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MKE2FS(8)							     MKE2FS(8)

NAME
       mke2fs - create an ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem

SYNOPSIS
       mke2fs [ -c | -l filename ] [ -b block-size ] [ -f fragment-size ] [ -g
       blocks-per-group ] [ -G number-of-groups ] [ -i bytes-per-inode ] [  -I
       inode-size ] [ -j ] [ -J journal-options ] [ -K ] [ -N number-of-inodes
       ] [ -n ] [ -m reserved-blocks-percentage ] [ -o creator-os ] [ -O  fea‐
       ture[,...]  ] [ -q ] [ -r fs-revision-level ] [ -E extended-options ] [
       -v ] [ -F ] [ -L volume-label ] [ -M last-mounted-directory ] [ -S ]  [
       -t fs-type ] [ -T usage-type ] [ -U UUID ] [ -V ] device [ blocks-count
       ]

       mke2fs -O journal_dev [ -b block-size ] [ -L volume-label ] [ -n ] [ -q
       ] [ -v ] external-journal [ blocks-count ]

DESCRIPTION
       mke2fs  is used to create an ext2, ext3, or ext4 filesystem, usually in
       a disk partition.  device is the	 special  file	corresponding  to  the
       device  (e.g  /dev/hdXX).   blocks-count is the number of blocks on the
       device.	If omitted, mke2fs automagically figures the file system size.
       If  called  as  mkfs.ext3  a journal is created as if the -j option was
       specified.

       The defaults of the parameters for the newly created filesystem, if not
       overridden   by	the  options  listed  below,  are  controlled  by  the
       /etc/mke2fs.conf configuration file.   See  the	mke2fs.conf(5)	manual
       page for more details.

OPTIONS
       -b block-size
	      Specify  the  size  of blocks in bytes.  Valid block-size values
	      are 1024, 2048 and 4096 bytes per block.	If omitted, block-size
	      is  heuristically	 determined  by	 the  filesystem  size and the
	      expected usage of the filesystem (see the -T option).  If block-
	      size  is	negative, then mke2fs will use heuristics to determine
	      the appropriate block size, with the constraint that  the	 block
	      size will be at least block-size bytes.  This is useful for cer‐
	      tain hardware devices which require that the blocksize be a mul‐
	      tiple of 2k.

       -c     Check the device for bad blocks before creating the file system.
	      If this option is specified twice, then a slower read-write test
	      is used instead of a fast read-only test.

       -E extended-options
	      Set  extended  options for the filesystem.  Extended options are
	      comma separated, and may take an argument using the equals ('=')
	      sign.   The  -E  option  used  to	 be  -R in earlier versions of
	      mke2fs.  The -R option is still accepted for backwards  compati‐
	      bility.	The following extended options are supported:

		   stride=stride-size
			  Configure  the  filesystem  for  a  RAID  array with
			  stride-size filesystem blocks. This is the number of
			  blocks  read or written to disk before moving to the
			  next disk, which is sometimes	 referred  to  as  the
			  chunk	  size.	  This	mostly	affects	 placement  of
			  filesystem metadata like bitmaps at mke2fs  time  to
			  avoid	 placing them on a single disk, which can hurt
			  performance.	It may also be used by the block allo‐
			  cator.

		   stripe-width=stripe-width
			  Configure  the  filesystem  for  a  RAID  array with
			  stripe-width filesystem blocks per stripe.  This  is
			  typically  stride-size * N, where N is the number of
			  data-bearing disks in the  RAID  (e.g.  for  RAID  5
			  there is one parity disk, so N will be the number of
			  disks in the array minus 1).	This allows the	 block
			  allocator to prevent read-modify-write of the parity
			  in a RAID stripe if possible when the data is	 writ‐
			  ten.

		   resize=max-online-resize
			  Reserve   enough  space  so  that  the  block	 group
			  descriptor table can grow to	support	 a  filesystem
			  that has max-online-resize blocks.

		   lazy_itable_init[= <0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
			  If enabled and the uninit_bg feature is enabled, the
			  inode table will not be fully initialized by mke2fs.
			  This speeds up filesystem initialization noticeably,
			  but it requires the kernel  to  finish  initializing
			  the filesystem in the background when the filesystem
			  is first mounted.  If the option value  is  omitted,
			  it defaults to 1 to enable lazy inode table initial‐
			  ization.

		   test_fs
			  Set a flag in the filesystem	superblock  indicating
			  that	it  may	 be  mounted using experimental kernel
			  code, such as the ext4dev filesystem.

		   discard
			  Attempt to discard blocks at mkfs  time  (discarding
			  blocks  initially  is	 useful on solid state devices
			  and sparse /	thin-provisioned  storage).  When  the
			  device advertises that discard also zeroes data (any
			  subsequent read after the discard and	 before	 write
			  returns  zero),  then	 mark all not-yet-zeroed inode
			  tables  as  zeroed.  This  significantly  speeds  up
			  filesystem initialization. This is set as default.

		   nodiscard
			  Do not attempt to discard blocks at mkfs time.

