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6dbe3af9 1.\" Copyright 1992, 1993 Rickard E. Faith (faith@cs.unc.edu)
2b6fc908 2.\" Copyright 1998 Andries E. Brouwer (aeb@cwi.nl)
6efb4b12 3.\" Copyright 2012 Davidlohr Bueso <dave@gnu.org>
811d2ecc 4.\" Copyright (C) 2013 Karel Zak <kzak@redhat.com>
6dbe3af9 5.\" May be distributed under the GNU General Public License
49b7f95e 6.TH FDISK 8 "February 2016" "util-linux" "System Administration"
eb2be4fd 7
6dbe3af9 8.SH NAME
232dc924 9fdisk \- manipulate disk partition table
eb2be4fd 10
6dbe3af9 11.SH SYNOPSIS
57bc4707 12.B fdisk
f49ccec2 13[options]
57bc4707 14.I device
2b6fc908 15.sp
57bc4707 16.B fdisk \-l
57bc4707 17.RI [ device ...]
eb2be4fd 18
6dbe3af9 19.SH DESCRIPTION
278f63c0 20.B fdisk
811d2ecc 21is a dialog-driven program for creation and manipulation of partition tables.
870a6df5 22It understands GPT, MBR, Sun, SGI and BSD partition tables.
278f63c0 23
870a6df5 24Block devices can be divided into one or more logical disks called
2b6fc908 25.IR partitions .
a1939d70
BS
26This division is recorded in the
27.IR "partition table" ,
811d2ecc 28usually found in sector 0 of the disk.
a1939d70 29(In the BSD world one talks about `disk slices' and a `disklabel'.)
2b6fc908 30
870a6df5 31All partitioning is driven by device I/O limits (the topology) by default.
6dbe3af9 32.B fdisk
870a6df5
BS
33is able to optimize the disk layout for a 4K-sector size and use an alignment offset on
34modern devices for MBR and GPT. It is always a good idea to follow \fBfdisk\fR's defaults
eb024893 35as the default values (e.g., first and last partition sectors) and partition
757cefbb 36sizes specified by the +/-<size>{M,G,...} notation are always aligned according
811d2ecc 37to the device properties.
6dbe3af9 38
b0eca21a 39CHS (Cylinder-Head-Sector) addressing is deprecated and not used by default.
1c4c6024 40Please, do not follow old articles and recommendations with "fdisk \-S <n> \-H
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41<n>" advices for SSD or 4K-sector devices.
42
811d2ecc 43Note that
870a6df5
BS
44.BR partx (8)
45provides a rich interface for scripts to print disk layouts,
46.B fdisk
47is mostly designed for humans. Backward compatibility in the output of
811d2ecc 48.B fdisk
870a6df5 49is not guaranteed. The input (the commands) should always be backward compatible.
6dbe3af9
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50
51.SH OPTIONS
52.TP
b06c1ca6 53\fB\-b\fR, \fB\-\-sector\-size\fR \fIsectorsize\fP
870a6df5
BS
54Specify the sector size of the disk. Valid values are 512, 1024, 2048, and 4096.
55(Recent kernels know the sector size. Use this option only on old kernels or
eb2be4fd 56to override the kernel's ideas.) Since util-linux-2.17, \fBfdisk\fR differentiates
a1939d70 57between logical and physical sector size. This option changes both sector sizes to
7f152745 58.IB sectorsize .
6dbe3af9 59.TP
aeb9a30b 60\fB\-B\fR, \fB\-\-protect\-boot\fP
49b7f95e 61Don't erase the begin of the first disk sector when create a new disk label. This
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62feature is supported for GPT and MBR.
63.TP
49b7f95e 64\fB\-c\fR, \fB\-\-compatibility\fR[=\fImode\fR]
455fe9a0 65Specify the compatibility mode, 'dos' or 'nondos'. The default is non-DOS
a1939d70 66mode. For backward compatibility, it is possible to use the option without
eb2be4fd 67the \fImode\fR argument -- then the default is used. Note that the optional
1c4c6024
BIG
68\fImode\fR argument cannot be separated from the \fB\-c\fR option by a space,
69the correct form is for example '\-c=dos'.
78498b7b 70.TP
e3a4aaa7 71\fB\-h\fR, \fB\-\-help\fR
eb2be4fd 72Display a help text and exit.
a1939d70 73.TP
7e3b3f47 74\fB\-L\fR, \fB\-\-color\fR[=\fIwhen\fR]
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75Colorize the output. The optional argument \fIwhen\fP
76can be \fBauto\fR, \fBnever\fR or \fBalways\fR. If the \fIwhen\fR argument is omitted,
7e3b3f47
BS
77it defaults to \fBauto\fR. The colors can be disabled; for the current built-in default
78see the \fB\-\-help\fR output. See also the \fBCOLORS\fR section.
