Provided by: xfsprogs_6.8.0-2.2ubuntu1.1_amd64 bug

NAME

       mkfs.xfs - construct an XFS filesystem

SYNOPSIS

       mkfs.xfs  [  -b  block_size_options  ]  [  -c  config_file_options  ] [ -m global_metadata_options ] [ -d
       data_section_options ] [ -f ] [ -i inode_options ] [ -l log_section_options ] [ -n naming_options ] [  -p
       protofile_options ] [ -q ] [ -r realtime_section_options ] [ -s sector_size_options ] [ -L label ] [ -N ]
       [ -K ] device
       mkfs.xfs -V

DESCRIPTION

       mkfs.xfs constructs an XFS filesystem by writing on  a  special  file  using  the  values  found  in  the
       arguments  of  the  command  line.   It  is  invoked automatically by mkfs(8) when it is given the -t xfs
       option.

       In its simplest (and most commonly used form), the size of the filesystem is  determined  from  the  disk
       driver.   As  an  example,  to make a filesystem with an internal log on the first partition on the first
       SCSI disk, use:

              mkfs.xfs /dev/sda1

       The metadata log can be placed on another device to reduce  the  number  of  disk  seeks.   To  create  a
       filesystem on the first partition on the first SCSI disk with a 100MiB log located on the first partition
       on the second SCSI disk, use:

              mkfs.xfs -l logdev=/dev/sdb1,size=100m /dev/sda1

       Each of the option elements in  the  argument  list  above  can  be  given  as  multiple  comma-separated
       suboptions  if multiple suboptions apply to the same option.  Equivalently, each main option can be given
       multiple times with different  suboptions.   For  example,  -l  internal,size=100m  and  -l  internal  -l
       size=100m are equivalent.

       In  the  descriptions  below, sizes are given in sectors, bytes, blocks, kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes,
       etc.  Sizes are treated as hexadecimal if prefixed by 0x or 0X,  octal  if  prefixed  by  0,  or  decimal
       otherwise.  The following lists possible multiplication suffixes:
              s - multiply by sector size (default = 512, see -s option below).
              b - multiply by filesystem block size (default = 4K, see -b option below).
              k - multiply by one kilobyte (1,024 bytes).
              m - multiply by one megabyte (1,048,576 bytes).
              g - multiply by one gigabyte (1,073,741,824 bytes).
              t - multiply by one terabyte (1,099,511,627,776 bytes).
              p - multiply by one petabyte (1,024 terabytes).
              e - multiply by one exabyte (1,048,576 terabytes).

       When  specifying  parameters in units of sectors or filesystem blocks, the -s option or the -b option may
       be used to specify the size of the sector or block.  If the size of the block or sector is not specified,
       the default sizes (block: 4KiB, sector: 512B) will be used.

       Many  feature  options  allow  an  optional  argument  of  0  or  1,  to explicitly disable or enable the
       functionality.

       The correctness of the crc32c checksum implementation will be tested before  formatting  the  filesystem.
       If the test fails, the format will abort.

OPTIONS

       Options  may  be  specified  either on the command line or in a configuration file.  Not all command line
       options can be specified in configuration files; only the command line options followed  by  a  [section]
       label can be used in a configuration file.

       Options  that  can  be  used in configuration files are grouped into related sections containing multiple
       options.  The command line options and configuration files use the same  option  sections  and  grouping.
       Configuration  file section names are listed in the command line option sections below.  Option names and
       values are the same for both command line and configuration file specification.

       Options specified are the combined set of command line  parameters  and  configuration  file  parameters.
       Duplicated options will result in a respecification error, regardless of the location they were specified
       at.

       -c configuration_file_option
              This option specifies the files  that  mkfs  configuration  will  be  obtained  from.   The  valid
              configuration_file_option is:

                   options=name
                          The  configuration  options will be sourced from the file specified by the name option
                          string.  This  option  can  be  use  either  an  absolute  or  relative  path  to  the
                          configuration   file  to  be  read.   Sample  configuration  files  can  be  found  in
                          /usr/share/xfsprogs/mkfs.

       -b block_size_options
       Section Name: [block]
              This option specifies the fundamental block size of the filesystem.  The  valid  block_size_option
              is:

                   size=value
                          The  filesystem  block  size  is specified with a value in bytes. The default value is
                          4096 bytes (4 KiB), the minimum is 512, and the maximum is 65536 (64 KiB).