       -f fragment-size
	      Specify the size of fragments in bytes.

       -F     Force  mke2fs  to	 create	 a  filesystem,	 even if the specified
	      device is not a partition on a block special device, or if other
	      parameters  do not make sense.  In order to force mke2fs to cre‐
	      ate a filesystem even if the filesystem appears to be in use  or
	      is  mounted (a truly dangerous thing to do), this option must be
	      specified twice.

       -g blocks-per-group
	      Specify the number of blocks in a block group.  There is	gener‐
	      ally  no	reason for the user to ever set this parameter, as the
	      default is optimal for the filesystem.  (For administrators  who
	      are creating filesystems on RAID arrays, it is preferable to use
	      the stride RAID parameter as part of the -E option  rather  than
	      manipulating  the	 number	 of blocks per group.)	This option is
	      generally used by developers who are developing test cases.

       -G number-of-groups
	      Specify the number of block groups that will be packed  together
	      to  create  a larger virtual block group (or "flex_bg group") in
	      an ext4 filesystem.  This improves meta-data locality  and  per‐
	      formance	on  meta-data  heavy  workloads.  The number of groups
	      must be a power of 2 and may only be specified  if  the  flex_bg
	      filesystem feature is enabled.

       -i bytes-per-inode
	      Specify  the  bytes/inode	 ratio.	  mke2fs  creates an inode for
	      every bytes-per-inode bytes of space on the  disk.   The	larger
	      the  bytes-per-inode  ratio,  the	 fewer inodes will be created.
	      This value generally shouldn't be smaller than the blocksize  of
	      the  filesystem,	since  in  that case more inodes would be made
	      than can ever be used.  Be warned that it	 is  not  possible  to
	      expand the number of inodes on a filesystem after it is created,
	      so be careful deciding the correct value for this parameter.

       -I inode-size
	      Specify the  size	 of  each  inode  in  bytes.   mke2fs  creates
	      256-byte	inodes	by  default.  In kernels after 2.6.10 and some
	      earlier vendor kernels it is possible to utilize	inodes	larger
	      than 128 bytes to store extended attributes for improved perfor‐
	      mance.  The inode-size value must be a  power  of	 2  larger  or
	      equal  to	 128.	The  larger  the inode-size the more space the
	      inode table will consume, and this reduces the usable  space  in
	      the  filesystem  and  can	 also  negatively  impact performance.
	      Extended attributes stored in large inodes are not visible  with
	      older  kernels,  and such filesystems will not be mountable with
	      2.4 kernels at all.  It is not possible  to  change  this	 value
	      after the filesystem is created.

       -j     Create the filesystem with an ext3 journal.  If the -J option is
	      not specified, the default journal parameters will  be  used  to
	      create  an  appropriately	 sized	journal (given the size of the
	      filesystem) stored within the filesystem.	 Note that you must be
	      using  a kernel which has ext3 support in order to actually make
	      use of the journal.

       -J journal-options
	      Create the ext3 journal using options specified on the  command-
	      line.   Journal  options	are  comma  separated, and may take an
	      argument using the equals ('=')  sign.   The  following  journal
	      options are supported:

		   size=journal-size
			  Create  an internal journal (i.e., stored inside the
			  filesystem) of  size	journal-size  megabytes.   The
			  size of the journal must be at least 1024 filesystem
			  blocks (i.e., 1MB if using 1k blocks, 4MB  if	 using
			  4k  blocks,  etc.)   and may be no more than 102,400
			  filesystem blocks.

		   device=external-journal
			  Attach the filesystem to the	journal	 block	device
			  located  on  external-journal.  The external journal
			  must already have been created using the command

			  mke2fs -O journal_dev external-journal

			  Note that external-journal must  have	 been  created
			  with	the same block size as the new filesystem.  In
			  addition, while there is support for attaching  mul‐
			  tiple	 filesystems to a single external journal, the
			  Linux kernel and e2fsck(8) do not currently  support
			  shared external journals yet.

			  Instead of specifying a device name directly, exter‐
			  nal-journal  can  also  be   specified   by	either
			  LABEL=label  or  UUID=UUID  to  locate  the external
			  journal by either the volume label or UUID stored in
			  the  ext2  superblock	 at  the start of the journal.
			  Use dumpe2fs(8) to display a journal device's volume
			  label	  and	UUID.	See  also  the	-L  option  of
			  tune2fs(8).

