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GDISK(8)		       GPT fdisk Manual			      GDISK(8)

NAME
       gdisk - Interactive GUID	partition table	(GPT) manipulator

SYNOPSIS
       gdisk [ -l ] device

DESCRIPTION
       GPT  fdisk  (aka	gdisk) is a text-mode menu-driven program for creation
       and manipulation	of partition tables. It	will automatically convert  an
       old-style  Master  Boot	Record	(MBR) partition	table or BSD disklabel
       stored without an MBR carrier partition to the  newer  Globally	Unique
       Identifier  (GUID)  Partition  Table  (GPT) format, or will load	a GUID
       partition table.	When used with the -l command-line option, the program
       displays	the current partition table and	then exits.

       GPT fdisk operates mainly on the	GPT headers and	partition tables; how-
       ever, it	can and	will generate a	fresh protective MBR,  when  required.
       (Any  boot loader code in the protective	MBR will not be	disturbed.) If
       you've created an unusual protective MBR, such as a hybrid MBR  created
       by  gptsync or gdisk's own hybrid MBR creation feature, this should not
       be disturbed by most ordinary actions. Some advanced data recovery  op-
       tions  require  you to understand the distinctions between the main and
       backup data, as well as between the GPT headers and the	partition  ta-
       bles.  For  information	on MBR vs. GPT,	as well	as GPT terminology and
       structure, see the extended gdisk  documentation	 at  https://www.rods-
       books.com/gdisk/	or consult Wikipedia.

       The  gdisk  program employs a user interface similar to that of Linux's
       fdisk, but gdisk	modifies GPT partitions. It also has the capability of
       transforming MBR	partitions or BSD disklabels into GPT partitions. Like
       the original fdisk program, gdisk does not modify disk structures until
       you explicitly write them to disk, so if	you make a  mistake,  you  can
       exit  from the program with the 'q' option to leave your	partitions un-
       modified.

       Ordinarily, gdisk operates on disk device files,	such  as  /dev/sda  or
       /dev/hda	 under	Linux,	/dev/disk0  under  Mac	OS  X,	or /dev/ad0 or
       /dev/da0	under FreeBSD. The program can	also  operate  on  disk	 image
       files, which can	be either copies of whole disks	(made with dd, for in-
       stance)	or  raw	 disk images used by emulators such as QEMU or VMWare.
       Note that only raw disk images are supported; gdisk cannot work on com-
       pressed or other	advanced disk image formats.

       The MBR partitioning system uses	a combination of  cylinder/head/sector
       (CHS)  addressing  and  logical	block  addressing (LBA). The former is
       klunky and limiting. GPT	drops CHS addressing and uses 64-bit LBA  mode
       exclusively.  Thus,  GPT	 data  structures, and therefore gdisk,	do not
       need to deal with CHS geometries	and  all  the  problems	 they  create.
       Users  of  fdisk	will note that gdisk lacks the options and limitations
       associated with CHS geometries.

       For best	results, you should use	an OS-specific partition table program
       whenever	possible. For example, you should make	Mac  OS	 X  partitions
       with  the  Mac  OS X Disk Utility program and Linux partitions with the
       Linux gdisk or GNU Parted program.

       Upon start, gdisk attempts to identify the partition type in use	on the
       disk. If	it finds valid GPT data, gdisk will use	it. If gdisk  finds  a
       valid  MBR or BSD disklabel but no GPT data, it will attempt to convert
       the MBR or disklabel into GPT form. (BSD	disklabels are likely to  have
       unusable	 first	and/or	final partitions because they overlap with the
       GPT data	structures, though.) GPT fdisk can identify, but not use  data
       in,  Apple Partition Map	(APM) disks, which are used on 680x0- and Pow-
       erPC-based Macintoshes. Upon exiting with the  'w'  option,  gdisk  re-
       places the MBR or disklabel with	a GPT. This action is potentially dan-
       gerous! Your system may become unbootable, and partition	type codes may
       become  corrupted  if the disk uses unrecognized	type codes. Boot prob-
       lems are	particularly likely if you're multi-booting with  any  GPT-un-
       aware OS. If you	mistakenly launch gdisk	on an MBR disk,	you can	safely
       exit the	program	without	making any changes by using the	'q' option.

