DISKLABEL(5) NetBSD Programmer's Manual DISKLABEL(5)
NAME
disklabel - disk pack label
SYNOPSIS
#include <sys/disklabel.h>
DESCRIPTION
Each disk or disk pack on a system may contain a disk label which pro- vides detailed information about the geometry of the disk and the parti- tions into which the disk is divided. It should be initialized when the disk is formatted, and may be changed later with the disklabel(8) pro- gram. This information is used by the system disk driver and by the bootstrap program to determine how to program the drive and where to find the filesystems on the disk partitions. Additional information is used by the filesystem in order to use the disk most efficiently and to locate important filesystem information. The description of each partition con- tains an identifier for the partition type (standard filesystem, swap area, etc.). The filesystem updates the in-core copy of the label if it contains incomplete information about the filesystem. The label is located in sector number LABELSECTOR of the drive, usually sector 0 where it may be found without any information about the disk ge- ometry. It is at an offset LABELOFFSET from the beginning of the sector, to allow room for the initial bootstrap. The disk sector containing the label is normally made read-only so that it is not accidentally overwrit- ten by pack-to-pack copies or swap operations; the DIOCWLABEL ioctl(2), which is done as needed by the disklabel program. A copy of the in-core label for a disk can be obtained with the DIOCGDINFO ioctl; this works with a file descriptor for a block or char- acter (``raw'') device for any partition of the disk. The in-core copy of the label is set by the DIOCSDINFO ioctl. The offset of a partition cannot generally be changed while it is open, nor can it be made smaller while it is open. One exception is that any change is allowed if no la- bel was found on the disk, and the driver was able to construct only a skeletal label without partition information. Finally, the DIOCWDINFO ioctl operation sets the in-core label and then updates the on-disk la- bel; there must be an existing label on the disk for this operation to succeed. Thus, the initial label for a disk or disk pack must be in- stalled by writing to the raw disk. All of these operations are normally done using disklabel. The format of the disk label, as specified in sys/disklabel.h, is /* * Disk description table, see disktab(5) */ #define _PATH_DISKTAB "/etc/disktab" /* * Each disk has a label which includes information about the hardware * disk geometry, filesystem partitions, and drive specific information. * The location of the label, as well as the number of partitions the * label can describe and the number of the "whole disk" (raw) * paritition are machine dependent. */ #include <machine/disklabel.h> /* * The absolute maximum number of disk partitions allowed. * This is the maximum value of MAXPARTITIONS for which 'struct disklabel' * is <= DEV_BSIZE bytes long. If MAXPARTITIONS is greater than this, beware. */ #define MAXMAXPARTITIONS 22 #if MAXPARTITIONS > MAXMAXPARTITIONS #warn beware: MAXPARTITIONS bigger than MAXMAXPARTITIONS #endif #define DISKMAGIC ((u_int32_t) 0x82564557) /* The disk magic number */ #ifndef _LOCORE struct disklabel { u_int32_t d_magic; /* the magic number */ u_int16_t d_type; /* drive type */ u_int16_t d_subtype; /* controller/d_type specific */ char d_typename[16]; /* type name, e.g. "eagle" */ /* * d_packname contains the pack identifier and is returned when * the disklabel is read off the disk or in-core copy. * d_boot0 and d_boot1 are the (optional) names of the * primary (block 0) and secondary (block 1-15) bootstraps * as found in /usr/mdec. These are returned when using * getdiskbyname(3) to retrieve the values from /etc/disktab. */ union { char un_d_packname[16]; /* pack identifier */ struct { char *un_d_boot0; /* primary bootstrap name */ char *un_d_boot1; /* secondary bootstrap name */ } un_b; } d_un; #define d_packname d_un.un_d_packname #define d_boot0 d_un.un_b.un_d_boot0 #define d_boot1 d_un.un_b.un_d_boot1 /* disk geometry: */ u_int32_t d_secsize; /* # of bytes per sector */ u_int32_t d_nsectors; /* # of data sectors per track */ u_int32_t d_ntracks; /* # of tracks per cylinder */ u_int32_t d_ncylinders; /* # of data cylinders per unit */ u_int32_t d_secpercyl; /* # of data sectors per cylinder */ u_int32_t d_secperunit; /* # of data sectors per unit */ /* * Spares (bad sector replacements) below are not counted in * d_nsectors or d_secpercyl. Spare sectors are assumed to * be physical sectors which occupy space at the end of each * track and/or cylinder. */ u_int16_t d_sparespertrack; /* # of spare sectors per track */ u_int16_t d_sparespercyl; /* # of spare sectors per cylinder */ /* * Alternative cylinders include maintenance, replacement, configuration * description areas, etc. */ u_int32_t d_acylinders; /* # of alt. cylinders per unit */ /* hardware characteristics: */ /* * d_interleave, d_trackskew and d_cylskew describe perturbations * in the media format used to compensate for a slow controller. * Interleave is physical sector interleave, set up by the * formatter or controller when formatting. When interleaving is * in use, logically adjacent sectors are not physically * contiguous, but instead are separated by some number of * sectors. It is specified as the ratio of physical sectors * traversed per logical sector. Thus an interleave of 1:1 * implies contiguous layout, while 2:1 implies that logical * sector 0 is separated by one sector from logical sector 1. * d_trackskew is the offset of sector 0 on track N relative to * sector 0 on track N-1 on the same cylinder. Finally, d_cylskew * is the offset of sector 0 on cylinder N relative to sector 0 * on cylinder N-1. */ u_int16_t d_rpm; /* rotational speed */ u_int16_t d_interleave; /* hardware sector interleave */ u_int16_t d_trackskew; /* sector 0 skew, per track */ u_int16_t d_cylskew; /* sector 0 skew, per cylinder */ u_int32_t d_headswitch; /* head switch time, usec */ u_int32_t d_trkseek; /* track-to-track seek, usec */ u_int32_t d_flags; /* generic flags */ #define NDDATA 5 u_int32_t d_drivedata[NDDATA]; /* drive-type specific information */ #define NSPARE 5 u_int32_t d_spare[NSPARE]; /* reserved for future use */ u_int32_t d_magic2; /* the magic number (again) */ u_int16_t d_checksum; /* xor of data incl. partitions */ /* filesystem and partition information: */ u_int16_t d_npartitions; /* number of partitions in following */ u_int32_t d_bbsize; /* size of boot area at sn0, bytes */ u_int32_t d_sbsize; /* max size of fs superblock, bytes */ struct partition { /* the partition table */ u_int32_t p_size; /* number of sectors in partition */ u_int32_t p_offset; /* starting sector */ u_int32_t p_fsize; /* filesystem basic fragment size */ u_int8_t p_fstype; /* filesystem type, see below */ u_int8_t p_frag; /* filesystem fragments per block */ union { u_int16_t cpg; /* UFS: FS cylinders per group */ u_int16_t sgs; /* LFS: FS segment shift */ } __partition_u1; #define p_cpg __partition_u1.cpg #define p_sgs __partition_u1.sgs } d_partitions[MAXPARTITIONS]; /* actually may be more */ }; #else /* _LOCORE */ /* * offsets for asm boot files. */ .set d_secsize,40 .set d_nsectors,44 .set d_ntracks,48 .set d_ncylinders,52 .set d_secpercyl,56 .set d_secperunit,60 .set d_end_,276 /* size of disk label */ #endif /* _LOCORE */ /* d_type values: */ #define DTYPE_SMD 1 /* SMD, XSMD; VAX hp/up */ #define DTYPE_MSCP 2 /* MSCP */ #define DTYPE_DEC 3 /* other DEC (rk, rl) */ #define DTYPE_SCSI 4 /* SCSI */ #define DTYPE_ESDI 