-4087-4169-B7FF-056CC58473F9", "Ceph block write-ahead log");
AddType(0xf809, "FB3AABF9-D25F-47CC-BF5E-721D1816496B", "Ceph lockbox for dm-crypt keys");
AddType(0xf80a, "4FBD7E29-8AE0-4982-BF9D-5A8D867AF560", "Ceph multipath OSD");
AddType(0xf80b, "45B0969E-8AE0-4982-BF9D-5A8D867AF560", "Ceph multipath journal");
AddType(0xf80c, "CAFECAFE-8AE0-4982-BF9D-5A8D867AF560", "Ceph multipath block 1");
AddType(0xf80d, "7F4A666A-16F3-47A2-8445-152EF4D03F6C", "Ceph multipath block 2");
AddType(0xf80e, "EC6D6385-E346-45DC-BE91-DA2A7C8B3261", "Ceph multipath block DB");
AddType(0xf80f, "01B41E1B-002A-453C-9F17-88793989FF8F", "Ceph multipath block write-ahead log");
AddType(0xf810, "CAFECAFE-9B03-4F30-B4C6-5EC00CEFF106", "Ceph dm-crypt block");
AddType(0xf811, "93B0052D-02D9-4D8A-A43B-33A3EE4DFBC3", "Ceph dm-crypt block DB");
AddType(0xf812, "306E8683-4FE2-4330-B7C0-00A917C16966", "Ceph dm-crypt block write-ahead log");
AddType(0xf813, "45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-35865CEFF106", "Ceph dm-crypt LUKS journal");
AddType(0xf814, "CAFECAFE-9B03-4F30-B4C6-35865CEFF106", "Ceph dm-crypt LUKS block");
AddType(0xf815, "166418DA-C469-4022-ADF4-B30AFD37F176", "Ceph dm-crypt LUKS block DB");
AddType(0xf816, "86A32090-3647-40B9-BBBD-38D8C573AA86", "Ceph dm-crypt LUKS block write-ahead log");
AddType(0xf817, "4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-35865CEFF05D", "Ceph dm-crypt LUKS OSD");
// VMWare ESX partition types codes
AddType(0xfb00, "AA31E02A-400F-11DB-9590-000C2911D1B8", "VMWare VMFS");
@@ -381,23 +509,32 @@ uint16_t PartType::GetHexType() const {
// it stops at under 80 columns; on narrower displays, lines will wrap
// in an ugly way. The maxLines value is the maximum number of lines
// to display before prompting to continue, or 0 (or a negative value)
// for no limit.
// for no limit. If (maxLines > 0), this function will prompt for a
// substring to search for in the partition type description, so it's
// imperative that maxLines be set to 0 in non-interactive contexts
// (namely, sgdisk).
void PartType::ShowAllTypes(int maxLines) const {
int colCount = 1, lineCount = 1;
size_t i;
AType* thisType = allTypes;
string line;
string line, matchString = "";
size_t found;
cout.unsetf(ios::uppercase);
if (maxLines > 0) {
cout << "Type search string, or <Enter> to show all codes: ";
matchString = ReadString();
} // if
while (thisType != NULL) {
if (thisType->display == 1) { // show it
found = thisType->name.find(matchString);
if ((thisType->display == 1) && (found != string::npos)) { // show it
cout.fill('0');
cout.width(4);
cout << hex << thisType->MBRType << " ";
cout << thisType->name.substr(0, 20);
for (i = 0; i < (20 - (thisType->name.substr(0, 20).length())); i++)
cout << thisType->name.substr(0, DESC_LENGTH);
for (i = 0; i < (DESC_LENGTH - (thisType->name.substr(0, DESC_LENGTH).length())); i++)
cout << " ";
if ((colCount % 3) == 0) {
if ((colCount % NUM_COLUMNS) == 0) {
if (thisType->next) {
cout << "\n";
if ((maxLines > 0) && (lineCount++ % maxLines) == 0) {

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2013 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2018 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
under the terms of the GNU GPL version 2, as detailed in the COPYING file. */
#include <stdint.h>