80a1712f 79.TP
e3a4aaa7 80\fB\-l\fR, \fB\-\-list\fR
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81List the partition tables for the specified devices and then exit.
82If no devices are given, those mentioned in
83.I /proc/partitions
870a6df5 84(if that file exists) are used.
6dbe3af9 85.TP
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86.BR \-o , " \-\-output " \fIlist\fP
87Specify which output columns to print. Use
88.B \-\-help
89to get a list of all supported columns.
90
91The default list of columns may be extended if \fIlist\fP is
1c4c6024 92specified in the format \fI+list\fP (e.g., \fB\-o +UUID\fP).
fff8ad58 93.TP
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94\fB\-s\fR, \fB\-\-getsz\fR
95Print the size in 512-byte sectors of each given block device. This option is DEPRECATED
9564e46c 96in favour of
dbeb1d73 97.BR blockdev (8).
2b6fc908 98.TP
e3a4aaa7 99\fB\-t\fR, \fB\-\-type\fR \fItype\fR
870a6df5
BS
100Enable support only for disklabels of the specified \fItype\fP, and disable
101support for all other types.
565b7da6 102.TP
49b7f95e 103\fB\-u\fR, \fB\-\-units\fR[=\fIunit\fR]
a1939d70
BS
104When listing partition tables, show sizes in 'sectors' or in 'cylinders'. The
105default is to show sizes in sectors. For backward compatibility, it is possible
eb2be4fd 106to use the option without the \fIunit\fR argument -- then the default is used.
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107Note that the optional \fIunit\fR argument cannot be separated from the \fB\-u\fR
108option by a space, the correct form is for example '\-u=cylinders'.
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109
110.TP
4b4e391a 111\fB\-C\fR, \fB\-\-cylinders\fR \fInumber\fR
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112Specify the number of cylinders of the disk.
113I have no idea why anybody would want to do so.
114.TP
4b4e391a 115\fB\-H\fR, \fB\-\-heads\fR \fInumber\fR
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116Specify the number of heads of the disk. (Not the physical number,
117of course, but the number used for partition tables.)
118Reasonable values are 255 and 16.
119.TP
4b4e391a 120\fB\-S\fR, \fB\-\-sectors\fR \fInumber\fR
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121Specify the number of sectors per track of the disk.
122(Not the physical number, of course, but the number used for
123partition tables.) A reasonable value is 63.
124
cb9a4b00 125.TP
589b6931 126\fB\-w\fR, \fB\-\-wipe\fR \fIwhen\fR
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127Wipe filesystem, RAID and partition-table signatures from the device, in order
128to avoid possible collisions. The argument \fIwhen\fR can be \fBauto\fR,
129\fBnever\fR or \fBalways\fR. When this option is not given, the default is
130\fBauto\fR, in which case signatures are wiped only when in interactive mode.
131In all cases detected signatures are reported by warning messages
132before a new partition table is created. See also
133.BR wipefs (8)
134command.
135
136.TP
137\fB\-W\fR, \fB\-\-wipe-partition\fR \fIwhen\fR
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138Wipe filesystem, RAID and partition-table signatures from a newly created
139partitions, in order to avoid possible collisions. The argument \fIwhen\fR can
140be \fBauto\fR, \fBnever\fR or \fBalways\fR. When this option is not given, the
141default is \fBauto\fR, in which case signatures are wiped only when in
142interactive mode and after confirmation by user. In all cases detected
143signatures are reported by warning messages before a new partition is
144created. See also
145.BR wipefs (8)
146command.
147
22853e4a 148.TP
e3a4aaa7 149\fB\-V\fR, \fB\-\-version\fR
eb2be4fd 150Display version information and exit.
24505fb2 151
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152.SH DEVICES
153The
154.I device
155is usually /dev/sda, /dev/sdb or so. A device name refers to the entire disk.
156Old systems without libata (a library used inside the Linux kernel to support
157ATA host controllers and devices) make a difference between IDE and SCSI disks.
158In such cases the device name will be /dev/hd* (IDE) or /dev/sd* (SCSI).
159
160The
161.I partition
162is a device name followed by a partition number. For example, /dev/sda1 is the
163first partition on the first hard disk in the system. See also Linux kernel
164documentation (the Documentation/devices.txt file).
165
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166.SH SIZES
167The "last sector" dialog accepts partition size specified by number of sectors
757cefbb 168or by +/-<size>{K,B,M,G,...} notation.
