parted man page on OpenIndiana

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parted(1M)		System Administration Commands		    parted(1M)

NAME
       parted - partition manipulation program

SYNOPSIS
       parted [options] [device [options...]...]]

DESCRIPTION
       parted  is  a  disk  partitioning  and  partition resizing  program. It
       allows you to create, destroy,  resize,	move,  and  copy  ext2,	 ext3,
       linux-swap,  FAT,  FAT32,  and  reiserfs	  partitions.  It  can create,
       resize, and move Macintosh HFS  partitions,  as	well  as  detect  jfs,
       ntfs,  ufs, and xfs partitions. It is useful for creating space for new
       operating systems, reorganizing disk usage, and	copying	 data  to  new
       hard disks.

       This  manual page documents parted briefly. Complete  parted documenta‐
       tion is distributed with the package in "GNU Info"  format.

       parted is implemented with a set of top-level options and a set of sub‐
       commands, most of which have their own options and operands. These sub‐
       commands are described below. parted has an optional operand:

       device	 The block device to be used. When none is given, parted  uses
		 the first block device it finds.

OPTIONS
       The following options are supported:

       -h, --help

	   Displays a help message.

       -i, --interactive

	   Prompts for user intervention.

       -l, --list

	   Lists partition layout on all block devices.

       -m, --machine

	   Displays machine-parseable output.

       -s, --script

	   Never prompts for user intervention.

       -v, --version

	   Displays the version number.

SUB-COMMANDS
       If you omit a subcommand in a parted command line, the utility issues a
       command prompt.

       check partition

	   Do a simple check on partition.

       cp [source-device] source dest

	   Copy the source partition's filesystem  on  source-device  (or  the
	   current device if no other device was specified) to the dest parti‐
	   tion on the current device.

       help command

	   Display general help, or help on a command, if specified.

       mkfs partition fs-type

	   Make a filesystem fs-type on	 partition.  fs-type  can  be  one  of
	   fat16, fat32, ext2, linux-wap, or reiserfs.

       mklabel label-type

	   Create a new disk label (partition table) of label-type. label-type
	   should be one of bsd, dvh, gpt, loop, mac, msdos, pc98, or sun.

       mkpart part-type [fs-type] start end

	   Make a part-type partition with file system fs-type (if specified),
	   beginning  at  start	 and ending at end (by default, in megabytes).
	   fs-type can be one of fat16, fat32, ext2,  HFS,  linux-swap,	 NTFS,
	   reiserfs,  or  ufs. part-type should be one of primary, logical, or
	   extended.

       mkpartfs part-type fs-type start end

	   Make a part-type partition with file system fs-type,	 beginning  at
	   start and ending at end (by default, in megabytes).

       move partition start end

	   Move	 partition  so	that  it begins at start and ends at end. Note
	   that move never changes the minor number.

       name partition name

	   Set the name of partition to name. This option works only  on  Mac,
	   PC98,  and  GPT  disk  labels. The name can be placed in quotes, if
	   necessary.

       print

	   Display the partition table.

       quit

	   Exit from parted.

       rescue start end

	   Rescue a lost partition that was located  somewhere	between	 start
	   and	end.  If  a partition is found, parted will ask if you want to
	   create an entry for it in the partition table.

       resize partition start end

	   Resize the file system on partition so that it begins at start  and
	   ends at end (by default, in megabytes).

       rm partition

	   Delete partition.

       select device

	   Choose device as the current device to edit.	 device should usually
	   be a Solaris or Linux hard disk device, but it can be a  partition,
	   software raid device, or an SVM or LVM logical volume if necessary.

       set partition flag state

	   Change the state of the flag on partition to state. Supported flags
	   are: boot, root, swap, hidden, raid,	 lvm,  lba,  and  palo.	 state
	   should be either on or off.

       unit unit

	   Set	unit  as  the unit to use when displaying locations and sizes,
	   and for interpreting those given by the user when not suffixed with
	   an  explicit	 unit.	unit can be one of s (sectors), B (bytes), kB,
	   MB, GB, TB, % (percentage of device	size),	cyl  (cylinders),  chs
	   (cylinders, heads, sectors), or compact (megabytes for input, and a
	   human-friendly form for output).

       version

	   Display version information and a copyright message.

ATTRIBUTES
       See attributes(5) for descriptions of the following attributes:

       ┌─────────────────────────────┬─────────────────────────────┐
       │      ATTRIBUTE TYPE	     │	    ATTRIBUTE VALUE	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Availability		     │system/storage/parted	   │
       ├─────────────────────────────┼─────────────────────────────┤
       │Interface Stability	     │Uncommitted		   │
       └─────────────────────────────┴─────────────────────────────┘

SEE ALSO
       fdisk(1M), mkfs(1M), attributes(5)

       The parted program is fully documented in the info(1) format GNU parti‐
       tioning software manual.

AUTHOR
       This  manual page was written by Timshel Knoll for the Debian GNU/Linux
       system. It is here adapted for the Solaris operating system.

SunOS 5.11			  27 May 2009			    parted(1M)
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