On 19/09/2012 23:59, Polytropon wrote: > The terminology is simple and as follows: > > A disk is a disk, e. g. /dev/ad0. > > A slice is a "DOS primary partition" on the disk, e. g. /dev/ad0s1. > > A partition is a subdivision of a slice, e. g. /dev/ad0s1a. > > Partitions can be used without a slice that encloses them, > e. g. /dev/ad0a; this is called "dedicated mode" (because > some obscure operating systems may have problems accessing > something they cannot even understand). > > Tools like dump and restore operate on partitions. > > Tools like dd operate on everything.
What Polytropon says is perfectly correct, and accurate for setups using MBR, fdisk(8) and bsdlabel(8). However nowadays, the move is towards using gpart(8) and the terminology is different there. It looks like this: % gpart show -p da0 => 34 134217661 da0 GPT (64G) 34 128 da0p1 freebsd-boot (64k) 162 4194304 da0p2 freebsd-swap (2.0G) 4194466 130023229 da0p3 freebsd-zfs (62G) 'da0' is the disk -- this is from a VM emulating a SAS controller, hence 'da' as the disk device. That's not gpart specific, and you'll also commonly see 'ad' or 'ada' for disk devices, plus some others specific to certain hardware RAID controllers. The disk has three partitions: da0p1, p2 and p3 of the indicated types. There's also a freebsd-ufs type for those that don't want ZFS. That's really all there is to it for all practical purposes. There's no need for 'partitions inside slices' or 'logical partitions' or any of that malarkey. I believe you could create partitions inside partitions recursively to your heart's content but never cared enough to try that out -- I think the device names would come out like 'da0p3p1' but I could be wrong. Cheers, Matthew -- Dr Matthew J Seaman MA, D.Phil. PGP: http://www.infracaninophile.co.uk/pgpkey
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