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169
170If the size is prefixed by '+' then it is interpreted as relative to the
1c4c6024 171partition first sector. If the size is prefixed by '\-' then it is interpreted
757cefbb
AG
172as relative to the high limit (last available sector for the partition).
173
174In the case the size is specified in bytes than the number may be followed by
175the multiplicative suffixes KiB=1024, MiB=1024*1024, and so on for GiB, TiB,
eb024893 176PiB, EiB, ZiB and YiB. The "iB" is optional, e.g., "K" has the same meaning as
757cefbb 177"KiB".
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178
179The relative sizes are always aligned according to device I/O limits. The
757cefbb 180+/-<size>{K,B,M,G,...} notation is recommended.
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181
182For backward compatibility fdisk also accepts the suffixes KB=1000,
183MB=1000*1000, and so on for GB, TB, PB, EB, ZB and YB. These 10^N suffixes
184are deprecated.
185
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186.SH SCRIPT FILES
187.B fdisk
188allows to read (by 'I' command) sfdisk compatible script files. The script is
189applied to in-memory partition table, and then it is possible to modify the
190partition table before you write it to the device.
191.PP
192And vice-versa it is possible to write the current in-memory disk layout
193to the script file by command 'O'.
194.PP
195The script files are compatible between cfdisk, sfdisk, fdisk and another
196libfdisk applications. For more details see
197.BR sfdisk (8).
198
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199.SH DISK LABELS
200.B GPT (GUID Partition Table)
201.RS
870a6df5
BS
202GPT is modern standard for the layout of the partition table. GPT uses 64-bit
203logical block addresses, checksums, UUIDs and names for partitions and an
204unlimited number of partitions (although the number of partitions is
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205usually restricted to 128 in many partitioning tools).
206
207Note that the first sector is still reserved for a
208.B protective MBR
870a6df5
BS
209in the GPT specification. It prevents MBR-only partitioning tools
210from mis-recognizing and overwriting GPT disks.
811d2ecc 211
870a6df5 212GPT is always a better choice than MBR, especially on modern hardware with a UEFI
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213boot loader.
214.RE
215
216.B DOS-type (MBR)
217.RS
870a6df5 218A DOS-type partition table can describe an unlimited number of partitions. In sector 0
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219there is room for the description of 4 partitions (called `primary'). One of
220these may be an extended partition; this is a box holding logical partitions,
221with descriptors found in a linked list of sectors, each preceding the
222corresponding logical partitions. The four primary partitions, present or not,
870a6df5 223get numbers 1-4. Logical partitions are numbered starting from 5.
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224
225In a DOS-type partition table the starting offset and the size of each
226partition is stored in two ways: as an absolute number of sectors (given in 32
227bits), and as a
228.B Cylinders/Heads/Sectors
229triple (given in 10+8+6 bits). The former is OK -- with 512-byte sectors this
230will work up to 2 TB. The latter has two problems. First, these C/H/S fields
231can be filled only when the number of heads and the number of sectors per track
232are known. And second, even if we know what these numbers should be, the 24
233bits that are available do not suffice. DOS uses C/H/S only, Windows uses
870a6df5 234both, Linux never uses C/H/S. The
811d2ecc 235.B C/H/S addressing is deprecated
0d0d12ad 236and may be unsupported in some later fdisk version.
811d2ecc 237
870a6df5 238.B Please, read the DOS-mode section if you want DOS-compatible partitions.
811d2ecc 239.B fdisk
870a6df5 240does not care about cylinder boundaries by default.
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241.RE
242
870a6df5 243.B BSD/Sun-type
811d2ecc 244.RS
870a6df5 245A BSD/Sun disklabel can describe 8 partitions, the third of which should be a `whole
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246disk' partition. Do not start a partition that actually uses its first sector
247(like a swap partition) at cylinder 0, since that will destroy the disklabel.
870a6df5 248Note that a
811d2ecc 249.B BSD label
870a6df5 250is usually nested within a DOS partition.
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251.RE
252
253.B IRIX/SGI-type
254.RS
870a6df5 255An IRIX/SGI disklabel can describe 16 partitions, the eleventh of which should be an entire
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256`volume' partition, while the ninth should be labeled `volume header'. The
257volume header will also cover the partition table, i.e., it starts at block
258zero and extends by default over five cylinders. The remaining space in the
259volume header may be used by header directory entries. No partitions may
260overlap with the volume header. Also do not change its type or make some
261filesystem on it, since you will lose the partition table. Use this type of
262label only when working with Linux on IRIX/SGI machines or IRIX/SGI disks under
263Linux.
264.RE
265
870a6df5 266A sync() and an ioctl(BLKRRPART) (rereading the partition table from disk)
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267are performed before exiting when the partition table has been updated.
