attribute (it should be allowed only to unset it), but for test purposes it
might be useful, so the current code allows it.
Reviewed by: arch@ (Message-ID: <20100917234542.GE1902@garage.freebsd.pl>)
MFC after: 2 weeks
confusing.
Note there is still no information about 'partcode' being written to disk
(gpart bootcode -p <partcode> <disk>).
Maybe in the future all the messages printed by gpart(8) on success could be
hidden under -v?
PR: bin/150239
Reported by: Roddi <roddi@me.com>
Submitted by: arundel
MFC after: 2 weeks
understand everything correctly, we don't really need it.
- Provide default numeric value as strings. This allows to simplify
a lot of code.
- Bump version number.
do not constitute user-visible or active partitions and as such should
not prevent undoing pending operations.
While here, initialize the last usable sector for the placeholder geom
based on the null scheme, created to allow undoing the destruction of
a scheme. This gives consistent output with "gpart show".
Based on a patch from: "Andrey V. Elsukov" <bu7cher@yandex.ru>
zero stripeoffset in such case (as if device has no stripes), report offset
from the beginning of the media (as if device has single infinite stripe).
This gives partitioning tools information, required to guess better
partition alignment, in case if hardware doesn't report it's stripe size.
For example, it should give disklabel info about odd offset made by fdisk.
This fixes a null pointer dereference with "gpart create -s GPT" after
the previous commit.
Reported by: Yuri Pankov
Pointyhat to: me
MFC after: 1 week
It is valid for an on-disk GPT header to report a header size which is
greater than 92 bytes. Previously, we would read in the sector and copy
only the 92 bytes that we know how to deal with before calculating the
checksum for comparison. This meant that when we did the checksum, we
overshot the buffer and took in random memory, so the checksum would fail.
We now determine the size of the header and allocate enough space to
preserve the entire on-disk contents. This allows us to be correctly
calculate the checksum and be able to modify and write the header back
to the disk, while preserving data that we might not understand.
Reported by: Kris Weston
Approved by: marcel@
MFC after: 2 weeks
depend on on-disk metadata. This was we won't attach to providers that are used
by other classes. For example we don't want to configure partitions on da0 if
it is part of gmirror, what we really want is partitions on mirror/foo.
During regular work it works like this: if provider is open for writing a class
receives the spoiled event from GEOM and detaches, once provider is closed the
taste event is send again and class can rediscover its metadata if it is still
there. This doesn't work that way when new class arrives, because GEOM gives
all existing providers for it to taste, also those open for writing. Classes
have to decided on their own if they want to deal with such providers (eg.
geom_dev) or not (classes modified by this commit).
Reported by: des, Oliver Lehmann <lehmann@ans-netz.de>
Tested by: des, Oliver Lehmann <lehmann@ans-netz.de>
Discussed with: phk, marcel
Reviewed by: marcel
MFC after: 3 days
code that merely emits an error and waits for a key press before
rebooting. The error being that extended partitions are not
bootable. The origin is presumed to be Windows 2000; Windows XP
does not do this...
For now, ignore the first 96 bytes when checking that the EBR is
(for the most part) all zeroes.
Tested by: Mario Lobo <mlobo@digiart.art.br>
MFC after: 1 week
by CHS addressing. Don't define these fields as 0xff, but rather define
them correctly. This prevents boot problems on PCs where GPT is being
used.
PR: 115406
Submitted by: Kent Hauser <kent@khauser.net>
Approved by: re (kib)
is invalid because the ioctl happens without prior open. The ioctl
got introduced to provide backward compatibility for extended
partitions, but it ended up not being used because it didn't work
as expected. Since there are no consumers of the ioctl and the
implementation is broken, the best fix is to remove the code
entirely.
Spotted by: phk
Approved by: re (kensmith)
naming of the partitions (GEOM_PART_EBR_COMPAT). When
compatibility is enabled, changes to the partitioning are
disallowed.
Remove the device name aliasing added previously to provide
backward compatibility, but which in practice doesn't give
us anything.
Enable compatibility on amd64 and i386.
o PC98 uses 32-bit block numbers. Limit the scheme to 2^32-1
blocks when the media is larger. The 32-bit block numbers
are implicit (16-bit cylinder * 8-bit head * 8-bit sector).
o EBR uses 32-bit block numbers. Limit the scheme to 2^32-1
blocks when the media is larger.
o Calculate the number of entries based on the rounded media
size, rather than the raw media size.
o Don't create an APM scheme underneath another scheme when
the probe doesn't allow it.
o APM uses 32-bit block numbers. Limit the scheme to 2^32-1
blocks when the media is larger.
"raw" names. While there, change the formatting of extended MSDOS partitions
so that the dot (".") is not used to separate two numbers (which kind of
looks like the whole is a decimal number). Use "+" instead, which also
hints that the second part of the name is the offset from the start of
the partition in the first part of the name. Also change the offset from
decimal to hexadecimal notation, simply for aesthetic reasons and future
compatibility.
GEOM_PART is the default in 8-CURRENT but not yet in 7-STABLE so this
changeset can be MFC-ed without causing major problems from the second
part.
Reviewed by: marcel
Approved by: gnn (mentor)
MFC after: 2 weeks
properly. Otherwise the minimum of 1 is used and you can
only insert a single partition/slice and only at sector
0 (index 1).
o When adding a partition/slice, recalculate the index after
the start and size of the partition/slice are adjusted to
make them a multiple of the track size. Since the precheck
method sets the index based on the start of the partition
as provided by the user, we know that we're off by at most
1 and adjusting the index is safe.