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MKE2FS(8)		    System Manager's Manual		     MKE2FS(8)

NAME
       mke2fs -	create an ext2/ext3/ext4 file system

SYNOPSIS
       mke2fs  [ -c | -l filename ] [ -b block-size ] [	-C cluster-size	] [ -d
       root-directory|tarball ]	[ -D ] [ -g blocks-per-group ] [ -G number-of-
       groups ]	[ -i bytes-per-inode ] [ -I inode-size ] [ -j ]	[ -J  journal-
       options	] [ -N number-of-inodes	] [ -n ] [ -m reserved-blocks-percent-
       age ] [ -o creator-os ] [ -O [^]feature[,...]  ]	[ -q ] [ -E  extended-
       options ] [ -v ]	[ -F ] [ -L volume-label ] [ -M	last-mounted-directory
       ]  [  -S	] [ -t fs-type ] [ -T usage-type ] [ -U	UUID ] [ -V ] [	-e er-
       rors-behavior ] [ -z undo_file ]	device [ fs-size ]

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

DESCRIPTION
       mke2fs is used to create	an ext2, ext3, or ext4 file system, usually in
       a disk partition	(or file) named	by device.

       The file	system size is specified by fs-size.  If fs-size does not have
       a suffix, it is interpreted as power-of-two kilobytes,  unless  the  -b
       blocksize  option is specified, in which	case fs-size is	interpreted as
       the number of blocksize blocks.	 If the	fs-size	is  suffixed  by  'k',
       'm', 'g', 't' (either upper-case	or lower-case),	then it	is interpreted
       in  power-of-two	 kilobytes,  megabytes,	gigabytes, terabytes, etc.  If
       fs-size is omitted, mke2fs will create the file system based on the de-
       vice size.

       If mke2fs is run	as mkfs.XXX (i.e., mkfs.ext2, mkfs.ext3, or mkfs.ext4)
       the option -t XXX is implied; so	mkfs.ext3 will create  a  file	system
       for  use	 with  ext3,  mkfs.ext4	will create a file system for use with
       ext4, and so on.

       The defaults of the parameters for the newly created  file  system,  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 powers of two	from 1024 up to	65536 (however note  that  the
	      kernel  is  able	to  mount  only	 file  systems with block-size
	      smaller or equal to the system page size - 4k on x86 systems, up
	      to 64k on	ppc64 or aarch64 depending on  kernel  configuration).
	      If  omitted,  block-size is heuristically	determined by the file
	      system size and the expected usage of the	file system  (see  the
	      -T option).  In most common cases, the default block size	is 4k.
	      If  block-size is	preceded by a negative sign ('-'), 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 certain hardware	devices	 which
	      require that the blocksize be a multiple 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.

       -C  cluster-size
	      Specify  the size	of cluster in bytes for	file systems using the
	      bigalloc feature.	 Valid cluster-size values  range  from	 2  to
	      32768  times  the	filesystem blocksize and must be a power of 2.
	      The cluster-size can only	be specified if	the  bigalloc  feature
	      is  enabled.   (See the ext4 (5) man page	for more details about
	      bigalloc.)   The default cluster size if bigalloc	is enabled  is
	      16 times the block size.

       -d root-directory|tarball
	      Copy  the	 contents  of  the given directory or tarball into the
	      root directory of	the file system. Tarball input is only	avail-
	      able  if mke2fs was compiled with	libarchive support enabled and
	      if the libarchive	shared library is available at	run-time.  The
	      special value "-"	will read a tarball from standard input.

       -D     Use  direct  I/O	when  writing to the disk.  This avoids	mke2fs
	      dirtying a lot of	buffer cache memory, which  may	 impact	 other
	      applications  running  on	a busy server.	This option will cause
	      mke2fs to	run much more slowly, however, so there	is a  tradeoff
	      to using direct I/O.