5 /* ESDI interface */ #define DTYPE_ST506 6 /* ST506 etc. */ #define DTYPE_HPIB 7 /* CS/80 on HP-IB */ #define DTYPE_HPFL 8 /* HP Fiber-link */ #define DTYPE_FLOPPY 10 /* floppy */ #define DTYPE_CCD 11 /* concatenated disk device */ #define DTYPE_VND 12 /* vnode pseudo-disk */ #ifdef DKTYPENAMES static char *dktypenames[] = { "unknown", "SMD", "MSCP", "old DEC", "SCSI", "ESDI", "ST506", "HP-IB", "HP-FL", "type 9", "floppy", "ccd", "vnd", 0 }; #define DKMAXTYPES (sizeof(dktypenames) / sizeof(dktypenames[0]) - 1) #endif /* * Filesystem type and version. * Used to interpret other filesystem-specific * per-partition information. */ #define FS_UNUSED 0 /* unused */ #define FS_SWAP 1 /* swap */ #define FS_V6 2 /* Sixth Edition */ #define FS_V7 3 /* Seventh Edition */ #define FS_SYSV 4 /* System V */ #define FS_V71K 5 /* V7 with 1K blocks (4.1, 2.9) */ #define FS_V8 6 /* Eighth Edition, 4K blocks */ #define FS_BSDFFS 7 /* 4.2BSD fast file system */ #define FS_MSDOS 8 /* MSDOS file system */ #define FS_BSDLFS 9 /* 4.4BSD log-structured file system */ #define FS_OTHER 10 /* in use, but unknown/unsupported */ #define FS_HPFS 11 /* OS/2 high-performance file system */ #define FS_ISO9660 12 /* ISO 9660, normally CD-ROM */ #define FS_BOOT 13 /* partition contains bootstrap */ #define FS_ADOS 14 /* AmigaDOS fast file system */ #define FS_HFS 15 /* Macintosh HFS */ #define FS_ADFS 16 /* Acorn Disk Filing System */ #ifdef DKTYPENAMES static char *fstypenames[] = { "unused", "swap", "Version 6", "Version 7", "System V", "4.1BSD", "Eighth Edition", "4.2BSD", "MSDOS", "4.4LFS", "unknown", "HPFS", "ISO9660", "boot", "ADOS", "HFS", "ADFS", 0 }; #define FSMAXTYPES (sizeof(fstypenames) / sizeof(fstypenames[0]) - 1) #endif /* * flags shared by various drives: */ #define D_REMOVABLE 0x01 /* removable media */ #define D_ECC 0x02 /* supports ECC */ #define D_BADSECT 0x04 /* supports bad sector forw. */ #define D_RAMDISK 0x08 /* disk emulator */ #define D_CHAIN 0x10 /* can do back-back transfers */ /* * Drive data for SMD. */ #define d_smdflags d_drivedata[0] #define D_SSE 0x1 /* supports skip sectoring */ #define d_mindist d_drivedata[1] #define d_maxdist d_drivedata[2] #define d_sdist d_drivedata[3] /* * Drive data for ST506. */ #define d_precompcyl d_drivedata[0] #define d_gap3 d_drivedata[1] /* used only when formatting */ /* * Drive data for SCSI. */ #define d_blind d_drivedata[0] #ifndef _LOCORE /* * Structure used to perform a format or other raw operation, * returning data and/or register values. Register identification * and format are device- and driver-dependent. */ struct format_op { char *df_buf; int df_count; /* value-result */ daddr_t df_startblk; int df_reg[8]; /* result */ }; /* * Structure used internally to retrieve * information about a partition on a disk. */ struct partinfo { struct disklabel *disklab; struct partition *part; }; Disk specific ioctls ar defined in sys/dkio.h. /* * Disk-specific ioctls. */ /* get and set disklabel; DIOCGPART used internally */ #define DIOCGDINFO _IOR('d', 101, struct disklabel) /* get */ #define DIOCSDINFO _IOW('d', 102, struct disklabel) /* set */ #define DIOCWDINFO _IOW('d', 103, struct disklabel) /* set, update disk */ #define DIOCGPART _IOW('d', 104, struct partinfo) /* get partition */ /* do format operation, read or write */ #define DIOCRFORMAT _IOWR('d', 105, struct format_op) #define DIOCWFORMAT _IOWR('d', 106, struct format_op) #define DIOCSSTEP _IOW('d', 107, int) /* set step rate */ #define DIOCSRETRIES _IOW('d', 108, int) /* set # of retries */ #define DIOCWLABEL _IOW('d', 109, int) /* write en/disable label */ #define DIOCSBAD _IOW('d', 110, struct dkbad) /* set kernel dkbad */ #endif _LOCORE
SEE ALSO
disktab(5), disklabel(8)
HISTORY
4.4BSD June 5, 1993 6
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