       The  MBR-to-GPT conversion will leave at	least one gap in the partition
       numbering if the	original MBR used logical partitions. These  gaps  are
       harmless,  but  you  can	eliminate them by using	the 's'	option,	if you
       like.  (Doing this may require you to update your /etc/fstab file.)

       When creating a fresh partition table, certain considerations may be in
       order:

       *      For data (non-boot) disks, and for boot disks used on BIOS-based
	      computers	with GRUB as the boot loader, partitions may  be  cre-
	      ated in whatever order and in whatever sizes are desired.

       *      Boot disks for EFI-based systems require an EFI System Partition
	      (gdisk  internal code 0xEF00) formatted as FAT-32. I recommended
	      making this partition 550	MiB. (Smaller  ESPs  are  common,  but
	      some  EFIs have flaky FAT	drivers	that necessitate a larger par-
	      tition for reliable operation.) Boot-related  files  are	stored
	      here. (Note that GNU Parted identifies such partitions as	having
	      the "boot	flag" set.)

       *      Some boot	loaders	for BIOS-based systems make use	of a BIOS Boot
	      Partition	 (gdisk	 internal code 0xEF02),	in which the secondary
	      boot loader  is  stored,	possibly  without  the	benefit	 of  a
	      filesystem.  (GRUB2  may	optionally use such a partition.) This
	      partition	can typically be quite small (roughly 32 to  200  KiB,
	      although	1 MiB is more common in	practice), but you should con-
	      sult your	boot loader documentation for details.

       *      If Windows is to boot from a GPT disk, a partition of  type  Mi-
	      crosoft  Reserved	 (gdisk	 internal code 0x0C01) is recommended.
	      This partition should be about 128 MiB in	 size.	It  ordinarily
	      follows  the  EFI	 System	Partition and immediately precedes the
	      Windows data partitions. (Note that old versions of  GNU	Parted
	      create all FAT partitions	as this	type, which actually makes the
	      partition	 unusable  for normal file storage in both Windows and
	      Mac OS X.)

       *      Some OSes' GPT utilities create some blank space (typically  128
	      MiB)  after  each	partition. The intent is to enable future disk
	      utilities	to use this space. Such	free space is not required  of
	      GPT  disks, but creating it may help in future disk maintenance.
	      You can use GPT fdisk's relative	partition  positioning	option
	      (specifying  the	starting  sector  as '+128M', for instance) to
	      simplify creating	such gaps.

OPTIONS
       -l     List the partition table for the specified device	and  then  ex-
	      its.

       Most  interactions  with	 gdisk	occur  with  its interactive text-mode
       menus. Three menus exist: the main menu,	the recovery &	transformation
       menu,  and the experts' menu. The main menu provides the	functions that
       are most	likely to be useful for	typical	partitioning  tasks,  such  as
       creating	and deleting partitions, changing partition type codes,	and so
       on. Specific functions are:

       b      Save  partition data to a	backup file. You can back up your cur-
	      rent in-memory partition table to	a disk file using this option.
	      The resulting file is a binary file consisting of	the protective
	      MBR, the main GPT	header,	the backup GPT header, and one copy of
	      the partition table, in that order. Note that the	backup	is  of
	      the current in-memory data structures, so	if you launch the pro-
	      gram,  make  changes,  and then use this option, the backup will
	      reflect your changes. Note also that the restore	option	is  on
	      the  recovery & transformation menu; the backup option is	on the
	      main menu	to encourage its use.

       c      Change the GPT name of a partition. This name is	encoded	 as  a
	      UTF-16  string,  but proper entry	and display of anything	beyond
	      basic ASCII values requires suitable locale  and	font  support.
	      For  the most part, Linux	ignores	the partition name, but	it may
	      be important in some OSes. GPT fdisk sets	a default  name	 based
	      on  the partition	type code. Note	that the GPT partition name is
	      different	from the filesystem name,  which  is  encoded  in  the
	      filesystem's data	structures.

       d      Delete  a	partition. This	action deletes the entry from the par-
	      tition table but does not	disturb	the data  within  the  sectors
	      originally  allocated  to	the partition on the disk. If a	corre-
	      sponding hybrid MBR partition exists, gdisk deletes it, as well,
	      and expands any adjacent 0xEE (EFI GPT) MBR protective partition
	      to fill the new free space.

       i      Show detailed partition  information.  The  summary  information
	      produced by the 'p' command necessarily omits many details, such
	      as  the  partition's  unique GUID	and the	translation of gdisk's
	      internal partition type code to a	plain type name. The  'i'  op-
	      tion displays this information for a single partition.