       -e error-behavior
	      Change the behavior of the kernel	code when errors are detected.
	      In  all cases, a file system error will cause e2fsck(8) to check
	      the file system on the next boot.	 error-behavior	can be one  of
	      the following:

		   continue    Continue	normal execution.

		   remount-ro  Remount file system read-only.

		   panic       Cause a kernel panic.

       -E extended-options
	      Set  extended options for	the file system.  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, but is deprecated.  The following	extended  options  are
	      supported:

		   assume_storage_prezeroed[= <0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
			  If  enabled,	mke2fs assumes that the	storage	device
			  has been prezeroed, skips zeroing  the  journal  and
			  inode	tables,	and annotates the block	group flags to
			  signal that the inode	table has been zeroed.

		   discard
			  Attempt  to  discard blocks at mkfs time (discarding
			  blocks initially is useful on	 solid	state  devices
			  and sparse / thin-provisioned	storage). When the de-
			  vice	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  file
			  system initialization. This is set as	default.

		   encoding=encoding-name
			  Enable  the  casefold	feature	in the super block and
			  set encoding-name as the encoding to	be  used.   If
			  encoding-name	is not specified, the encoding defined
			  in mke2fs.conf(5) is used.

		   encoding_flags=encoding-flags
			  Define  parameters  for file name character encoding
			  operations.  If a flag is not	changed	using this pa-
			  rameter, its default value is	used.	encoding-flags
			  should be a comma-separated lists of flags to	be en-
			  abled.   To  disable a flag, add it to the list with
			  the prefix "no".

			  The only flag	that can be set	right  now  is	strict
			  which	 means that invalid strings should be rejected
			  by the file system.  In the  default	configuration,
			  the strict flag is disabled.

		   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  file system	initialization notice-
			  ably,	but it requires	the kernel to finish  initial-
			  izing	 the  file  system  in the background when the
			  file system is first mounted.	 If the	 option	 value
			  is  omitted,	it  defaults to	1 to enable lazy inode
			  table	zeroing.

		   lazy_journal_init[= <0 to disable, 1	to enable>]
			  If enabled, the journal inode	will not be fully  ze-
			  roed out by mke2fs.  This speeds up file system ini-
			  tialization  noticeably, but carries some small risk
			  if the system	crashes	before the  journal  has  been
			  overwritten  entirely	one time.  If the option value
			  is omitted, it defaults to 1 to enable lazy  journal
			  inode	zeroing.

		   mmp_update_interval=interval
			  Adjust  the  initial MMP update interval to interval
			  seconds.  Specifying an interval of 0	means  to  use
			  the  default	interval.  The specified interval must
			  be less than 300 seconds.   Requires	that  the  mmp
			  feature  be  enabled.	  nodiscard  Do	not attempt to
			  discard blocks at mkfs time.

		   no_copy_xattrs
			  Normally mke2fs will copy the	extended attributes of
			  the files in the directory hierarchy	specified  via
			  the  (optional)  -d  option.	 This will disable the
			  copy and leaves the files in the newly created  file
			  system without any extended attributes.

		   num_backup_sb=<0|1|2>
			  If  the sparse_super2	file system feature is enabled
			  this option controls whether there will be 0,	1,  or
			  2 backup superblocks created in the file system.

		   offset=offset
			  Create  the file system at an	offset from the	begin-
			  ning of the device or	file.  This can	be useful when
			  creating disk	images for virtual machines.

		   orphan_file_size=size
			  Set size of the file for tracking unlinked but still
			  open inodes and inodes with  truncate	 in  progress.
			  Larger file allows for better	scalability, reserving
			  a few	blocks per cpu is ideal.

		   packed_meta_blocks[=	<0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
			  Place	 the allocation	bitmaps	and the	inode table at
			  the beginning	of the	disk.	This  option  requires
			  that	the  flex_bg file system feature to be enabled
			  in order for it to have effect, and will also	create
			  the journal at the beginning	of  the	 file  system.
			  This option is useful	for flash devices that use SLC
			  flash	 at  the beginning of the disk.	 It also maxi-
			  mizes	the range of contiguous	data blocks, which can
			  be useful for	certain	specialized use	cases, such as
			  supported Shingled Drives.