                          Although mkfs.xfs will accept any of these values and create a valid  filesystem,  XFS
                          on Linux can only mount filesystems with pagesize or smaller blocks.

       -m global_metadata_options
       Section Name: [metadata]
              These options specify metadata format options that either apply to the entire filesystem or aren't
              easily characterised by a specific functionality group. The valid global_metadata_options are:

                   bigtime=value
                          This option enables filesystems that can handle inode timestamps from December 1901 to
                          July  2486,  and quota timer expirations from January 1970 to July 2486.  The value is
                          either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to enable large timestamps.

                          If this feature is not  enabled,  the  filesystem  can  only  handle  timestamps  from
                          December 1901 to January 2038, and quota timers from January 1970 to February 2106.

                          By  default,  mkfs.xfs  will enable this feature.  If the option -m crc=0 is used, the
                          large timestamp feature is not supported and is disabled.

                   crc=value
                          This is used to create a filesystem which maintains and checks CRC information in  all
                          metadata objects on disk. The value is either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to enable
                          the use of CRCs.

                          CRCs enable enhanced error detection due to hardware issues, whilst the format changes
                          also  improves  crash recovery algorithms and the ability of various tools to validate
                          and repair metadata corruptions when they  are  found.   The  CRC  algorithm  used  is
                          CRC32c,  so  the  overhead is dependent on CPU architecture as some CPUs have hardware
                          acceleration of this algorithm.  Typically the overhead of  calculating  and  checking
                          the CRCs is not noticeable in normal operation.

                          By default, mkfs.xfs will enable metadata CRCs.

                          Formatting  a  filesystem  without CRCs selects the V4 format, which is deprecated and
                          will be removed from upstream in September 2030.  Distributors may choose to  withdraw
                          support for the V4 format earlier than this date.  Several other options, noted below,
                          are only tunable on V4 formats, and will be removed along with the V4 format itself.

                   finobt=value
                          This option enables the use of a separate free inode btree index  in  each  allocation
                          group. The value is either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to create a free inode btree
                          in each allocation group.

                          The free inode btree mirrors the existing allocated inode btree  index  which  indexes
                          both  used  and free inodes. The free inode btree does not index used inodes, allowing
                          faster, more consistent inode allocation performance as filesystems age.

                          By default, mkfs.xfs will create free inode btrees for filesystems  created  with  the
                          (default)  -m crc=1 option set. When the option -m crc=0 is used, the free inode btree
                          feature is not supported and is disabled.

                   inobtcount=value
                          This option causes the filesystem to record the number of blocks  used  by  the  inode
                          btree  and the free inode btree.  This can be used to reduce mount times when the free
                          inode btree is enabled.

                          By default, mkfs.xfs will enable this option.  This  feature  is  only  available  for
                          filesystems  created  with  the  (default) -m finobt=1 option set.  When the option -m
                          finobt=0 is used, the inode btree counter feature is not supported and is disabled.

                   uuid=value
                          Use the given value as the filesystem UUID for  the  newly  created  filesystem.   The
                          default is to generate a random UUID.

                   rmapbt=value
                          This  option  enables the creation of a reverse-mapping btree index in each allocation
                          group.  The value is either 0 to disable the feature, or 1 to create the btree.

                          The reverse mapping btree maps filesystem blocks to the owner of the filesystem block.
                          Most  of the mappings will be to an inode number and an offset, though there will also
                          be mappings to filesystem metadata.  This secondary metadata can be used  to  validate
                          the primary metadata or to pinpoint exactly which data has been lost when a disk error
                          occurs.

                          By default, mkfs.xfs will create reverse mapping btrees when possible.   This  feature
                          is only available for filesystems created with the (default) -m crc=1 option set. When
                          the option -m crc=0 is used, the reverse mapping btree feature is not supported and is
                          disabled.

                   reflink=value
                          This  option  enables  the  use  of  a  separate  reference  count btree index in each
                          allocation group. The value is either 0 to disable the  feature,  or  1  to  create  a
                          reference count btree in each allocation group.

