fdisk
util-linux fdisk is a dialogue-driven command-line utility that creates and manipulates partition tables and partitions on a hard disk. Hard disks are divided into partitions and this division is described in the partition table.
This article covers fdisk(8) and its related sfdisk(8) utility.
Installation
fdisk and its associated utilities are provided by the util-linux package, which is a dependency of the base meta package.
List partitions
To list partition tables and partitions on a device, you can run the following, where device is a name like /dev/sda
:
# fdisk -l /dev/sda
/proc/partitions
.Backup and restore partition table
Before making changes to a hard disk, you may want to backup the partition table and partition scheme of the drive. You can also use a backup to copy the same partition layout to numerous drives.
For both GPT and MBR you can use sfdisk to save the partition layout of your device to a file with the -d
/--dump
option. Run the following command for device /dev/sda
:
# sfdisk -d /dev/sda > sda.dump
The file should look something like this for a single ext4 partition that is 1 GiB in size:
sda.dump
label: gpt label-id: AAAAAAAA-BBBB-CCCC-DDDD-EEEEEEEEEEEE device: /dev/sda unit: sectors first-lba: 34 last-lba: 1048576 /dev/sda1 : start=2048, size=1048576, type=0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4, uuid=BBF1CD36-9262-463E-A4FB-81E32C12BDE7
To later restore this layout you can run:
# sfdisk /dev/sda < sda.dump
Create a partition table and partitions
The first step to partitioning a disk is making a partition table. After that, the actual partitions are created according to the desired partition scheme. See the partition table article to help decide whether to use MBR or GPT.
Before beginning, you may wish to backup your current partition table and scheme.
Recent versions of fdisk have abandoned the deprecated system of using cylinders as the default display unit, as well as MS-DOS compatibility by default. fdisk performs partition alignment automatically on a 2048 512-byte sector (1 MiB) block size base which should be compatible with all Advanced Format HDDs and the vast majority of SSDs if not all. This means that the default settings will give you proper alignment.
To use fdisk, run the program with the name of the block device you want to change/edit. This example uses /dev/sda
:
# fdisk /dev/sda
This opens the fdisk dialogue where you can type in commands.
Create new table
To create a new partition table and clear all current partition data type o
at the prompt for a MBR partition table or g
for a GUID Partition Table (GPT). Skip this step if the table you require has already been created.
Create partitions
Create a new partition with the n
command. You must enter a MBR partition type, partition number, starting sector, and an ending sector.
Partition type
When using MBR, fdisk will ask for the MBR partition type. Specify it, type p
to create a primary partition or e
to create an extended one. There may be up to four primary partitions.
fdisk does not ask for the partition type ID and uses 'Linux filesystem' by default; you can change it later.
Partition number
A partition number is the number assigned to a partition, e.g. a partition with number 1
on a disk /dev/sda
would be /dev/sda1
. Partition numbers may not always match the order of partitions on disk, in which case they can be sorted.
It is advised to choose the default number suggested by fdisk.
First and last sector
The first sector must be specified in absolute terms using sector numbers. The last sector can be specified using the absolute position in sector numbers or as positions measured in kibibytes (K
), mebibytes (M
), gibibytes (G
), tebibytes (T
), or pebibytes (P
);
The position of the last sector can be specified in:
- absolute terms from the start of the disk. E.g.
40M
as a first sector specifies a position 40 MiB from the start of the disk. - relative terms by preceding the size with
+size
or-size
. E.g.+2G
to specify a point 2 GiB after the start sector, or-200M
to specify a point 200 MiB before the last available sector.
Pressing the Enter
key with no input specifies the default value, which is the start of the largest available block for the first sector and the end of the same block for the last sector.
- When partitioning it is always a good idea to follow the default value for a partition's first sector. Additionally, specify partition sizes with the
+size{M,G,T,P}
notation and do not use sizes smaller than 1 MiB. Such partitions will always be aligned according to the device properties. - On a disk with a MBR partition table leave at least 33 512-byte sectors (16.5 KiB) of free unpartitioned space at the end of the disk to allow converting between MBR and GPT.
-
EFI system partition requires type
EFI System
. -
GRUB requires a BIOS boot partition with type
BIOS boot
when installing GRUB to a GPT partitioned disk. - It is recommended to use
Linux swap
for any swap partitions, since systemd will automount it.
See the respective articles for considerations concerning the size and location of these partitions.
Repeat this procedure until you have the partitions you desire.
Change partition type
Each partition is associated with a type. MBR uses partition IDs; GPT uses Partition type GUIDs.
Press t
to change the type of a partition. The default, Linux filesystem
, should be fine for most use.
- Press
L
to show fdisk's internal code list. - When using GPT, it is advised to follow the Discoverable Partitions Specification since systemd-gpt-auto-generator(8) will automount them.
Make a partition bootable
You can make the MBR partition bootable by typing a
.
Write changes to disk
Write the table to disk and exit via the w
command.
Moving partitions
In order to move a partition, you need to have free space available where the partition will be moved. If necessary, you can make room by shrinking your partitions and the filesystems on them. See Parted#Shrinking partitions. To relocate a partition:
# echo '+sectors,' | sfdisk --move-data device -N number
Where sectors
is the number of sectors to move the partition (the +
indicates moving it forward), device
is the device that holds the partition, and number
is the partition number. Note that if you add a new partition in the middle or at the beginning of your disk, you will likely want to renumber the partitions. See #Sort partitions or the "extra functionality" mode of fdisk.
Tips and tricks
Sort partitions
This applies for when a new partition is created in the space between two partitions or a partition is deleted. /dev/sda
is used in this example.
# sfdisk -r /dev/sda
After sorting the partitions if you are not using Persistent block device naming, it might be required to adjust the /etc/fstab
and/or the /etc/crypttab
configuration files.
/dev/sda1
) to be usable. Reboot the system or tell the kernel to reread the partition table.