Date: Mon, 11 May 1998 22:00:58 +0200 (MET DST) From: Andries.Brouwer@cwi.nl To: pavel@elf.ucw.cz Subject: Re: Fdisk bug --- can cause data corruption.... > What is so wrong with fdisk? It uses (C,H,S) as basic unit, instead of absolute number of sectors. Everywhere there are implicit assumptions about C being at most 1023, S at most 63, etc. For example, if I want to make a partition from cylinder 1000 to cylinder 1099, fdisk refuses because that crosses the 1024 cylinder barrier. Any particular such flaw can be easily fixed, but there are so many that rewriting everything is easier. (And there are other problems as well.) In fact, a few days after fdisk destroyed an ext2 filesystem on a 9 GB disk of mine, I did rewrite everything, and that resulted in the present sfdisk. Unfortunately it is too powerful, and too user-unfriendly, so as a replacement of fdisk it is a failure. Still some people use it when they have a need for an fdisk that can be called from a shell script and is not conversational. In the meantime I also fixed all flaws I knew about in cfdisk; that was easy enough, because cfdisk was well-written. So, the present situation is: There is Disk Druid. I used it once (installing RedHat 5.0) and discovered a file-system destroying bug and a few minor flaws. Probably it will soon get better, and be a good fdisk alternative. There is fdisk. It kind of works, and is the only fdisk with BSD disklabel support. There is cfdisk. It works well, but does not know about BSD disklabels or any other disk partitioning scheme. It has support for volume labels. There is sfdisk. For hackers only. If you know what you are doing, it will enable you to make two chains of extended partitions (say one for DOS and both for Linux), and do lots of other nifty things. If you do not know what you are doing, you can cause yourself no end of trouble. A somewhat long and detailed answer; this is the third time this week that I answer this question. Maybe a cc to linux-kernel will help. All the best - Andries - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majordomo@vger.rutgers.edu