On 2023-10-18, Michael <confabul...@kintzios.com> wrote: >> Oh, and if you use GPT, you no longer need the MBR compatibility >> partition, or whatever its called. I no longer need it so I can't >> remember the exact name. > > Man pages of partitioning tools refer to it as "Protective MBR", although > I've > seen it mentioned in the interwebs as "protective GPT", which I think is more > accurate. It uses the first sector (LBA 0) to store an MBR table showing the > whole disk, or 2TB if smaller, as an MBR partition. This is the first > partition on the disk, typically 1 MiB in size. It is meant to stop 20 year > old partitioning tools from messing up a GPT partitioning scheme because they > can't see it. Arguably nobody uses Windows 98 these days, so it should be > safe to not have a protective MBR on your GPT disks.
The protective MBR and the BIOS boot partition are two different, unrelated things. The BIOS boot partition is a real partition (usually 1-2MB in size) that's present in the GPT parition table. It's used by Grub as a place to store its files. It must be the first partition, and it doesn't have a real filesystem (grub uses some sort of private filesystem): $ sudo fdisk -l /dev/nvme0n1 Disk /dev/nvme0n1: 465.76 GiB, 500107862016 bytes, 976773168 sectors Disk model: Samsung SSD 980 PRO 500GB Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes Disklabel type: gpt Disk identifier: E81DD16A-A5AE-3C4A-AD3C-26DF2985827A Device Start End Sectors Size Type /dev/nvme0n1p1 2048 6143 4096 2M BIOS boot /dev/nvme0n1p2 6144 134219775 134213632 64G Linux filesystem /dev/nvme0n1p3 134219776 976773134 842553359 401.8G Linux filesystem