                          The  reference  count  btree  enables the sharing of physical extents between the data
                          forks of different files, which is commonly known as  "reflink".   Unlike  traditional
                          Unix  filesystems which assume that every inode and logical block pair map to a unique
                          physical block, a reflink-capable XFS filesystem removes the  uniqueness  requirement,
                          allowing  up  to four billion arbitrary inode/logical block pairs to map to a physical
                          block.  If a program tries to write to a multiply-referenced  block  in  a  file,  the
                          write  will  be redirected to a new block, and that file's logical-to-physical mapping
                          will be changed to the new block ("copy on write").  This feature enables the creation
                          of  per-file  snapshots and deduplication.  It is only available for the data forks of
                          regular files.

                          By default, mkfs.xfs will create reference count btrees and therefore will enable  the
                          reflink  feature.   This  feature  is  only available for filesystems created with the
                          (default) -m crc=1 option set. When the option -m crc=0 is used, the  reference  count
                          btree feature is not supported and reflink is disabled.

       -d data_section_options
       Section Name: [data]
              These  options  specify  the  location,  size,  and  other  parameters  of the data section of the
              filesystem. The valid data_section_options are:

                   agcount=value
                          This is used to specify the number of allocation  groups.  The  data  section  of  the
                          filesystem  is  divided into allocation groups to improve the performance of XFS. More
                          allocation groups imply that more parallelism can be achieved when  allocating  blocks
                          and  inodes.  The  minimum  allocation  group size is 16 MiB; the maximum size is just
                          under 1 TiB.  The data section of the filesystem  is  divided  into  value  allocation
                          groups (default value is scaled automatically based on the underlying device size).

                   agsize=value
                          This  is  an alternative to using the agcount suboption. The value is the desired size
                          of the allocation group expressed in bytes (usually using the m or g suffixes).   This
                          value must be a multiple of the filesystem block size, and must be at least 16MiB, and
                          no more than 1TiB, and may be automatically adjusted to properly align with the stripe
                          geometry.  The agcount and agsize suboptions are mutually exclusive.

                   cowextsize=value
                          Set  the  copy-on-write extent size hint on all inodes created by mkfs.xfs.  The value
                          must be provided in units of filesystem blocks.  If the value  is  zero,  the  default
                          value (currently 32 blocks) will be used.  Directories will pass on this hint to newly
                          created regular files and directories.

                   name=value
                          This can be used to specify the name of the special file containing the filesystem. In
                          this  case,  the  log  section  must be specified as internal (with a size, see the -l
                          option below) and there can be no real-time section.

                   file[=value]
                          This is used to specify that the file given by the name suboption is a  regular  file.
                          The value is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that the file is regular. This suboption
                          is used only to make a filesystem image. If the value is omitted then 1 is assumed.

                   size=value
                          This is used to specify the size of the data section. This suboption is required if -d
                          file[=1]  is  given. Otherwise, it is only needed if the filesystem should occupy less
                          space than the size of the special file.

                          The data section must be at least 300MB in size.

                   sunit=value
                          This is used to specify the stripe unit for a RAID device or  a  logical  volume.  The
                          value has to be specified in 512-byte block units. Use the su suboption to specify the
                          stripe unit size in bytes. This suboption ensures that data allocations will be stripe
                          unit  aligned  when  the  current  end  of file is being extended and the file size is
                          larger than 512KiB. Also inode allocations and the internal log will  be  stripe  unit
                          aligned.

                   su=value
                          This is an alternative to using sunit.  The su suboption is used to specify the stripe
                          unit for a RAID device or a striped logical volume. The value has to be  specified  in
                          bytes,  (usually  using  the  m  or  g suffixes). This value must be a multiple of the
                          filesystem block size.

                   swidth=value
                          This is used to specify the stripe width for  a  RAID  device  or  a  striped  logical
                          volume. The value has to be specified in 512-byte block units. Use the sw suboption to
                          specify the stripe width size in bytes.  This suboption is required if  -d  sunit  has
                          been specified and it has to be a multiple of the -d sunit suboption.

                   sw=value
                          suboption  is an alternative to using swidth.  The sw suboption is used to specify the
                          stripe width for a RAID device or striped logical volume. The value is expressed as  a
                          multiplier of the stripe unit, usually the same as the number of stripe members in the
                          logical volume configuration, or data disks in a RAID device.