	      Only one of the size or  device  options	can  be	 given	for  a
	      filesystem.

       -K     Keep,  do not attempt to discard blocks at mkfs time (discarding
	      blocks initially is useful on solid state devices and  sparse  /
	      thin-provisioned storage).

       -l filename
	      Read  the	 bad  blocks  list from filename.  Note that the block
	      numbers in the bad block list must be generated using  the  same
	      block  size  as  used  by mke2fs.	 As a result, the -c option to
	      mke2fs is a much simpler and less error-prone method of checking
	      a disk for bad blocks before formatting it, as mke2fs will auto‐
	      matically pass the correct parameters to the badblocks program.

       -L new-volume-label
	      Set the volume label for	the  filesystem	 to  new-volume-label.
	      The maximum length of the volume label is 16 bytes.

       -m reserved-blocks-percentage
	      Specify the percentage of the filesystem blocks reserved for the
	      super-user.  This avoids fragmentation,  and  allows  root-owned
	      daemons,	such  as syslogd(8), to continue to function correctly
	      after non-privileged processes are prevented from writing to the
	      filesystem.  The default percentage is 5%.

       -M last-mounted-directory
	      Set  the	last mounted directory for the filesystem.  This might
	      be useful for the sake of utilities that key  off	 of  the  last
	      mounted  directory  to  determine where the filesystem should be
	      mounted.

       -n     Causes mke2fs to not actually create a filesystem,  but  display
	      what it would do if it were to create a filesystem.  This can be
	      used to determine the location of the backup superblocks	for  a
	      particular  filesystem,  so  long	 as the mke2fs parameters that
	      were passed when the filesystem was originally created are  used
	      again.  (With the -n option added, of course!)

       -N number-of-inodes
	      Overrides	 the  default calculation of the number of inodes that
	      should be reserved for the filesystem (which  is	based  on  the
	      number  of  blocks  and the bytes-per-inode ratio).  This allows
	      the user to specify the number of desired inodes directly.

       -o creator-os
	      Overrides the default value of the  "creator  operating  system"
	      field of the filesystem.	The creator field is set by default to
	      the name of the OS the mke2fs executable was compiled for.

       -O feature[,...]
	      Create  a	 filesystem  with  the	given	features   (filesystem
	      options),	 overriding  the default filesystem options.  The fea‐
	      tures that are enabled by default are specified by the base_fea‐
	      tures   relation,	 either	 in  the  [defaults]  section  in  the
	      /etc/mke2fs.conf configuration file, or in the  [fs_types]  sub‐
	      sections for the usage types as specified by the -T option, fur‐
	      ther modified by the features relation found in  the  [fs_types]
	      subsections  for	the  filesystem	 and  usage  types.   See  the
	      mke2fs.conf(5) manual page for  more  details.   The  filesystem
	      type-specific configuration setting found in the [fs_types] sec‐
	      tion will override the global default found in [defaults].

	      The filesystem feature set will be further edited	 using	either
	      the  feature  set specified by this option, or if this option is
	      not given, by the default_features relation for  the  filesystem
	      type being created, or in the [defaults] section of the configu‐
	      ration file.

	      The filesystem feature set is comprised of a list	 of  features,
	      separated	 by commas, that are to be enabled.  To disable a fea‐
	      ture, simply prefix the feature name with a  caret ('^') charac‐
	      ter.   The  pseudo-filesystem  feature  "none"  will  clear  all
	      filesystem features.

		   dir_index
			  Use hashed b-trees to	 speed	up  lookups  in	 large
			  directories.

		   extent Instead of using the indirect block scheme for stor‐
			  ing the location of data blocks  in  an  inode,  use
			  extents  instead.   This  is	a  much more efficient
			  encoding which speeds up  filesystem	access,	 espe‐
			  cially for large files.

		   filetype
			  Store file type information in directory entries.

		   flex_bg
			  Allow	 the per-block group metadata (allocation bit‐
			  maps and inode tables) to be placed anywhere on  the
			  storage  media.   In addition, mke2fs will place the
			  per-block group metadata together  starting  at  the
			  first	 block	group  of  each "flex_bg group".   The
			  size of the flex_bg group can be specified using the
			  -G option.

		   has_journal
			  Create an ext3 journal (as if using the -j option).

		   journal_dev
			  Create  an external ext3 journal on the given device
			  instead of a regular	ext2  filesystem.   Note  that
			  external-journal must be created with the same block
			  size as the filesystems that will be using it.

