Date: Fri, 30 Mar 2007 08:07:23 +1000 From: Antony Mawer <fbsd-questions@mawer.org> To: Kris Kennaway <kris@obsecurity.org> Cc: freebsd-questions@freebsd.org, "Marc G. Fournier" <freebsd@hub.org> Subject: Re: Why is 'disklabel'ng a new drive so difficult? Message-ID: <460C389B.7060703@mawer.org> In-Reply-To: <20070328204126.GA27217@xor.obsecurity.org> References: <C0012B02FE5D8BE2EC25FE05@ganymede.hub.org> <20070328204126.GA27217@xor.obsecurity.org>
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On 29/03/2007 6:41 AM, Kris Kennaway wrote: > On Wed, Mar 28, 2007 at 05:26:49PM -0300, Marc G. Fournier wrote: >> Just bought a new WD SATA drive: WDC WD5000YS-01MPB1 09.02E09 >> >> Tried to disklabel it, and it gives me all kinds of warnings when I look at it >> after running the disklabel: >> >> >> ganymede# bsdlabel -w ad4s1 auto >> ganymede# bsdlabel ad4s1c >> # /dev/ad4s1c: >> 8 partitions: >> # size offset fstype [fsize bsize bps/cpg] >> a: 976767986 79 unused 0 0 >> c: 976768002 63 unused 0 0 # "raw" part, don't >> edit >> partition a: partition extends past end of unit >> partition c: partition extends past end of unit >> bsdlabel: partition c doesn't start at 0! >> bsdlabel: An incorrect partition c may cause problems for standard system >> utilities >> >> Even if I try to use /stand/sysinstall to do the fdisk, the end result has >> 'issues' ... >> >> So, what is the generally accepted method of label'ng a new drive? :( > > I learned a useful trick the other day: you can use abbreviations like > "1g", also '*' to mean "automatically calculate". See the manpage. This timely thread came as I was experimenting with disklabel, and I noticed in the man page it says this: > offset The offset of the start of the partition from the beginning of > the drive in sectors, or * to have bsdlabel calculate the correct > offset to use (the end of the previous partition plus one, ignor- > ing partition `c'. For partition `c', * will be interpreted as > an offset of 0. The first partition should start at offset 16, > because the first 16 sectors are reserved for metadata. When I tried using "16" as the offset for my 'a' partition, I could no longer user "*" on my last partition to make it auto-size... disklabel then sized the partition so it went past the end of the disk. Presumably it's not taking into account the starting offset when it does this (gm0 is a 3gb gmirror device, with a single slice created on it using fdisk): $ bsdlabel -R /dev/mirror/gm0s1 /dev/stdin 8 partitions: a: 2097152 16 4.2BSD b: 102400 * swap c: * 0 unused d: 102400 * 4.2BSD e: * * 4.2BSD partition e: partition extends past end of unit However if I change the 'a' partition offset to 'e', it works: $ bsdlabel -R /dev/mirror/gm0s1 /dev/stdin 8 partitions: a: 2097152 0 4.2BSD b: 102400 * swap c: * 0 unused d: 102400 * 4.2BSD e: * * 4.2BSD $ disklabel /dev/mirror/gm0s1 # /dev/mirror/gm0s1: 8 partitions: # size offset fstype [fsize bsize bps/cpg] a: 2097152 0 4.2BSD 0 0 0 b: 102400 2097152 swap c: 6281352 0 unused 0 0 # "raw" d: 102400 2199552 4.2BSD 0 0 0 e: 3979400 2301952 4.2BSD 0 0 0 Is it important to use 16 as the offset still, or is this a historical piece of information that is no longer relevant? Or is this is a bug in disklabel that should be fixed? --Antony
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