       l      Display  a  summary of partition types. GPT uses a GUID to iden-
	      tify partition types for particular OSes and purposes. For  ease
	      of  data entry, gdisk compresses these into two-byte (four-digit
	      hexadecimal) values that are related  to	their  equivalent  MBR
	      codes.  Specifically,  the MBR code is multiplied	by hexadecimal
	      0x0100. For instance, the	code for Linux swap space  in  MBR  is
	      0x82,  and  it's 0x8200 in gdisk.	A one-to-one correspondence is
	      impossible, though. Most notably,	the codes for all varieties of
	      FAT and NTFS partition correspond	to a single GPT	code  (entered
	      as  0x0700 in gdisk). Some OSes use a single MBR code but	employ
	      many more	codes in GPT. For these, gdisk adds code  numbers  se-
	      quentially,  such	 as 0xa500 for a FreeBSD disklabel, 0xa501 for
	      FreeBSD boot, 0xa502 for FreeBSD swap,  and  so  on.  Note  that
	      these two-byte codes are unique to gdisk.	The type code list may
	      optionally  be filtered by a search string; for instance,	enter-
	      ing linux	shows only partition type codes	with descriptions that
	      include the string Linux.	This search is performed case-insensi-
	      tively.

       n      Create a new partition. This command is modeled after the	equiv-
	      alent fdisk option, although some	differences exist. You enter a
	      partition	number,	starting sector, and an	 ending	 sector.  Both
	      start and	end sectors can	be specified in	absolute terms as sec-
	      tor numbers or as	positions measured in kibibytes	(K), mebibytes
	      (M),  gibibytes  (G),  tebibytes	(T), or	pebibytes (P); for in-
	      stance, 40M specifies a position 40MiB from  the	start  of  the
	      disk.  You can specify locations relative	to the start or	end of
	      the specified default range by preceding the number by a '+'  or
	      '-'  symbol, as in +2G to	specify	a point	2GiB after the default
	      start sector, or -200M to	specify	a point	200MiB before the last
	      available	sector.	Pressing the Enter key with no input specifies
	      the default value, which is the start of the  largest  available
	      block for	the start sector and the end of	the same block for the
	      end  sector. Default start and end points	may be adjusted	to op-
	      timize partition alignment.

       o      Clear out	all partition data. This includes GPT header data, all
	      partition	definitions, and the protective	MBR. The sector	align-
	      ment is reset to the default (1 MiB, or 2048 sectors on  a  disk
	      with 512-byte sectors).

       p      Display  basic  partition	 summary data. This includes partition
	      numbers, starting	and ending sector  numbers,  partition	sizes,
	      gdisk's  partition  types	 codes,	and partition names. For addi-
	      tional information, use the 'i' command.

       q      Quit from	the program without saving your	changes.  Use this op-
	      tion if you just wanted to view information or  if  you  make  a
	      mistake and want to back out of all your changes.

       r      Enter  the  recovery  &  transformation menu. This menu includes
	      emergency	recovery options (to fix damaged GPT data  structures)
	      and  options to transform	to or from other partitioning systems,
	      including	creating hybrid	MBRs.

       s      Sort partition entries. GPT partition numbers need not match the
	      order of partitions on the disk. If you want them	to match,  you
	      can use this option.  Note that some partitioning	utilities sort
	      partitions  whenever they	make changes. Such changes will	be re-
	      flected in your device  filenames,  so  you  may	need  to  edit
	      /etc/fstab if you	use this option.

       t      Change  a	 single	partition's type code. You enter the type code
	      using a two-byte hexadecimal number, as described	 earlier.  You
	      may  also	 enter	a  GUID	 directly,  if	you have one and gdisk
	      doesn't know it.

       v      Verify disk. This	option checks for a variety of problems,  such
	      as  incorrect CRCs and mismatched	main and backup	data. This op-
	      tion does	not automatically correct most problems,  though;  for
	      that,  you  must	use  options  on the recovery &	transformation
	      menu. If no problems are found, this command displays a  summary
	      of unallocated disk space.

       w      Write data. Use this command to save your	changes.

       x      Enter  the  experts'  menu. Using	this option provides access to
	      features you can use to get into even more trouble than the main
	      menu allows.