103
sgdisk.8
View File

@@ -1,6 +1,6 @@
.\" Copyright 2011-2013 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" Copyright 2011-2018 Roderick W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)
.\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License
.TH "SGDISK" "8" "0.8.10" "Roderick W. Smith" "GPT fdisk Manual"
.TH "SGDISK" "8" "1.0.4" "Roderick W. Smith" "GPT fdisk Manual"
.SH "NAME"
sgdisk \- Command\-line GUID partition table (GPT) manipulator for Linux and Unix
.SH "SYNOPSIS"
@@ -87,19 +87,21 @@ and in whatever sizes are desired.
.TP
.B *
Boot disks for EFI\-based systems require an \fIEFI System
Partition\fR (\fBsgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF00) formatted as FAT\-32.
The recommended size of this partition is between 100 and 300 MiB.
Boot\-related files are stored here. (Note that GNU Parted identifies
such partitions as having the "boot flag" set.)
Boot disks for EFI\-based systems require an \fIEFI System Partition\fR
(\fBgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF00) formatted as FAT\-32. I recommended
making this partition 550 MiB. (Smaller ESPs are common, but some EFIs have
flaky FAT drivers that necessitate a larger partition for reliable
operation.) Boot\-related files are stored here. (Note that GNU Parted
identifies such partitions as having the "boot flag" set.)
.TP
.B *
Some boot loaders for BIOS\-based systems make use of a \fIBIOS Boot
Partition\fR (\fBsgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF02), in which the secondary
boot loader is stored, possibly without the benefit of a filesystem. This
partition can typically be quite small (roughly 32 to 200 KiB), but you
should consult your boot loader documentation for details.
Partition\fR (\fBgdisk\fR internal code 0xEF02), in which the secondary
boot loader is stored, possibly without the benefit of a filesystem. (GRUB2
may optionally use such a partition.) This partition can typically be quite
small (roughly 32 to 200 KiB, although 1 MiB is more common in practice),
but you should consult your boot loader documentation for details.
.TP
.B *
@@ -148,11 +150,11 @@ sibling. Options available in \fBsgdisk\fR are:
.TP
.B \-a, \-\-set\-alignment=value
Set the sector alignment multiple. GPT fdisk aligns the start of partitions
to sectors that are multiples of this value, which defaults to 2048 on
freshly formatted disks. This alignment value is necessary to obtain optimum
performance with Western Digital Advanced Format and similar drives with larger
physical than logical sector sizes, with some types of RAID arrays, and
with SSD devices.
to sectors that are multiples of this value, which defaults to 1 MiB (2048
on disks with 512-byte sectors) on freshly formatted disks. This alignment
value is necessary to obtain optimum performance with Western Digital
Advanced Format and similar drives with larger physical than logical sector
sizes, with some types of RAID arrays, and with SSD devices.
.TP
.B \-A, \-\-attributes=list|[partnum:show|or|nand|xor|=|set|clear|toggle|get[:bitnum|hexbitmask]]
@@ -217,7 +219,7 @@ of the sector value reported by this option. You can change the alignment value
with the \-a option.
.TP
.B e, \-\-move\-second\-header
.B \-e, \-\-move\-second\-header
Move backup GPT data structures to the end of the disk. Use this option if
you've added disks to a RAID array, thus creating a virtual disk with space
that follows the backup GPT data structures. This command moves the backup
@@ -262,13 +264,13 @@ in order to render all GUIDs once again unique.
.TP
.B \-h, \-\-hybrid
Create a hybrid MBR. This option takes from one to three partition numbers,
separated by colons, as arguments. The created hybrid MBR places an EFI GPT
(type 0xEE) partition first in the table, followed by the partition(s) you
specify. Their type codes are based on the GPT fdisk type codes divided by
0x0100, which is usually correct for Windows partitions. If the
active/bootable flag should be set, you must do so in another program, such
as \fBfdisk\fR. The \fBgdisk\fR program offers additional hybrid MBR
creation options.
separated by colons, as arguments. You may optionally specify a final partition
"EE" to indicate that the EFI GPT (type 0xEE) should be placed last in the table,
otherwise it will be placed first, followed by the partition(s) you specify.
Their type codes are based on the GPT fdisk type codes divided by 0x0100, which
is usually correct for Windows partitions. If the active/bootable flag should
be set, you must do so in another program, such as \fBfdisk\fR. The \fBgdisk\fR
program offers additional hybrid MBR creation options.
.TP
.B \-i, \-\-info=partnum
@@ -278,6 +280,14 @@ unique GUID and the translation of \fBsgdisk\fR's
internal partition type code to a plain type name. The \fI\-i\fR option
displays this information for a single partition.
.TP
.B \-j, \-\-adjust\-main\-table=sector
Adjust the location of the main partition table. This value is normally 2,
but it may need to be increased in some cases, such as when a
system\-on\-chip (SoC) is hard\-coded to read boot code from sector 2. I
recommend against adjusting this value unless doing so is absolutely
necessary.
.TP
.B \-l, \-\-load\-backup=file
Load partition data from a backup file. This option is the reverse of the
@@ -335,10 +345,7 @@ to use the first available partition number. Subsequent uses of the
.TP
.B \-N, \-\-largest\-new=num
Create a new partition that fills the largest available block of space on
the disk. Note that if used on a completely blank disk, this is likely to
result in a sector-moved warning, since the first available sector
(normally 34) doesn't fall on a 2048-sector boundary (the default for
alignment). You can use the \fI\-a\fR (\fI\-\-set\-alignment\fR) option to
the disk. You can use the \fI\-a\fR (\fI\-\-set\-alignment\fR) option to
adjust the alignment, if desired. A num value of 0 causes the program to
use the first available partition number.
@@ -352,12 +359,20 @@ and then partition it normally. This option will work even if the
disk's original partition table is bad; however, most other options on the
same command line will be ignored.
.TP
.B \-O, \-\-print\-mbr
Display basic \fIMBR\fR partition summary data. This includes partition
numbers, starting and ending sector numbers, partition sizes, MBR partition
types codes, and partition names. This option is useful mainly for
diagnosing partition table problems, particularly on disks with hybrid
MBRs.
.TP
.B \-p, \-\-print
Display basic partition summary data. This includes partition
numbers, starting and ending sector numbers, partition sizes,
\fBsgdisk\fR's partition types codes, and partition names. For
additional information, use the \fI\-i\fR (\fI\-\-info\fR) option.
Display basic GPT partition summary data. This includes partition numbers,
starting and ending sector numbers, partition sizes, \fBsgdisk\fR's
partition types codes, and partition names. For additional information, use
the \fI\-i\fR (\fI\-\-info\fR) option.
.TP
.B \-P, \-\-pretend
@@ -475,7 +490,8 @@ An error occurred while reading the partition table
.TP
.B 3
Non\-GPT disk detected and no \fI\-g\fR option
Non\-GPT disk detected and no \fI\-g\fR option, but operation requires a
write action
.TP
.B 4
@@ -491,8 +507,7 @@ sgdisk, but may with gdisk)
Disk replication operation (-R) failed
.SH "BUGS"
As of March 2014 (version 0.8.10), \fBsgdisk\fR
should be considered beta software. Known bugs and limitations include:
Known bugs and limitations include:
.TP
.B *
@@ -578,20 +593,20 @@ Contributors:
* Justin Maggard (justin.maggard@netgear.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@ti.com)
* Dwight Schauer (dschauer@gmail.com)
* Florian Zumbiehl (florz@florz.de)
.SH "SEE ALSO"
\fBcfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBcgdisk (8)\fR,
\fBfdisk (8)\fR,
\fBgdisk (8)\fR,
\fBmkfs (8)\fR,
\fBparted (8)\fR,
\fBsfdisk (8)\fR
\fBfixparts (8)\fR
.BR cfdisk (8),
.BR cgdisk (8),
.BR fdisk (8),
.BR gdisk (8),
.BR mkfs (8),
.BR parted (8),
.BR sfdisk (8),
.BR fixparts (8).
\fIhttp://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table\fR