                          When a filesystem is created on a block device, mkfs.xfs will automatically query  the
                          block  device  for  appropriate  sunit  and  swidth values if the block device and the
                          filesystem size would be larger than 1GB.

                   noalign
                          This option disables automatic geometry detection and creates the  filesystem  without
                          stripe  geometry  alignment  even  if  the  underlying  storage  device  provides this
                          information.

                   rtinherit=value
                          If value is set to 1, all inodes created by mkfs.xfs will be created with the realtime
                          flag  set.   The  default  is  0.  Directories will pass on this flag to newly created
                          regular files and directories.

                   projinherit=value
                          All inodes created by mkfs.xfs will be assigned  the  project  quota  id  provided  in
                          value.   Directories  will  pass  on the project id to newly created regular files and
                          directories.

                   extszinherit=value
                          All inodes created by mkfs.xfs will have this value extent  size  hint  applied.   The
                          value  must  be provided in units of filesystem blocks.  Directories will pass on this
                          hint to newly created regular files and directories.

                   daxinherit=value
                          If value is set to 1, all inodes created by mkfs.xfs will be created with the DAX flag
                          set.   The  default is 0.  Directories will pass on this flag to newly created regular
                          files and directories.  By default, mkfs.xfs will not enable DAX mode.

                   concurrency=value
                          Create enough allocation groups to handle the desired level of concurrency.  The  goal
                          of  this  calculation  scheme  is to set the number of allocation groups to an integer
                          multiple of the number of writer threads desired, to minimize contention of AG  locks.
                          This  scheme  will  neither  create  fewer  AGs  than  would be created by the default
                          configuration, nor will it create AGs smaller than 4GB.  This option is not compatible
                          with  the  agcount or agsize options.  The magic value nr_cpus or 1 or no value at all
                          will set this parameter to the number of active processors  in  the  system.   If  the
                          kernel  advertises  that  the data device is a non-mechanical storage device, mkfs.xfs
                          will use this new geometry calculation scheme.  The magic value of 0 forces use of the
                          older AG geometry calculations that is used for mechanical storage.

       -f     Force  overwrite when an existing filesystem is detected on the device.  By default, mkfs.xfs will
              not write to the device if it suspects that there is a filesystem or partition table on the device
              already.

       -i inode_options
       Section Name: [inode]
              This  option  specifies  the  inode size of the filesystem, and other inode allocation parameters.
              The XFS inode contains a fixed-size part and a variable-size part.  The variable-size part,  whose
              size  is  affected  by  this option, can contain: directory data, for small directories; attribute
              data, for small attribute sets; symbolic link data, for small symbolic links; the extent list  for
              the file, for files with a small number of extents; and the root of a tree describing the location
              of extents for the file, for files with a large number of extents.

              The valid inode_options are:

                   size=value | perblock=value
                          The inode size is specified either as a value in bytes with size=  or  as  the  number
                          fitting  in a filesystem block with perblock=.  The minimum (and default) value is 256
                          bytes without crc, 512 bytes with crc enabled.  The maximum  value  is  2048  (2  KiB)
                          subject  to  the  restriction  that  the  inode  size  cannot  exceed  one half of the
                          filesystem block size.

                          XFS uses 64-bit inode numbers internally; however, the number of significant  bits  in
                          an  inode number is affected by filesystem geometry.  In practice, filesystem size and
                          inode size are the  predominant  factors.   The  Linux  kernel  (on  32  bit  hardware
                          platforms) and most applications cannot currently handle inode numbers greater than 32
                          significant bits, so if no inode size is given on  the  command  line,  mkfs.xfs  will
                          attempt  to choose a size such that inode numbers will be < 32 bits.  If an inode size
                          is specified, or if a filesystem is sufficiently large, mkfs.xfs  will  warn  if  this
                          will create inode numbers > 32 significant bits.

                   maxpct=value
                          This specifies the maximum percentage of space in the filesystem that can be allocated
                          to inodes. The default value is 25% for filesystems  under  1TB,  5%  for  filesystems
                          under 50TB and 1% for filesystems over 50TB.

                          Setting  the  value to 0 means that essentially all of the filesystem can become inode
                          blocks (subject  to  possible  inode32  mount  option  restrictions,  see  xfs(5)  for
                          details.)

                          This value can be modified with xfs_growfs(8).

                   align[=value]
                          This  is  used  to  specify  that  inode allocation is or is not aligned. The value is
                          either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that inodes are allocated aligned.  If the  value  is
                          omitted,  1  is assumed. The default is that inodes are aligned.  Aligned inode access
                          is normally more efficient than unaligned access; alignment must be established at the
                          time  the filesystem is created, since inodes are allocated at that time.  This option
                          can be used to turn off inode alignment when the filesystem needs to be mountable by a
                          version  of  IRIX  that does not have the inode alignment feature (any release of IRIX
                          before 6.2, and IRIX 6.2 without XFS patches).

