Hitchhiker's Guide to Openbsd
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obsd-faq49
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- Partition identification
Partitioning
Due to historical reasons, the term "partition" is regularly used for two different things in OpenBSD and this leads to some confusion. The two types of "partitions" are: ● "disklabel partitions" created with disklabel(8) (often called "filesystem partitions"). ● "fdisk partitions" created with fdisk(8) (often called "partition table partitions" or "Master Boot Record (MBR) partitions"). All OpenBSD platforms use disklabel(8) as the primary way to manage OpenBSD filesystem partitions, but only some platforms also require using fdisk(8) to manage Partition Table partitions. On the platforms that use fdisk partitions, one fdisk partition is used to hold all of the OpenBSD file systems, this partition is then sliced up into disklabel partitions. These disklabel partitions are labeled "a" through "p". A few of these are "special": ● a -- On the boot disk, the 'a' partition is your root partition. ● b -- On the boot disk, the 'b' partition is automatically used as a swap partition. ● c -- On all disks, the 'c' partition is the entire disk, from the first sector to the last. (Hint: if you wish to totally clear a drive, you write zeros to the 'c' partition of the drive. More commonly, the 'c' partition is used by utilities like 'fdisk' to install boot loaders, partition tables, etc.) Partition identification An OpenBSD filesystem is identified by the disk it is on, plus the file system partition on that disk. So, file http://www.openbsd.org/faq/faq14.html (2 of 34)9/4/2011 10:02:25 AM 14 - Disk Setup systems may be identified by identifiers like "sd0a" (the "a" partition of the first "sd" device), "wd2h" (the "h" partition of the third "wd" device), or "sd1c" (the entire second sd device). The device files would be /dev/ sd0a for the block device, /dev/rsd0a would be the device file for the "raw" (character) device. Some utilities will let you use the "shortcut" name of a partition (i.e., "sd0d") or a drive (i.e., "wd1") instead of the actual device name (" /dev/sd0d " or " /dev/wd1c ", respectively). Note again that if you put data on wd2d , then later remove wd1 from the system and reboot, your data is now on wd1d , as your old wd2 is now wd1 . However, a drive's identification won't change after boot, so if a USB drive is unplugged or fails, it won't change the identification of other drives until reboot. Download 1.27 Mb. Do'stlaringiz bilan baham: |
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