       ?      Print the	menu. Type this	command	 (or  any  other  unrecognized
	      command) to see a	summary	of available options.

       The second gdisk	menu is	the recovery & transformation menu, which pro-
       vides  access  to  data	recovery  options  and features	related	to the
       transformation of partitions between partitioning  schemes  (converting
       BSD  disklabels	into  GPT  partitions or creating hybrid MBRs, for in-
       stance).	 A few options on this menu  duplicate	functionality  on  the
       main menu, for the sake of convenience. The options on this menu	are:

       b      Rebuild  GPT  header  from  backup.  You	can use	the backup GPT
	      header to	rebuild	the main GPT header  with  this	 option.  It's
	      likely  to  be useful if your main GPT header was	damaged	or de-
	      stroyed (say, by sloppy use of dd).

       c      Load backup partition table. Ordinarily,	gdisk  uses  only  the
	      main partition table (although the backup's integrity is checked
	      when  you	 launch	 the program). If the main partition table has
	      been damaged, you	can use	this option to load  the  backup  from
	      disk  and	 use  it instead. Note that this will almost certainly
	      produce no or strange partition entries if you've	just converted
	      an MBR disk to GPT format, since there will be no	backup	parti-
	      tion table on disk.

       d      Use  main	 GPT  header  and  rebuild  the	backup.	This option is
	      likely to	be useful if the backup	GPT header has been damaged or
	      destroyed.

       e      Load main	partition table. This option reloads the  main	parti-
	      tion  table  from	 disk. It's only likely	to be useful if	you've
	      tried to use the backup partition	table (via 'c')	 but  it's  in
	      worse shape then the main	partition table.

       f      Load  MBR	 and  build fresh GPT from it. Use this	option if your
	      GPT is corrupt or	conflicts with the MBR and you want to use the
	      MBR as the basis for a new set of	GPT partitions.

       g      Convert GPT into MBR and exit. This option converts as many par-
	      titions as possible into MBR form, destroys the GPT data	struc-
	      tures,  saves the	new MBR, and exits.  Use this option if	you've
	      tried GPT	and find that MBR works	better	for  you.   Note  that
	      this  function  generates	 up  to	four primary MBR partitions or
	      three primary partitions and as many logical partitions  as  can
	      be generated. Each logical partition requires at least one unal-
	      located  block immediately before	its first block. Therefore, it
	      may be possible to convert a maximum of four partitions on disks
	      with tightly-packed partitions; however, if free space  was  in-
	      serted  between  partitions  when	 they were created, and	if the
	      disk is under 2 TiB in size, it should be	 possible  to  convert
	      all the partitions to MBR	form.  See also	the 'h'	option.

       h      Create  a	 hybrid	 MBR.  This is an ugly workaround that enables
	      GPT-unaware OSes,	or those that can't boot from a	GPT  disk,  to
	      access up	to three of the	partitions on the disk by creating MBR
	      entries  for them. Note that these hybrid	MBR entries can	easily
	      go out of	sync with  the	GPT  entries,  particularly  when  hy-
	      brid-unaware GPT utilities are used to edit the disk.  Thus, you
	      may  need	to re-create the hybrid	MBR if you use such tools. Un-
	      like the 'g' option, this	option does not	support	converting any
	      partitions into MBR logical partitions.

       i      Show detailed partition information. This	option is identical to
	      the 'i' option on	the main menu.

       l      Load partition data from a backup	file. This option is  the  re-
	      verse  of	 the  'b' option on the	main menu. Note	that restoring
	      partition	data from anything but the original disk is not	recom-
	      mended.

       m      Return to	the main  menu.	 This  option  enables	you  to	 enter
	      main-menu	commands.

       o      Print  protective	MBR data. You can see a	summary	of the protec-
	      tive MBR's partitions with this option. This may enable  you  to
	      spot  glaring  problems or help identify the partitions in a hy-
	      brid MBR.

       p      Print the	partition table. This option is	identical to  the  'p'
	      option in	the main menu.

       q      Quit without saving changes. This	option is identical to the 'q'
	      option in	the main menu.

       t      Transform	 BSD partitions	into GPT partitions. This option works
	      on BSD disklabels	held within GPT	(or converted MBR) partitions.
	      Converted	partitions' type codes are likely to need  manual  ad-
	      justment.	gdisk will attempt to convert BSD disklabels stored on
	      the  main	 disk  when launched, but this conversion is likely to
	      produce first and/or last	partitions that	are unusable. The many
	      BSD variants means that the probability of gdisk being unable to
	      convert a	BSD disklabel is high compared to  the	likelihood  of
	      problems with an MBR conversion.

       v      Verify  disk.  This option is identical to the 'v' option	in the
	      main menu.

       w      Write table to disk and exit. This option	is  identical  to  the
	      'w' option in the	main menu.

       x      Enter the	experts' menu. This option is identical	to the 'x' op-
	      tion in the main menu.