View File

@@ -3,7 +3,7 @@
// Primarily by Rod Smith, February 2009, but with a few functions
// copied from other sources (see attributions below).
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2013 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2018 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
under the terms of the GNU GPL version 2, as detailed in the COPYING file. */
#define __STDC_LIMIT_MACROS
@@ -19,6 +19,7 @@
#include <sys/stat.h>
#include <string>
#include <iostream>
#include <inttypes.h>
#include <sstream>
#include "support.h"
@@ -36,31 +37,51 @@ using namespace std;
// Reads a string from stdin, returning it as a C++-style string.
// Note that the returned string will NOT include the carriage return
// entered by the user.
#ifdef EFI
extern int __sscanf( const char * str , const char * format , ... ) ;
string ReadString(void) {
string inString;
char efiString[256];
int stringLength;
if (fgets(efiString, 255, stdin) != NULL) {
stringLength = strlen(efiString);
if ((stringLength > 0) && (efiString[stringLength - 1] == '\n'))
efiString[stringLength - 1] = '\0';
inString = efiString;
} else {
inString = "";
}
return inString;
} // ReadString()
#else
string ReadString(void) {
string inString;
cout << flush;
getline(cin, inString);
if (!cin.good())
exit(5);
return inString;
} // ReadString()
#endif
// Get a numeric value from the user, between low and high (inclusive).
// Keeps looping until the user enters a value within that range.
// If user provides no input, def (default value) is returned.
// (If def is outside of the low-high range, an explicit response
// is required.)
int GetNumber(int low, int high, int def, const string & prompt) {
int response, num;
uint64_t GetNumber(uint64_t low, uint64_t high, uint64_t def, const string & prompt) {
uint64_t response, num;
char line[255];
if (low != high) { // bother only if low and high differ...
do {
cout << prompt;
cout << prompt << flush;
cin.getline(line, 255);
if (!cin.good())
exit(5);
num = sscanf(line, "%d", &response);
num = sscanf(line, "%" SCNu64, &response);
if (num == 1) { // user provided a response
if ((response < low) || (response > high))
cout << "Value out of range\n";
@@ -84,7 +105,7 @@ char GetYN(void) {
do {
if ( again ) { cout << "Your option? " ; }
again = 1 ;
cout << "(Y/N): ";
cout << "(Y/N): " << flush;
line = ReadString();
response = toupper(line[0]);
} while ((response != 'Y') && (response != 'N'));
@@ -134,7 +155,7 @@ uint64_t GetSectorNum(uint64_t low, uint64_t high, uint64_t def, uint64_t sSize,
uint64_t IeeeToInt(string inValue, uint64_t sSize, uint64_t low, uint64_t high, uint64_t def) {
uint64_t response = def, bytesPerUnit = 1, mult = 1, divide = 1;
size_t foundAt = 0;
char suffix, plusFlag = ' ';
char suffix = ' ', plusFlag = ' ';
string suffixes = "KMGTPE";
int badInput = 0; // flag bad input; once this goes to 1, other values are irrelevant
@@ -227,7 +248,7 @@ string BytesToIeee(uint64_t size, uint32_t sectorSize) {
uint64_t sizeInIeee;
uint64_t previousIeee;
float decimalIeee;
uint index = 0;
uint64_t index = 0;
string units, prefixes = " KMGTPEZ";
ostringstream theValue;