		   large_file
			  Filesystem can contain files that are	 greater  than
			  2GB.	(Modern kernels set this feature automatically
			  when a file > 2GB is created.)

		   resize_inode
			  Reserve space so the block  group  descriptor	 table
			  may  grow in the future.  Useful for online resizing
			  using resize2fs.  By default mke2fs will attempt  to
			  reserve enough space so that the filesystem may grow
			  to 1024 times its initial size.  This can be changed
			  using the resize extended option.

		   sparse_super
			  Create  a  filesystem	 with  fewer superblock backup
			  copies (saves space on large filesystems).

		   uninit_bg
			  Create a filesystem without initializing all of  the
			  block	 groups.   This feature also enables checksums
			  and highest-inode-used  statistics  in  each	block‐
			  group.   This	 feature  can speed up filesystem cre‐
			  ation	 time  noticeably  (if	 lazy_itable_init   is
			  enabled),  and  can also reduce e2fsck time dramati‐
			  cally.  It is only supported by the ext4  filesystem
			  in recent Linux kernels.

       -q     Quiet execution.	Useful if mke2fs is run in a script.

       -r revision
	      Set  the	filesystem revision for the new filesystem.  Note that
	      1.2 kernels only support revision 0 filesystems.	The default is
	      to create revision 1 filesystems.

       -S     Write  superblock and group descriptors only.  This is useful if
	      all of the superblock and backup superblocks are corrupted,  and
	      a	 last-ditch  recovery  method is desired.  It causes mke2fs to
	      reinitialize the superblock and  group  descriptors,  while  not
	      touching	the  inode table and the block and inode bitmaps.  The
	      e2fsck program should be run immediately after  this  option  is
	      used,  and  there is no guarantee that any data will be salvage‐
	      able.  It is critical to specify the correct  filesystem	block‐
	      size when using this option, or there is no chance of recovery.

       -t fs-type
	      Specify  the filesystem type (i.e., ext2, ext3, ext4, etc.) that
	      is to be created.	 If this option is not specified, mke2fs  will
	      pick  a default either via how the command was run (for example,
	      using a name of the form mkfs.ext2, mkfs.ext3, etc.)  or	via  a
	      default  as  defined  by	the  /etc/mke2fs.conf(5)  file.	  This
	      option controls which filesystem options are  used  by  default,
	      based	on     the    fstypes	 configuration	  stanza    in
	      /etc/mke2fs.conf(5).

	      If the -O option is used to explicitly add or remove  filesystem
	      options  that should be set in the newly created filesystem, the
	      resulting filesystem may not be supported by the	requested  fs-
	      type.   (e.g., "mke2fs -t ext3 -O extents /dev/sdXX" will create
	      a filesystem that is not supported by the ext3 implementation as
	      found  in	 the Linux kernel; and "mke2fs -t ext3 -O ^has_journal
	      /dev/hdXX" will create a filesystem that does not have a journal
	      and  hence  will not be supported by the ext3 filesystem code in
	      the Linux kernel.)

       -T usage-type[,...]
	      Specify how the filesystem is going to be used, so  that	mke2fs
	      can  choose  optimal  filesystem	parameters  for that use.  The
	      usage types that are supported are defined in the	 configuration
	      file  /etc/mke2fs.conf(5).   The	user  may  specify one or more
	      usage types using a comma separated list.

	      If this option is is not specified, mke2fs will  pick  a	single
	      default  usage  type  based  on the size of the filesystem to be
	      created.	If the filesystem size is less	than  or  equal	 to  3
	      megabytes,  mke2fs  will use the filesystem type floppy.	If the
	      filesystem size is greater than 3 but less than or equal to  512
	      megabytes,  mke2fs(8) will use the filesystem small.  Otherwise,
	      mke2fs(8) will use the default filesystem type default.

       -U UUID
	      Create the filesystem with the specified UUID.

       -v     Verbose execution.

       -V     Print the version number of mke2fs and exit.

AUTHOR
       This  version  of  mke2fs   has	 been	written	  by   Theodore	  Ts'o
       <tytso@mit.edu>.

BUGS
       mke2fs  accepts the -f option but currently ignores it because the sec‐
       ond extended file system does not support fragments yet.
       There may be other ones.	 Please, report them to the author.

AVAILABILITY
       mke2fs  is  part	 of  the  e2fsprogs  package  and  is  available  from
       http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net.

SEE ALSO
       mke2fs.conf(5), badblocks(8), dumpe2fs(8), e2fsck(8), tune2fs(8)

E2fsprogs version 1.41.12	   May 2010			     MKE2FS(8)
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