		   quotatype
			  Specify the which  quota types (usrquota,  grpquota,
			  prjquota)  which  should  be	enabled	in the created
			  file system.	The argument of	this  extended	option
			  should  be  a	colon separated	list.  This option has
			  effect only if the quota feature is set.    The  de-
			  fault	 quota	types to be initialized	if this	option
			  is not specified is both user	and group quotas.   If
			  the  project	feature	is enabled that	project	quotas
			  will be initialized as well.

		   resize=max-online-resize
			  Reserve enough space so that	the  block  group  de-
			  scriptor  table  can	grow  to support a file	system
			  that has max-online-resize blocks.

		   revision=fs-revision
			  Specify the file system revision number.    Revision
			  0  file  systems  provide compatibility with pre-1.2
			  Linux	kernels	(dating	from before 1995).    This  is
			  only	needed	for  testing or	people who want	to use
			  very early, historical Linux systems.	  The  current
			  default  (supported  by all modern Linux systems) is
			  revision 1.

		   root_owner[=uid:gid]
			  Specify the numeric user and group ID	 of  the  root
			  directory.  If no UID:GID is specified, use the user
			  and  group ID	of the user running mke2fs.  In	mke2fs
			  1.42 and earlier the UID and GID of the root	direc-
			  tory	were  set by default to	the UID	and GID	of the
			  user running the mke2fs  command.   The  root_owner=
			  option  allows  explicitly  specifying these values,
			  and avoid side-effects for users that	do not	expect
			  the  contents	 of the	file system to change based on
			  the user running mke2fs.

		   root_perms[=permissions]
			  Specify the root directory permissions in octal for-
			  mat. If no permissions are specified then  the  root
			  directory  permissions  would	 be  set in accordance
			  with the default filesystem umask.

		   stride=stride-size
			  Configure the	file system  for  a  RAID  array  with
			  stride-size  file  system 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 file
			  system metadata like bitmaps at mke2fs time to avoid
			  placing them on a single disk, which can  hurt  per-
			  formance.   It may also be used by the block alloca-
			  tor.

		   stripe_width=stripe-width
			  Configure the	file system  for  a  RAID  array  with
			  stripe-width	file system 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.

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

       -F     Force mke2fs to create a file system, even if the	specified  de-
	      vice  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  file system even if the file system 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 file system.  (For administrators who
	      are  creating  file  systems 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.

	      If the bigalloc feature is enabled, the -g option	 will  specify
	      the number of clusters in	a block	group.

       -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 file system.  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
	      file system 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 file system, since in	that case more inodes  would  be  made
	      than  can	 ever  be  used.  Be warned that it is not possible to
	      change this ratio	on a file system after it is  created,	so  be
	      careful  deciding	 the  correct  value for this parameter.  Note
	      that resizing a file system changes  the	number	of  inodes  to
	      maintain this ratio.

       -I inode-size
	      Specify  the  size of each inode in bytes.  The inode-size value
	      must be a	power of 2 larger or equal to 128.  The	larger the in-
	      ode-size the more	space the inode	table will consume,  and  this
	      reduces  the  usable space in the	file system and	can also nega-
	      tively impact performance.  It is	not possible  to  change  this
	      value after the file system is created.

	      File  systems  with  an  inode  size of 128 bytes	do not support
	      timestamps beyond	January	19, 2038.  Inodes which	are 256	 bytes
	      or  larger  will	support	extended timestamps, project id's, and
	      the ability to store some	extended attributes in the inode table
	      for improved performance.

	      The default inode	size is	controlled by the mke2fs.conf(5) file.
	      In the mke2fs.conf file shipped with e2fsprogs, the default  in-
	      ode  size	 is 256	bytes for all file systems, except for the GNU
	      Hurd since it only supports 128-byte inodes.

