EDAHDI(1) General Commands Manual (ATARI) EDAHDI(1)

NAME

edahdimodify AHDI partition identifiers

SYNOPSIS

edahdi device

DESCRIPTION

edahdi allows you to modify the partition identifiers on a disk partitioned with AHDI or an AHDI compatible formatter. An AHDI partition format is usually only present on disks shared between NetBSD and some other OS. The partition identifiers are used by NetBSD as a guideline to emulate a disklabel on such a disk.

edahdi supports the following options:

device
The name of the raw device you want to edit.

The following partition identifiers are recognized by NetBSD:

NBD
Partition is reserved for NetBSD. This can be either a root or an user partition. The first NBD partition on a disk will be mapped to partition a in NetBSD. The following NBD partitions will be mapped from d up. The filesystem type is ffs by default.
SWP
The first SWP partition is mapped to partition b.
GEM or BGM
These partitions are mapped from d up. The filesystem type is msdos.
NBR
NetBSD root partition (deprecated).
NBU
NetBSD user partition (deprecated).
NBS
NetBSD swap partition (deprecated).

EXAMPLES

Say, you have a disk with that is partitioned like:
Number Id
1 GEM
2 GEM
3 GEM
4 GEM

This partitioning will show up in NetBSD as (Number refers to the first table):

Partition Fstype Number
c (whole disk) unused
d (user part) MSDOS 1
e (user part) MSDOS 2
f (user part) MSDOS 3
g (user part) MSDOS 4

Now you decide to change the id of partition 2 and 3 to NBD. Now NetBSD will show the partitioning as (Number refers to the first table):

Partition Fstype Number
a (root) 4.2BSD 2
c (whole disk) unused
d (user part) MSDOS 1
e (user part) 4.2BSD 3
f (user part) MSDOS 4

You will notice that the order of the partitions has changed! You will have to watchout for this. It is a consequence of NetBSD habit of assigning a predefined meaning to the partitions a/b and c.

SEE ALSO

disklabel(8), installboot(8)

HISTORY

The edahdi command first appeared in NetBSD 1.2.

BUGS

The changes made to the AHDI partitions will become active on the next first open of the device. You are advised to use edahdi only on a device without any mounted or otherwise active partitions. This is not enforced by edahdi. This is particularly confusing when your change caused partitions to shift, as shown in the example above.

As soon as a disk contains at least one NBD partition, you are allowed to write disklabels and install bootstraps.

May 16, 1996 NetBSD 6.1