View File

@@ -1,4 +1,4 @@
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2013 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
/* This program is copyright (c) 2009-2018 by Roderick W. Smith. It is distributed
under the terms of the GNU GPL version 2, as detailed in the COPYING file. */
#include <stdint.h>
@@ -8,7 +8,7 @@
#ifndef __GPTSUPPORT
#define __GPTSUPPORT
#define GPTFDISK_VERSION "0.8.10.2"
#define GPTFDISK_VERSION "1.0.4"
#if defined (__FreeBSD__) || defined (__FreeBSD_kernel__) || defined (__APPLE__)
// Darwin (Mac OS) & FreeBSD: disk IOCTLs are different, and there is no lseek64
@@ -72,7 +72,7 @@
using namespace std;
string ReadString(void);
int GetNumber(int low, int high, int def, const string & prompt);
uint64_t GetNumber(uint64_t low, uint64_t high, uint64_t def, const string & prompt);
char GetYN(void);
uint64_t GetSectorNum(uint64_t low, uint64_t high, uint64_t def, uint64_t sSize, const std::string& prompt);
uint64_t IeeeToInt(string IeeeValue, uint64_t sSize, uint64_t low, uint64_t high, uint64_t def = 0);

24
uninstall-fixparts Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,24 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Script to uninstall FixParts from OS X
OSName=`uname -s`
if [[ $OSName != 'Darwin' ]] ; then
echo "This script is useful only under OS X! Exiting!"
exit 1
fi
# Remove from pre-1.0.1 locations
rm -f /usr/sbin/fixparts
rm -rf /usr/share/doc/fixparts
rm -f /usr/share/man/man8/fixparts.8
# Remove from 1.0.1 (and later) locations
rm -f /usr/local/bin/fixparts
rm -rf /usr/local/doc/fixparts
rm -f /usr/local/man/man8/fixparts.8
echo "All FixParts program files successfully removed!"
# And finally, erase this script itself....
rm -f /usr/local/bin/uninstall-fixparts

32
uninstall-gdisk Executable file
View File

@@ -0,0 +1,32 @@
#!/bin/bash
# Script to uninstall GPT fdisk from OS X
OSName=`uname -s`
if [[ $OSName != 'Darwin' ]] ; then
echo "This script is useful only under OS X! Exiting!"
exit 1
fi
# Remove from pre-1.0.1 locations
rm -f /usr/sbin/gdisk
rm -f /usr/sbin/sgdisk
rm -f /usr/sbin/cgdisk
rm -rf /usr/share/doc/gdisk/
rm -f /usr/share/man/man8/gdisk.8
rm -f /usr/share/man/man8/sgdisk.8
rm -f /usr/share/man/man8/cgdisk.8
# Remove from 1.0.1 (and later) locations
rm -f /usr/local/bin/gdisk
rm -f /usr/local/bin/sgdisk
rm -f /usr/local/bin/cgdisk
rm -rf /usr/local/doc/gdisk
rm -f /usr/local/man/man8/gdisk.8
rm -f /usr/local/man/man8/sgdisk.8
rm -f /usr/local/man/man8/cgdisk.8
echo "All GPT fdisk program files successfully removed!"
# And finally, erase this script itself....
rm -f /usr/local/bin/uninstall-gdisk