       -j     Create the file system 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
	      file system) stored within the file system.  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 ar-
	      gument using the equals ('=')  sign.  The	following journal  op-
	      tions are	supported:

		   device=external-journal
			  Attach  the  file system 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 file system.  In
			  addition, while there	is support for attaching  mul-
			  tiple	file systems 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  LA-
			  BEL=label  or	UUID=UUID to locate the	external jour-
			  nal 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 la-
			  bel and UUID.	 See also the -L option	of tune2fs(8).

		   fast_commit_size=fast-commit-size
			  Create  an  additional  fast	commit journal area of
			  size fast-commit-size	 kilobytes.   This  option  is
			  only	valid if fast_commit feature is	enabled	on the
			  file system. If this option is not specified and  if
			  fast_commit  feature	is turned on, fast commit area
			  size defaults	to journal-size	/  64  megabytes.  The
			  total	 size  of the journal with fast_commit feature
			  set is journal-size +	 (  fast-commit-size  *	 1024)
			  megabytes.  The  total  journal  size	may be no more
			  than 10,240,000 file system blocks or	half the total
			  file system size (whichever is smaller).

		   location=journal-location
			  Specify the location of the journal.	 The  argument
			  journal-location  can	either be specified as a block
			  number, or if	the number has a units	suffix	(e.g.,
			  'M',	'G', etc.) interpret it	as the offset from the
			  beginning of the file	system.

		   size=journal-size
			  Create an internal journal (i.e., stored inside  the
			  file	system)	 of  size journal-size megabytes.  The
			  size of the journal must be at least 1024 file  sys-
			  tem blocks (i.e., 1MB	if using 1k blocks, 4MB	if us-
			  ing  4k  blocks,  etc.)   and	 may  be  no more than
			  10,240,000 file system blocks	or half	the total file
			  system size (whichever is smaller)

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

       -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 file	 system	 to  new-volume-label.
	      The maximum length of the	volume label is	16 bytes.

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

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

       -n     Causes  mke2fs to	not actually create a file system, but display
	      what it would do if it were to create a file system.   This  can
	      be  used to determine the	location of the	backup superblocks for
	      a	particular file	system,	so long	as the mke2fs parameters  that
	      were passed when the file	system 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 file system (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 file system.  The creator field is	set by default
	      to the name of the OS the	mke2fs executable was compiled for.

       -O [^]feature[,...]
	      Create a file system with	the given features  (file  system  op-
	      tions),  overriding  the	default	file system 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  file  system  and	usage  types.  See the
	      mke2fs.conf(5) manual page for more details.   The  file	system
	      type-specific configuration setting found	in the [fs_types] sec-
	      tion will	override the global default found in [defaults].

	      The  file	system 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 file	system
	      type being created, or in	the [defaults] section of the configu-
	      ration file.

	      The file system 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.   Features  with  dependencies will not be removed success-
	      fully.  The pseudo-file system feature  "none"  will  clear  all
	      file system features.

       For more	information about the features which can be set, please	see
	      the manual page ext4(5).

       -q     Quiet execution.	Useful if mke2fs is run	in a script.  -S Write
	      superblock  and group descriptors	only.  This is an extreme mea-
	      sure to be taken only in the very	unlikely case that all of  the
	      superblock  and  backup  superblocks  are	corrupted, and a last-
	      ditch recovery method  is	 desired  by  experienced  users.   It
	      causes  mke2fs to	reinitialize the superblock and	group descrip-
	      tors, 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 salvageable.  Due	to the wide variety  of	 possible  op-
	      tions  to	 mke2fs	that affect the	on-disk	layout,	it is critical
	      to specify exactly the same format options, such	as  blocksize,
	      fs-type,	feature	 flags,	and other tunables when	using this op-
	      tion, or the file	system will be	further	 corrupted.   In  some
	      cases,  such as file systems that	have been resized, or have had
	      features enabled after format time, it is	 impossible  to	 over-
	      write  all  of the superblocks correctly,	and at least some file
	      system corruption	will occur.  It	is best	to run this on a  full
	      copy  of	the  file system so other options can be tried if this
	      doesn't work.

