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Date:      Wed, 29 Oct 2008 15:52:19 +0000
From:      Franck Royer <royer.franck@gmail.com>
To:        John Baldwin <jhb@FreeBSD.org>
Cc:        Franck Royer <royer.franck@gmail.com>, questions@FreeBSD.org
Subject:   Re: GPT Support on Freebsd
Message-ID:  <490886B3.4070204@free.fr>
In-Reply-To: <200810291101.29795.jhb@FreeBSD.org>
References:  <49059437.4000700@free.fr> <44ljw7eig5.fsf@lowell-desk.lan> <200810291101.29795.jhb@FreeBSD.org>

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John Baldwin a écrit :
> On Wednesday 29 October 2008 07:42:18 am Lowell Gilbert wrote:
>   
>> Franck Royer <royer.franck@gmail.com> writes:
>>
>>     
>>> Can I oblige pcbsd to look the gpt table instead of the msdos one ? How
>>> can I access to my fifth partition ?
>>>       
>> John Baldwin (jhb) has been working on GPT support, but it's still
>> reported to be a work in progress. It works as far as recognizing
>> disks over 16TB.  It also gets picked up by the geom framework.  I'm
>> not sure about booting, although there are tantalizing hints in the
>> manual pages.
>>     
>
> GPT booting works just fine on 6.x and later.  Using the gpt(8) utility you 
> basically do:
>
> # gpt create foo0
> # gpt boot foo0
>
> The second command creates a special boot partition in /dev/foo0p1.  You can 
> then add partitions:
>
> # gpt add -t ufs <other params like size if needed> foo0
> # newfs /dev/foo0p2
>
> gpart(8) in HEAD works similarly.  The one thing lacking is that 
> sysinstall/libdisk doesn't handle GPT, so there isn't a nice way to do it 
> during installation.
>
>   
Ok thank you. But actually, it's not what I'm looking for.

I use freebsd on a macbook. On this macbook, I already have a gpt,
refit, mac os x and some linux partitions. The problem is freebsd, which
doesn't recognize partitions after the fourth one (but my gentoo linux
see them).

Then, I suppose freebsd use the mbr partition table (synchronized from
the gpt one using refit) to populate the /dev, but partitions after the
fourth, which are those I want to use, are only indexed in the gpt.

Finally, I want to force freebsd to use the gpt on my hard drive to
allow it to see others partitions.

I don't want to destroy my actual gpt, maybe one day, but no right now.

Tell me if my english is too bad to be understood.

I just want to precise that I use pcvbsd 7.0, so the kernel
configuration might be different than the freebsd generic one.

Thank you for your answers.

Franck



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