Provided by: e2fsprogs_1.44.1-1ubuntu1.4_amd64 

NAME
mke2fs - create an ext2/ext3/ext4 filesystem
SYNOPSIS
mke2fs [ -c | -l filename ] [ -b block-size ] [ -C cluster-size ] [ -d root-directory ] [ -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-percentage ] [ -o creator-os ] [ -O
[^]feature[,...] ] [ -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 ] [ -e
errors-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 filesystem, 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 device 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 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 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 filesystems using the bigalloc feature. Valid cluster-
size values are from 2048 to 256M bytes per cluster. This 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
Copy the contents of the given directory into the root directory of the filesystem.
-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 filesystem error
will cause e2fsck(8) to check the filesystem on the next boot. error-behavior can be one of the
following:
continue Continue normal execution.
remount-ro Remount filesystem read-only.
panic Cause a kernel panic.
-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 compatibility, but is deprecated. The following
extended options are supported:
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.
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 allocator.
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 written.
offset=offset
Create the filesystem at an offset from the beginning of the device or file. This can
be useful when creating disk images for virtual machines.
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 zeroing.
lazy_journal_init[= <0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
If enabled, the journal inode will not be fully zeroed out by mke2fs. This speeds up
filesystem initialization 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.
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.
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 maximizes the range of contiguous data blocks, which can be useful for
certain specialized use cases, such as supported Shingled Drives.
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 directory 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 filesystem to change based on the user running mke2fs.
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.
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
default 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.
-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 create 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 generally 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.
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 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.
-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 change this
ratio on a filesystem after it is created, so be careful deciding the correct value for this
parameter. Note that resizing a filesystem 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 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. It is not
possible to change this value after the filesystem is created.
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 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.
The default inode size is controlled by the mke2fs.conf(5) file. In the mke2fs.conf file shipped
with e2fsprogs, the default inode size is 256 bytes for most file systems, except for small file
systems where the inode size will be 128 bytes.
-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 10,240,000
filesystem 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.
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 multiple 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, external-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.
-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 automatically 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 features that are enabled by default are specified by the base_features
relation, either in the [defaults] section in the /etc/mke2fs.conf configuration file, or in the
[fs_types] subsections for the usage types as specified by the -T option, further 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] section 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 configuration file.
The filesystem feature set is comprised of a list of features, separated by commas, that are to be
enabled. To disable a feature, simply prefix the feature name with a caret ('^') character.
Features with dependencies will not be removed successfully. The pseudo-filesystem feature "none"
will clear all filesystem 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.
-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 an extreme measure 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 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 salvageable. Due to the wide variety of possible options 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 option, or the
filesystem will be further corrupted. In some cases, such as filesystems that have been resized,
or have had features enabled after format time, it is impossible to overwrite all of the
superblocks correctly, and at least some filesystem corruption will occur. It is best to run this
on a full copy of the filesystem so other options can be tried if this doesn't work.
-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 file. This option controls which filesystem 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 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 extent /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. 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 3 megabytes, mke2fs will use
the filesystem type floppy. If the filesystem size is greater than or equal to 3 but less than
512 megabytes, mke2fs(8) will use the filesystem type small. If the filesystem size is greater
than or equal to 4 terabytes but less than 16 terabytes, mke2fs(8) will use the filesystem type
big. If the filesystem size is greater than or equal to 16 terabytes, mke2fs(8) will use the
filesystem type huge. Otherwise, mke2fs(8) will use the default filesystem type default.
-U UUID
Set the universally unique identifier (UUID) of the filesystem to UUID. The format of the UUID is
a series of hex digits separated by hyphens, like this: "c1b9d5a2-f162-11cf-9ece-0020afc76f16".
The UUID parameter may also be one of the following:
clear clear the filesystem 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 directive 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 filesystem 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 1.44.1 March 2018 MKE2FS(8)