       ?      Print the	menu. This option (or any unrecognized entry) displays
	      a	summary	of the menu options.

       The  third gdisk	menu is	the experts' menu. This	menu provides advanced
       options that aren't closely related to recovery or  transformation  be-
       tween partitioning systems. Its options are:

       a      Set  attributes. GPT provides a 64-bit attributes	field that can
	      be used to set features for each partition. gdisk	supports  four
	      attributes:  system partition, read-only,	hidden,	and do not au-
	      tomount. You can set other attributes, but their numbers	aren't
	      translated  into anything	useful.	In practice, most OSes seem to
	      ignore these attributes.

       b      Swap the byte order for the name	of  the	 specified  partition.
	      Some  partitioning tools,	including GPT fdisk 1.0.7 and earlier,
	      can write	the partition name in the wrong	byte order on  big-en-
	      dian  computers,	such  as  the IBM s390 mainframes and PowerPC-
	      based Macs. This feature corrects	this problem.

       c      Change partition GUID. You can enter a custom unique GUID	for  a
	      partition	 using this option. (Note this refers to the GUID that
	      uniquely identifies a partition, not to its type code, which you
	      can change with the 't' main-menu	option.) Ordinarily, gdisk as-
	      signs this number	randomly; however, you might  want  to	adjust
	      the number manually if you've wound up with the same GUID	on two
	      partitions  because  of buggy GUID assignments (hopefully	not in
	      gdisk) or	sheer incredible coincidence.

       d      Display the sector alignment value. See the description  of  the
	      'l' option for more details.

       e      Move backup GPT data structures to the end of the	disk. Use this
	      command  if  you've added	disks to a RAID	array, thus creating a
	      virtual disk with	space that follows the backup GPT data	struc-
	      tures.  This command moves the backup GPT	data structures	to the
	      end of the disk, where they belong.

       f      Randomize	the disk's GUID	and all	partitions' unique GUIDs  (but
	      not  their partition type	code GUIDs). This function may be used
	      after cloning a disk with	another	utility	in order to render all
	      GUIDs once again unique.

       g      Change disk GUID.	Each disk has a	unique GUID code, which	 gdisk
	      assigns  randomly	 upon creation of the GPT data structures. You
	      can generate a fresh random GUID or enter	one manually with this
	      option.

       h      Recompute	CHS values in protective or hybrid  MBR.  This	option
	      can  sometimes  help if a	disk utility, OS, or BIOS doesn't like
	      the CHS values used by the partitions in the protective  or  hy-
	      brid  MBR.  In  particular, the GPT specification	requires a CHS
	      value of 0xFFFFFF	for over-8GiB partitions, but  this  value  is
	      technically  illegal by the usual	standards. Some	BIOSes hang if
	      they encounter this value. This option  will  recompute  a  more
	      normal  CHS value	-- 0xFEFFFF for	over-8GiB partitions, enabling
	      these BIOSes to boot.

       i      Show detailed partition information. This	option is identical to
	      the 'i' option on	the main menu.

       j      Adjust the location of the main partition	table. This  value  is
	      normally	2, but it may need to be increased in some cases, such
	      as when a	system-on-chip (SoC) is	hard-coded to read  boot  code
	      from  sector  2. I recommend against adjusting this value	unless
	      doing so is absolutely necessary.

       k      Adjust the location of the backup	partition table.  This	parti-
	      tion  table  is normally located just before the backup metadata
	      at the end of the	disk, but it may need to be moved in some very
	      rare cases. I recommend against adjusting	this value unless  do-
	      ing so is	absolutely necessary.

