Manual page for fmthard(1M)
fmthard - populate VTOC on hard disks
SPARC SYNOPSIS
fmthard
-d data
|
-n volume_name
|
-s datafile
[
-i
]
/dev/rdsk/c?[t?]d?s2
x86 SYNOPSIS
fmthard
-d data
|
-n volume_name
|
-s datafile
[
-i
][
-p pboot
][
-b bootblk
]
/dev/rdsk/c?[t?]d?s2
AVAILABILITY
SUNWcsu
DESCRIPTION
The
fmthard
command
updates the VTOC (Volume Table of Contents) on
hard disks and, on x86 systems, adds boot information to the Solaris
fdisk
partition.
One or more of the options
-s datafile, -d data,
or -n volume_name,
must be used to request modifications to the disk label. To print
disk label contents, see
prtvtoc.1m
The /dev/rdsk/c?[t?]d?s2
file must be the character special
file of the device where the new
VTOC
is to be installed.
On x86 systems,
fdisk.1m
must be run on the drive before
fmthard.
If you are using an x86 system, note
that the term ``partition'' in this page refers to
slices
within
the x86
fdisk
partition on x86 machines.
Do not confuse the partitions created by
fmthard
with the partitions created by
fdisk.
OPTIONS
The following options apply to fmthard:
- -i
-
This option allows the command to
create the desired
VTOC
table, but prints the
information to standard output instead of modifying the
VTOC
on the disk.
- -d data
-
The data argument of this option is a string representing
the information for a particular partition in the current VTOC.
The string must be of the format part:tag:flag:start:size
where part is the partition number, tag is the
ID
TAG of the partition, flag is the set of permission flags,
start is the starting sector number of the partition, and
size is the number of sectors in the partition.
See the description of the datafile below for more information
on these fields.
- -n volume_name
-
This option is used to give
the disk a volume_name up to 8 characters long.
- -s datafile
-
This option is used to populate the
VTOC
according to a
datafile
created by the user.
If the
datafile
is "-", fmthard reads from standard input.
The
datafile
format is described below.
This option causes all of the disk partition timestamp fields to be
set to zero.
Every
VTOC
generated by fmthard will also have partition 2,
by convention, that corresponds to the whole disk. If the input in
datafile
does not specify an entry for partition 2, a
default partition 2 entry will be created automatically in
VTOC
with the tag
V_BACKUP
and size equal to the full size of the disk.
The
datafile
contains one specification line for each partition, starting with partition 0.
Each line is delimited by a new-line character (\n).
If the first character of a line is an asterisk (*), the line is
treated as a comment.
Each line is composed of entries that are position-dependent,
separated by "white space" and having the following format:
-
partition tag flag starting_sector size_in_sectors
where the entries have the following values.
- partition
-
The partition number:
0-15
decimal or
0x0-0xf
hexadecimal.
- tag
-
The partition tag:
a two-digit hex number.
The following are reserved codes:
0x00 (V_UNASSIGNED),
0x01 (V_BOOT),
0x02 (V_ROOT),
0x03 (V_SWAP),
0x04 (V_USR),
0x05 (V_BACKUP),
0x06 (V_STAND),
0x07 (V_VAR) and
0x08 (V_HOME).
- flag
-
The flag allows a partition to be flagged as unmountable or read
only, the masks being:
V_UNMNT 0x01,
and
V_RONLY 0x10.
For mountable partitions use
0x00.
- starting sector
-
The sector number (decimal) on which the partition starts.
- size in sectors
-
The number (decimal) of sectors occupied by the partition.
Note that you can save the output of a prtvtoc command to a
file, edit the file, and use it as the datafile argument to the
-s option.
x86 Options
The functionality provided by the following two x86 options is
also provided by
installboot.1m
Because the functionality described here
may be removed in future versions of
fmthard,
you should use
installboot
to install boot records.
The following options currently apply to
fmthard:
- -p pboot
-
This option allows the user to override the default partition boot file,
/usr/platform/platform-name/lib/fs/ufs/pboot.
The partition boot file is platform dependent,
where
platform-name
can be determined using the
-i
option to
uname.1
- -b bootblk
-
This option allows the user to override the default
bootblk
file,
/usr/platform/platform-name/lib/fs/ufs/bootblk.
The boot block file is platform dependent,
where
platform-name
can be determined using the
-i
option to
uname.1
SEE ALSO
uname.1
format.1m
prtvtoc.1m
x86 Only
fdisk.1m
installboot.1m
NOTES
Special care should be exercised when overwriting an existing
VTOC, as incorrect entries could result in current data being
inaccessible.
As a precaution, save the old VTOC.
fmthard cannot write a disk label on an unlabeled disk.
Use
format.1m
for this purpose.
Created by unroff & hp-tools.
© by Hans-Peter Bischof. All Rights Reserved (1997).
Last modified 21/April/97