268
269.SH "DOS mode and DOS 6.x WARNING"
870a6df5
BS
270.B Note that all this is deprecated. You don't have to care about things like
271.B geometry and cylinders on modern operating systems. If you really want
272.B DOS-compatible partitioning then you have to enable DOS mode and cylinder
1c4c6024 273.B units by using the '\-c=dos \-u=cylinders' fdisk command-line options.
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274
275The DOS 6.x FORMAT command looks for some information in the first sector of
276the data area of the partition, and treats this information as more reliable
277than the information in the partition table. DOS FORMAT expects DOS FDISK to
278clear the first 512 bytes of the data area of a partition whenever a size
279change occurs. DOS FORMAT will look at this extra information even if the /U
280flag is given -- we consider this a bug in DOS FORMAT and DOS FDISK.
281
ba5ad6a4 282The bottom line is that if you use \fBfdisk\fR or \fBcfdisk\fR to change the
870a6df5
BS
283size of a DOS partition table entry, then you must also use
284.BR dd "(1) to " "zero the first 512 bytes"
811d2ecc 285of that partition before using DOS FORMAT to format the partition. For
870a6df5
BS
286example, if you were using \fBfdisk\fR to make a DOS partition table entry for
287/dev/sda1, then (after exiting \fBfdisk\fR and rebooting Linux so that the
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288partition table information is valid) you would use the command "dd
289if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sda1 bs=512 count=1" to zero the first 512 bytes of the
290partition.
291
292.B fdisk
870a6df5 293usually obtains the disk geometry automatically. This is not necessarily the
811d2ecc 294physical disk geometry (indeed, modern disks do not really have anything like a
870a6df5 295physical geometry, certainly not something that can be described in the simplistic
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296Cylinders/Heads/Sectors form), but it is the disk geometry that MS-DOS uses for
297the partition table.
298
299Usually all goes well by default, and there are no problems if Linux is the
300only system on the disk. However, if the disk has to be shared with other
301operating systems, it is often a good idea to let an fdisk from another
302operating system make at least one partition. When Linux boots it looks at the
303partition table, and tries to deduce what (fake) geometry is required for good
304cooperation with other systems.
305
306Whenever a partition table is printed out in DOS mode, a consistency check is
307performed on the partition table entries. This check verifies that the
308physical and logical start and end points are identical, and that each
309partition starts and ends on a cylinder boundary (except for the first
310partition).
311
312Some versions of MS-DOS create a first partition which does not begin
313on a cylinder boundary, but on sector 2 of the first cylinder.
314Partitions beginning in cylinder 1 cannot begin on a cylinder boundary, but
315this is unlikely to cause difficulty unless you have OS/2 on your machine.
316
317For best results, you should always use an OS-specific partition table
318program. For example, you should make DOS partitions with the DOS FDISK
870a6df5 319program and Linux partitions with the Linux fdisk or Linux cfdisk programs.
4ffbedba 320.SH COLORS
496c979a 321Implicit coloring can be disabled by an empty file \fI/etc/terminal-colors.d/fdisk.disable\fR.
811d2ecc 322
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323See
324.BR terminal-colors.d (5)
325for more details about colorization configuration. The logical color names
326supported by
327.B fdisk
328are:
329.TP
330.B header
331The header of the output tables.
332.TP
333.B help-title
334The help section titles.
335.TP
336.B warn
337The warning messages.
338.TP
339.B welcome
340The welcome message.
4ffbedba 341
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342.SH AUTHORS
343.MT kzak@redhat.com
344Karel Zak
345.ME
346.br
347.MT dave@gnu.org
348Davidlohr Bueso
349.ME
350.br
351.PP
352The original version was written by
353Andries E. Brouwer, A. V. Le Blanc and others.
354
24505fb2 355.SH ENVIRONMENT
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356.IP FDISK_DEBUG=all
357enables fdisk debug output.
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358.IP LIBFDISK_DEBUG=all
359enables libfdisk debug output.
360.IP LIBBLKID_DEBUG=all
361enables libblkid debug output.
362.IP LIBSMARTCOLS_DEBUG=all
363enables libsmartcols debug output.
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364.IP LIBSMARTCOLS_DEBUG_PADDING=on
365use visible padding characters. Requires enabled LIBSMARTCOLS_DEBUG.
24505fb2 366
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367.SH "SEE ALSO"
368.BR cfdisk (8),
63cccae4 369.BR mkfs (8),
f053ff1e
MK
370.BR partx (8),
371.BR sfdisk (8)
eb2be4fd 372
86d62711 373.SH AVAILABILITY
601d12fb 374The fdisk command is part of the util-linux package and is available from
d673b74e 375https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/.