       l      Change  the sector alignment value. Disks	with more logical sec-
	      tors per physical	sectors	(such as modern	Advanced  Format  dri-
	      ves), some RAID configurations, and many SSD devices, can	suffer
	      performance  problems if partitions are not aligned properly for
	      their internal data structures. On new disks, GPT	fdisk attempts
	      to align partitions on 1 MiB boundaries (2048 sectors  on	 disks
	      with  512-byte  sectors) by default, which optimizes performance
	      for all of these disk types. On pre-partitioned disks, GPT fdisk
	      attempts to identify the alignment value used on that disk,  but
	      will  set	8-sector alignment on disks larger than	300 GB even if
	      lesser alignment values are detected. In either case, it can  be
	      changed  by using	this option.  The alignment value also affects
	      the default end sector value when	creating a new	partition;  it
	      will  be	aligned	 to  one less than a multiple of the alignment
	      value, if	possible. This should keep partitions  a  multiple  of
	      the  alignment value in size. Some disk encryption tools require
	      partitions to be sized to	some value, typically 4096  bytes,  so
	      the default alignment of 1 MiB works well	for them.

       m      Return  to  the  main  menu.  This  option  enables you to enter
	      main-menu	commands.

       n      Create a new protective MBR. Use this option if the current pro-
	      tective MBR is damaged in	a way that gdisk doesn't automatically
	      detect and correct, or if	you want to convert a hybrid MBR  into
	      a	"pure" GPT with	a conventional protective MBR.

       o      Print  protective	MBR data. You can see a	summary	of the protec-
	      tive MBR's partitions with this option. This may enable  you  to
	      spot  glaring  problems or help identify the partitions in a hy-
	      brid MBR.

       p      Print the	partition table. This option is	identical to  the  'p'
	      option in	the main menu.

       q      Quit without saving changes. This	option is identical to the 'q'
	      option in	the main menu.

       r      Enter  the recovery & transformations menu. This option is iden-
	      tical to the 'r' option on the main menu.

       s      Resize partition table. The default partition table size is  128
	      entries.	 Officially,  sizes  of	 less  than 16KB (128 entries,
	      given the	normal entry size) are unsupported by the GPT specifi-
	      cation; however, in practice they	seem to	work,  and  can	 some-
	      times  be	useful in converting MBR disks.	Larger sizes also work
	      fine. OSes may impose their own limits on	the number  of	parti-
	      tions, though.

       t      Swap  two	partitions' entries in the partition table. One	parti-
	      tion may be empty. For instance, if partitions 1-4 are  defined,
	      transposing  1 and 5 results in a	table with partitions numbered
	      from 2-5.	Transposing partitions in this way has	no  effect  on
	      their  disk  space allocation; it	only alters their order	in the
	      partition	table.

       u      Replicate	the current device's partition table  on  another  de-
	      vice.  You  will	be prompted to type the	new device's filename.
	      After the	write operation	completes, you	can  continue  editing
	      the original device's partition table.  Note that	the replicated
	      partition	 table	is  an exact copy, including all GUIDs;	if the
	      device should have its own unique	GUIDs, you should  use	the  f
	      option on	the new	disk.

       v      Verify  disk.  This option is identical to the 'v' option	in the
	      main menu.

       z      Zap (destroy) the	GPT data structures and	exit. Use this	option
	      if  you want to repartition a GPT	disk using fdisk or some other
	      GPT-unaware program.  You'll be given the	choice	of  preserving
	      the  existing  MBR,  in  case it's a hybrid MBR with salvageable
	      partitions or if you've already created new MBR  partitions  and
	      want to erase the	remnants of your GPT partitions. If you've al-
	      ready created new	MBR partitions,	it's conceivable that this op-
	      tion  will  damage the first and/or last MBR partitions! Such an
	      event is unlikely, but could occur if your  new  MBR  partitions
	      overlap the old GPT data structures.

       ?      Print the	menu. This option (or any unrecognized entry) displays
	      a	summary	of the menu options.

       In  many	 cases,	you can	press the Enter	key to select a	default	option
       when entering data. When	only one option	is possible, gdisk usually by-
       passes the prompt entirely.

BUGS
       Known bugs and limitations include:

       *      The program compiles correctly only on Linux, FreeBSD, Mac OS X,
	      and Windows.  Linux versions for x86-64 (64-bit),	x86  (32-bit),
	      and  PowerPC  (32-bit) have been tested, with the	x86-64 version
	      having seen the most testing. Under FreeBSD,  32-bit  (x86)  and
	      64-bit  (x86-64) versions	have been tested. Only 32-bit versions
	      for Mac OS X and Windows have been tested	 by  the  author,  al-
	      though  I've  heard  of  64-bit versions being successfully com-
	      piled.

