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NAME

       mke2fs.conf - Configuration file for mke2fs

DESCRIPTION

       mke2fs.conf  is  the configuration file for mke2fs(8).  It controls the default parameters
       used by mke2fs(8) when it is creating ext2, ext3, or ext4 filesystems.

       The mke2fs.conf file uses an  INI-style  format.   Stanzas,  or  top-level  sections,  are
       delimited by square braces: [ ].  Within each section, each line defines a relation, which
       assigns tags  to  values,  or  to  a  subsection,  which  contains  further  relations  or
       subsections.   An  example of the INI-style format used by this configuration file follows
       below:

            [section1]
                 tag1 = value_a
                 tag1 = value_b
                 tag2 = value_c

            [section 2]
                 tag3 = {
                      subtag1 = subtag_value_a
                      subtag1 = subtag_value_b
                      subtag2 = subtag_value_c
                 }
                 tag1 = value_d
                 tag2 = value_e
            }

       Comments are delimited by a semicolon (';') or a hash ('#') character at the beginning  of
       the comment, and are terminated by the end of line character.

       Tags  and  values  must  be  quoted  using double quotes if they contain spaces.  Within a
       quoted string, the  standard  backslash  interpretations  apply:  "\n"  (for  the  newline
       character),  "\t"  (for  the  tab character), "\b" (for the backspace character), and "\\"
       (for the backslash character).

       Some relations expect a boolean  value.   The  parser  is  quite  liberal  on  recognizing
       ``yes'',  '`y'', ``true'', ``t'', ``1'', ``on'', etc. as a boolean true value, and ``no'',
       ``n'', ``false'', ``nil'', ``0'', ``off'' as a boolean false value.

       The following stanzas are used in the mke2fs.conf file.  They will be  described  in  more
       detail in future sections of this document.

       [options]
              Contains relations which influence how mke2fs behaves.

       [defaults]
              Contains  relations  which  define  the  default  parameters used by mke2fs(8).  In
              general, these defaults may be overridden by a definition in the  fs_types  stanza,
              or by an command-line option provided by the user.

       [fs_types]
              Contains  relations  which  define  defaults  that  should  be  used  for  specific
              filesystem types.  The filesystem type can be specified  explicitly  using  the  -T
              option to mke2fs(8).

THE [options] STANZA

       The following relations are defined in the [options] stanza.

       proceed_delay
              If  this  relation  is set to a positive integer, then if mke2fs will proceed after
              waiting proceed_delay seconds, after asking the user  for  permission  to  proceed,
              even if the user has not answered the question.  Defaults to 0, which means to wait
              until the user answers the question one way or another.

THE [defaults] STANZA

       The following relations are defined in the [defaults] stanza.

       base_features
              This relation specifies the filesystems features which are enabled in newly created
              filesystems.   It  may  be  overridden  by  the base_features relation found in the
              filesystem or usage type subsection of the [fs_types] stanza.

       default_features
              This relation specifies a set of features that should be added or  removed  to  the
              features  listed  in  the  base_features  relation.   It  may  be overridden by the
              filesystem-specific default_features in the filesystem or usage type subsection  of
              [fs_types], and by the -O command-line option to mke2fs(8).

       enable_periodic_fsck
              This  boolean  relation  specifies  whether  periodic  filesystem  checks should be
              enforced at boot time.  If set to true, checks will be forced every  180  days,  or
              after  a random number of mounts.  These values may be changed later via the -i and
              -c command-line options to tune2fs(8).

       force_undo
              This boolean relation, if set to a value of true, forces mke2fs to  always  try  to
              create  an  undo  file, even if the undo file might be huge and it might extend the
              time to create the filesystem image because the inode table isn't being initialized
              lazily.

       fs_type
              This relation specifies the default filesystem type if the user does not specify it
              via the -t option, or if mke2fs is not started using a program  name  of  the  form
              mkfs.fs-type.  If both the user and the mke2fs.conf file does not specify a default
              filesystem type, mke2fs will use a default filesystem type of ext3 if a journal was
              requested via a command-line option, or ext2 if not.

       blocksize
              This  relation  specifies  the  default  blocksize  if  the user does not specify a
              blocksize on the command line, and the  filesystem-type  specific  section  of  the
              configuration file does not specify a blocksize.

       hash_alg
              This  relation  specifies  the  default hash algorithm used for the new filesystems
              with hashed b-tree directories.  Valid algorithms accepted are:  legacy,  half_md4,
              and tea.

       inode_ratio
              This relation specifies the default inode ratio if the user does not specify one on
              the command line, and the filesystem-type specific  section  of  the  configuration
              file does not specify a default inode ratio.

