89 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
			
		
		
	
	
			89 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.0 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Groff
		
	
	
	
	
	
| .TH MKFS 1
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| .SH NAME
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| mkfs \- make a file system
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| .SH SYNOPSIS
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| \fBmkfs \fR[\fB\-Ldot\fR] [\fB\-B \fIblocksize\fR] [\fB\-i \fIinodes\fR] [\fB\-b \fIblocks\fR] \fIspecial \fIprototype\fR
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| .br
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| .de FL
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| .TP
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| \\fB\\$1\\fR
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| \\$2
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| ..
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| .de EX
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| .TP 20
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| \\fB\\$1\\fR
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| # \\$2
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| ..
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| .SH OPTIONS
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| .FL "\-L" "Make a listing on standard output"
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| .FL "\-d" "Use mod time of \fImkfs\fR binary for all files"
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| .FL "\-o" "Use a drive other than 0 or 1 (safety precaution)"
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| .FL "\-t" "Do not test if file system fits on the medium"
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| .FL "\-1" "Make a version 1 file system (for backward compatibility)"
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| .FL "\-i" "Number of i-nodes (files)"
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| .FL "\-B" "Filesystem block size (in bytes)"
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| .FL "\-b" "Filesystem size (in blocks)"
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| .SH EXAMPLES
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| .EX "mkfs /dev/fd1 proto" "Make a file system on \fI/dev/fd1\fR"
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| .EX "mkfs -b 360 /dev/fd1" "Make empty 360 block file system"
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| .EX "mkfs /dev/fd1 360" "Alternate way to specify the size"
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| .SH DESCRIPTION
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| .PP
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| .I Mkfs
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| builds a file system and copies specified files to it.
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| The prototype file tells which directories and files to copy to it.
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| If the prototype file cannot be opened, and its name is just a string of
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| digits, an empty file system will be made with the specified number of
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| blocks.
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| A sample prototype file follows.
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| The text following the \fI#\fR sign in the example below is comment.
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| In real prototype files, comments are not allowed.
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| .PP
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| .nf
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| .ta 0.20i 0.70i 1.10i 3i 3.5i 4i
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| 	boot			# boot block file (ignored)
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| 	360 63			# blocks and i-nodes
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| 	d--755 1 1		# root directory
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| 	   bin	d--755 \|2 1	# bin dir: mode (755), uid (2), gid (1)
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| 		sh	\|---755 2 1 /user/bin/shell	# shell has mode \fIrwxr-xr-x\fP
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| 		mv	-u-755 2 1 /user/bin/mv	# u = SETUID bit
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| 		login	-ug755 2 1 /user/bin/login	# SETUID and SETGID
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| 	   $			# end of \fI/bin\fP
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| 	   dev	d--755 2 1	# special files: tty (char), fd0 (block)
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| 		tty	c--777 2 1 4 0	# uid=2, gid=1, major=4, minor=0
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| 		fd0	b--644 2 1 2 0 360	# uid, gid, major, minor, blocks
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| 	   $			# end of \fI/dev\fP
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| 	   user	d--755 12 1	# user dir: mode (755), uid (12), gid (1)
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| 		ast	d--755 12 1	# \fI/user/ast\fP
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| 		$		# \fI/user/ast\fP is empty
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| 	   $			# end of \fI/user\fP
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| 	$			# end of root directory
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| .PP
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| .fi
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| The first entry on each line (except the first 3 and the $ lines, which
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| terminate directories) is the name the file or directory will get on the
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| new file system.  
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| Next comes its mode, with the first character being
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| \fB\-dbc\fR for regular files, directories, block special files and character 
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| special files, respectively.
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| The next two characters are used to specify the SETUID and SETGID bits, as
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| shown above.
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| The last three characters of the mode are the 
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| .I rwx
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| protection bits.
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| .PP
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| Following the mode are the uid and gid.
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| For special files, the major and minor devices are needed.
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| .PP
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| The maximum size of a file system is 1 Gb for a version 2 file system,
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| and 64 Mb for a version 1 file system.  Alas the 8086
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| .I fsck
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| runs out of memory on a V2 file system larger than 128 Mb, so for the 8086
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| version of
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| \s-1MINIX 3\s-1
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| you have to limit yourself to file systems of that size.
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| .SH "SEE ALSO"
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| .BR mkproto (1),
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| .BR fsck (1),
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| .BR mount (1).
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