       *      The FreeBSD version of the program can't write  changes  to  the
	      partition	 table to a disk when existing partitions on that disk
	      are mounted. (The	same problem exists with  many	other  FreeBSD
	      utilities,  such	as gpt,	fdisk, and dd.)	This limitation	can be
	      overcome by typing sysctl	 kern.geom.debugflags=16  at  a	 shell
	      prompt.

       *      The  fields used to display the start and	end sector numbers for
	      partitions in the	'p'  command  are  14  characters  wide.  This
	      translates to a limitation of about 45 PiB. On larger disks, the
	      displayed	columns	will go	out of alignment.

       *      In  the  Windows version,	only ASCII characters are supported in
	      the  partition  name  field.  If	an  existing  partition	  uses
	      non-ASCII	 UTF-16	 characters, they're likely to be corrupted in
	      the 'i' and 'p' menu options' displays; however, they should  be
	      preserved	 when  loading	and  saving  partitions.  Binaries for
	      Linux, FreeBSD, and OS X support full UTF-16 partition names.

       *      The program can load only	up to 128 partitions (4	primary	parti-
	      tions and	124 logical partitions)	when converting	from MBR  for-
	      mat.   This   limit  can	be  raised  by	changing  the  #define
	      MAX_MBR_PARTS line in the	basicmbr.h source code file and	recom-
	      piling;  however,	 such  a   change   will   require   using   a
	      larger-than-normal partition table. (The limit of	128 partitions
	      was  chosen  because  that number	equals the 128 partitions sup-
	      ported by	the most common	partition table	size.)

       *      Converting from MBR format sometimes fails because  of  insuffi-
	      cient space at the start or (more	commonly) the end of the disk.
	      Resizing	the  partition	table (using the 's' option in the ex-
	      perts' menu) can sometimes overcome this	problem;  however,  in
	      extreme  cases  it  may be necessary to resize a partition using
	      GNU Parted or a similar tool prior to conversion with gdisk.

       *      MBR conversions work only	if the disk has	correct	LBA  partition
	      descriptors.  These  descriptors	should	be present on any disk
	      over 8 GiB in size or on smaller disks partitioned with any  but
	      very ancient software.

       *      BSD  disklabel  support  can create first	and/or last partitions
	      that overlap with	the GPT	data structures. This can sometimes be
	      compensated by adjusting the partition table size,  but  in  ex-
	      treme cases the affected partition(s) may	need to	be deleted.

       *      Because  of  the	highly variable	nature of BSD disklabel	struc-
	      tures, conversions from this form	may be	unreliable  --	parti-
	      tions  may  be dropped, converted	in a way that creates overlaps
	      with other partitions, or	converted with incorrect start or  end
	      values. Use this feature with caution!

       *      Booting  after converting	an MBR or BSD disklabel	disk is	likely
	      to be disrupted. Sometimes re-installing a boot loader will  fix
	      the  problem,  but other times you may need to switch boot load-
	      ers. Except on EFI-based platforms,  Windows  through  at	 least
	      Windows 7	doesn't	support	booting	from GPT disks.	Creating a hy-
	      brid  MBR	(using the 'h' option on the recovery &	transformation
	      menu) or abandoning GPT in favor of MBR may be your only options
	      in this case.

AUTHORS
       Primary author: Roderick	W. Smith (rodsmith@rodsbooks.com)

       Contributors:

       * Yves Blusseau (1otnwmz02@sneakemail.com)

       * David Hubbard (david.c.hubbard@gmail.com)

       * Justin	Maggard	(justin.maggard@netgear.com)

       * Dwight	Schauer	(das@teegra.net)

       * Florian Zumbiehl (florz@florz.de)

SEE ALSO
       bsdlabel(8),  fdisk(8),	fixparts(8),   gdisk(8),   gpart(8),   gpt(8),
       newfs(8), sgdisk(8).

       https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/GUID_Partition_Table

       https://developer.apple.com/technotes/tn2006/tn2166.html

       https://www.rodsbooks.com/gdisk/

AVAILABILITY
       The  gdisk  command  is	part of	the GPT	fdisk package and is available
       from Rod	Smith.

Roderick W. Smith		    1.0.10			      GDISK(8)

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