       inode_size
              This  relation specifies the default inode size if the user does not specify one on
              the command line, and the filesystem-type specific  section  of  the  configuration
              file does not specify a default inode size.

       reserved_ratio
              This  relation  specifies  the default percentage of filesystem blocks reserved for
              the super-user, if the user does not specify one  on  the  command  line,  and  the
              filesystem-type  specific  section  of  the  configuration  file does not specify a
              default reserved ratio. This value can be a floating point number.

       undo_dir
              This relation specifies the directory where the undo file should be stored.  It can
              be  overridden  via  the E2FSPROGS_UNDO_DIR environment variable.  If the directory
              location is set to the value none, mke2fs will not create an undo file.

THE [fs_types] STANZA

       Each tag in the [fs_types] stanza names a filesystem type  or  usage  type  which  can  be
       specified via the -t or -T options to mke2fs(8), respectively.

       The  mke2fs  program  constructs  a  list of fs_types by concatenating the filesystem type
       (i.e., ext2, ext3, etc.) with the usage type list.  For most configuration options, mke2fs
       will  look  for a subsection in the [fs_types] stanza corresponding with each entry in the
       constructed list, with later entries overriding earlier filesystem or  usage  types.   For
       example, consider the following mke2fs.conf fragment:

       [defaults]
            base_features = sparse_super,filetype,resize_inode,dir_index
            blocksize = 4096
            inode_size = 256
            inode_ratio = 16384

       [fs_types]
            ext3 = {
                 features = has_journal
            }
            ext4 = {
                 features = extents,flex_bg
                 inode_size = 256
            }
            small = {
                 blocksize = 1024
                 inode_ratio = 4096
            }
            floppy = {
                 features = ^resize_inode
                 blocksize = 1024
                 inode_size = 128
            }

       If  mke2fs  started  with  a program name of mke2fs.ext4, then the filesystem type of ext4
       will be used.  If the filesystem is smaller  than  3  megabytes,  and  no  usage  type  is
       specified,  then  mke2fs  will  use  a  default  usage type of floppy.  This results in an
       fs_types list of "ext4, floppy".   Both the ext4  subsection  and  the  floppy  subsection
       define  an inode_size relation, but since the later entries in the fs_types list supersede
       earlier ones, the configuration parameter for fs_types.floppy.inode_size will be used,  so
       the filesystem  will have an inode size of 128.

       The  exception to this resolution is the features tag, which is specifies a set of changes
       to the features used by the filesystem, and which is cumulative.  So in the above example,
       first  the  configuration  relation defaults.base_features would enable an initial feature
       set with the sparse_super, filetype, resize_inode, and dir_index features  enabled.   Then
       configuration  relation  fs_types.ext4.features  would  enable  the  extents  and  flex_bg
       features, and finally the configuration relation fs_types.floppy.features would remove the
       resize_inode   feature,   resulting   in  a  filesystem  feature  set  consisting  of  the
       sparse_super, filetype, resize_inode, dir_index, extents_and flex_bg features.

       For each filesystem type, the following tags may be used in that fs_type's subsection:

       base_features
              This  relation  specifies  the  features  which  are  initially  enabled  for  this
              filesystem  type.   Only  one  base_features will be used, so if there are multiple
              entries in the fs_types list whose subsections define the  base_features  relation,
              only the last will be used by mke2fs(8).

       features
              This  relation  specifies  a  comma-separated  list of features edit requests which
              modify the feature set used by the newly constructed filesystem.  The syntax is the
              same as the -O command-line option to mke2fs(8); that is, a feature can be prefixed
              by a caret ('^')  symbol  to  disable  a  named  feature.   Each  feature  relation
              specified  in  the fs_types list will be applied in the order found in the fs_types
              list.

       default_features
              This relation specifies set of features which should be enabled or  disabled  after
              applying  the  features listed in the base_features and features relations.  It may
              be overridden by the -O command-line option to mke2fs(8).

       auto_64-bit_support
              This relation is a boolean which specifies whether mke2fs(8)  should  automatically
              add  the  64bit  feature  if the number of blocks for the file system requires this
              feature to be enabled.  The resize_inode feature  is  also  automatically  disabled
              since it doesn't support 64-bit block numbers.

       default_mntopts
              This  relation  specifies  the  set  of  mount  options  which should be enabled by
              default.  These may be changed at a later time with the -o command-line  option  to
              tune2fs(8).

       blocksize
              This  relation  specifies  the  default  blocksize  if  the user does not specify a
              blocksize on the command line.