       -t fs-type
	      Specify the file system 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 file.   This	option
	      controls which file system options are used by default, based on
	      the fstypes configuration	stanza in /etc/mke2fs.conf.

	      If the -O	option is used to explicitly add or remove file	system
	      options that should be set in the	newly created file system, the
	      resulting	file system may	not be supported by the	requested  fs-
	      type.  (e.g., "mke2fs -t ext3 -O extent /dev/sdXX" will create a
	      file  system 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	file system that does not have a jour-
	      nal and hence will not be	supported by the ext3 file system code
	      in the Linux kernel.)

       -T usage-type[,...]
	      Specify how the file system is going to be used, so that	mke2fs
	      can choose optimal file system parameters	for that use.  The us-
	      age  types  that	are supported are defined in the configuration
	      file /etc/mke2fs.conf.  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 file	system	to  be
	      created.	 If  the  file	system	size is	less than 3 megabytes,
	      mke2fs will use the file system type floppy.  If the file	system
	      size is greater than or equal to 3 but less than 512  megabytes,
	      mke2fs(8)	will use the file system type small.  If the file sys-
	      tem  size	 is greater than or equal to 4 terabytes but less than
	      16 terabytes, mke2fs(8) will use the file	system type  big.   If
	      the  file	 system	size is	greater	than or	equal to 16 terabytes,
	      mke2fs(8)	will  use  the	file  system  type  huge.   Otherwise,
	      mke2fs(8)	will use the default file system type default.

       -U UUID
	      Set  the universally unique identifier (UUID) of the file	system
	      to UUID.	The format of the UUID is a series of hex digits sepa-
	      rated	     by		 hyphens,	   like		 this:
	      "c1b9d5a2-f162-11cf-9ece-0020afc76f16".	The UUID parameter may
	      also be one of the following:

		   clear  clear	the file system	UUID

		   random generate a new randomly-generated UUID

		   time	  generate a new time-based UUID

       -v     Verbose execution.

       -V     Print the	version	number of mke2fs and exit.

       -z undo_file
	      Before overwriting a file	system block, write the	 old  contents
	      of  the  block to	an undo	file.  This undo file can be used with
	      e2undo(8)	to restore the old contents of the file	system	should
	      something	 go  wrong.   If  the  empty  string  is passed	as the
	      undo_file	argument, the undo file	will  be  written  to  a  file
	      named  mke2fs-device.e2undo  in  the directory specified via the
	      E2FSPROGS_UNDO_DIR environment variable or the  undo_dir	direc-
	      tive in the configuration	file.

	      WARNING: The undo	file cannot be used to recover from a power or
	      system crash.

ENVIRONMENT
       MKE2FS_SYNC
	      If set to	non-zero integer value,	its value is used to determine
	      how often	sync(2)	is called during inode table initialization.

       MKE2FS_CONFIG
	      Determines   the	 location   of	the  configuration  file  (see
	      mke2fs.conf(5)).

       MKE2FS_FIRST_META_BG
	      If set to	non-zero integer value,	its value is used to determine
	      first meta block group. This is mostly for debugging purposes.

       MKE2FS_DEVICE_SECTSIZE
	      If set to	non-zero integer value,	its value is used to determine
	      logical sector size of the device.

       MKE2FS_DEVICE_PHYS_SECTSIZE
	      If set to	non-zero integer value,	its value is used to determine
	      physical sector size of the device.

       MKE2FS_SKIP_CHECK_MSG
	      If set, do not show the message of file system  automatic	 check
	      caused by	mount count or check interval.

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

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),
       ext4(5)

E2fsprogs version 1.47.2	 January 2025			     MKE2FS(8)

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