       lazy_itable_init
              This  boolean  relation  specifies  whether  the  inode  table  should  be   lazily
              initialized.   It  only  has  meaning  if  the  uninit_bg  feature  is enabled.  If
              lazy_itable_init is true and the uninit_bg feature is  enabled,   the  inode  table
              will  not fully initialized by mke2fs(8).  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.

       journal_location
              This relation specifies the location of the journal.

       num_backup_sb
              This relation indicates whether file systems with the sparse_super2 feature enabled
              should be created with 0, 1, or 2 backup superblocks.

       packed_meta_blocks
              This boolean relation specifes whether the allocation  bitmaps,  inode  table,  and
              journal should be located at the beginning of the file system.

       inode_ratio
              This relation specifies the default inode ratio if the user does not specify one on
              the command line.

       inode_size
              This relation specifies the default inode size if the user does not specify one  on
              the command line.

       reserved_ratio
              This  relation  specifies  the default percentage of filesystem blocks reserved for
              the super-user, if the user does not specify one on the command line.

       hash_alg
              This relation specifies the default hash algorithm used  for  the  new  filesystems
              with  hashed  b-tree directories.  Valid algorithms accepted are: legacy, half_md4,
              and tea.

       flex_bg_size
              This relation specifies the number of block groups that will be packed together  to
              create  one  large  virtual block group on an ext4 filesystem.  This improves meta-
              data locality and performance 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.

       options
              This relation specifies additional extended options  which  should  be  treated  by
              mke2fs(8)  as if they were prepended to the argument of the -E option.  This can be
              used to configure the  default  extended  options  used  by  mke2fs(8)  on  a  per-
              filesystem type basis.

       discard
              This  boolean  relation  specifies  whether the mke2fs(8) should attempt to discard
              device prior to filesystem creation.

       cluster_size
              This relation specifies the default  cluster  size  if  the  bigalloc  file  system
              feature  is  enabled.   It  can  be  overridden  via  the -C command line option to
              mke2fs(8)

       make_hugefiles
              This boolean relation enables the  creation  of  pre-allocated  files  as  part  of
              formatting the file system.

       hugefiles_uid
              This  relation  controls  the  user  ownership for all of the files and directories
              created by the make_hugefiles feature.

       hugefiles_gid
              This relation controls the group ownership for all of  the  files  and  directories
              created by the make_hugefiles feature.

       hugefiles_umask
              This  relation  specifies the umask used when creating the files and directories by
              the make_hugefiles feature.

       num_hugefiles
              This relation specifies the number of huge files to be created.  If  this  relation
              is  not  specified, or is set to zero, and the hugefiles_size relation is non-zero,
              then make_hugefiles will create as many huge files as can fit to  fill  the  entire
              file system.

       hugefiles_slack
              This relation specifies how much space should be reserved for other files.

       hugefiles_size
              This  relation  specifies  the  size  of  the  huge files.  If this relation is not
              specified, the default is to fill the entire file system.

       hugefiles_align
              This relation specifies the alignment for the start block of the  huge  files.   It
              also forces the size of huge files to be a multiple of the requested alignment.  If
              this relation is not specified, no alignment requirement will  be  imposed  on  the
              huge files.

       hugefiles_align_disk
              Thie  relations specifies whether the alignment should be relative to the beginning
              of the hard drive (assuming that the starting offset of the partition is  available
              to  mke2fs).  The default value is false, which if will cause hugefile alignment to
              be relative to the beginning of the file system.

       hugefiles_name
              This relation specifies the base file name for the huge files.

       hugefiles_digits
              This relation specifies the (zero-padded) width of the  field  for  the  huge  file
              number.

       zero_hugefiles
              This  boolean  relation specifies whether or not zero blocks will be written to the
              hugefiles while mke2fs(8) is creating  them.   By  default,  zero  blocks  will  be
              written  to  the  huge  files  to  avoid  stale  data  from being made available to
              potentially untrusted user programs, unless  the  device  supports  a  discard/trim
              operation  which will take care of zeroing the device blocks.  By zero_hugefiles to
              false, this step will always be skipped, which can be useful if it  is  known  that
              the  disk has been previously erased, or if the user programs that will have access
              to the huge files are trusted to not reveal stale data.

THE [devices] STANZA

       Each tag in the [devices] stanza names device name so  that  per-device  defaults  can  be
       specified.

       fs_type
              This  relation  specifies  the  default parameter for the -t option, if this option
              isn't specified on the command line.

       usage_types
              This relation specifies the default parameter for the -T  option,  if  this  option
              isn't specified on the command line.

FILES

       /etc/mke2fs.conf
              The configuration file for mke2fs(8).

SEE ALSO

       mke2fs(8)