                          This option is only tunable on the deprecated V4 format.

                   attr=value
                          This is used to specify the version of extended attribute inline allocation policy  to
                          be  used.   By  default, this is 2, which uses an efficient algorithm for managing the
                          available inline inode space between attribute and extent data.

                          The previous version 1, which has fixed regions for attribute and extent data, is kept
                          for backwards compatibility with kernels older than version 2.6.16.

                          This option is only tunable on the deprecated V4 format.

                   projid32bit[=value]
                          This  is  used  to enable 32bit quota project identifiers. The value is either 0 or 1,
                          with 1 signifying that 32bit projid are to be enabled.  If the value is omitted, 1  is
                          assumed.  (This default changed in release version 3.2.0.)

                          This option is only tunable on the deprecated V4 format.

                   sparse[=value]
                          Enable  sparse  inode  chunk allocation. The value is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying
                          that sparse allocation is enabled.  If the value is  omitted,  1  is  assumed.  Sparse
                          inode allocation is enabled by default. This feature is only available for filesystems
                          formatted with -m crc=1.

                          When enabled, sparse inode allocation allows the filesystem to allocate  smaller  than
                          the  standard  64-inode  chunk  when  free  space is severely limited. This feature is
                          useful for filesystems that might fragment free space over  time  such  that  no  free
                          extents  are  large  enough  to accommodate a chunk of 64 inodes. Without this feature
                          enabled, inode allocations can fail with out of space errors under  severe  fragmented
                          free space conditions.

                   nrext64[=value]
                          Extend  maximum  values  of inode data and attr fork extent counters from 2^31 - 1 and
                          2^15 - 1 to 2^48 - 1 and 2^32 - 1  respectively.   If  the  value  is  omitted,  1  is
                          assumed.   This feature will be enabled when possible.  This feature is only available
                          for filesystems formatted with -m crc=1.

              -l log_section_options
       Section Name: [log]
              These options specify the location,  size,  and  other  parameters  of  the  log  section  of  the
              filesystem. The valid log_section_options are:

                   agnum=value
                          If the log is internal, allocate it in this AG.

                   internal[=value]
                          This is used to specify that the log section is a piece of the data section instead of
                          being another device or logical volume. The value is either 0 or 1, with 1  signifying
                          that the log is internal. If the value is omitted, 1 is assumed.

                   logdev=device
                          This is used to specify that the log section should reside on the device separate from
                          the data section. The internal=1 and logdev options are mutually exclusive.

                   size=value
                          This is used to specify the size of the log section.

                          If the log is contained within the data section and  size  isn't  specified,  mkfs.xfs
                          will  try  to select a suitable log size depending on the size of the filesystem.  The
                          actual logsize depends on the filesystem block size and the directory block size.

                          Otherwise, the size suboption is only needed if the  log  section  of  the  filesystem
                          should  occupy less space than the size of the special file. The value is specified in
                          bytes or blocks, with a b suffix meaning multiplication by the filesystem block  size,
                          as  described  above.  The overriding minimum value for size is 512 blocks.  With some
                          combinations of filesystem block size, inode  size,  and  directory  block  size,  the
                          minimum log size is larger than 512 blocks.

                          The log must be at least 64MB in size.  The log cannot be more than 2GB in size.

                   version=value
                          This  specifies  the  version  of  the log. The current default is 2, which allows for
                          larger log buffer sizes, as well as supporting  stripe-aligned  log  writes  (see  the
                          sunit and su options, below).

                          The  previous  version  1,  which  is  limited to 32k log buffers and does not support
                          stripe-aligned writes, is kept for backwards compatibility with very old 2.4 kernels.

                          This option is only tunable on the deprecated V4 format.

                   sunit=value
                          This specifies the alignment to be used for log writes. The value has to be  specified
                          in  512-byte  block units. Use the su suboption to specify the log stripe unit size in
                          bytes.  Log writes will be aligned on this boundary, and rounded up to this  boundary.
                          This  gives  major improvements in performance on some configurations such as software
                          RAID5 when the sunit is specified as the filesystem block size.  The  equivalent  byte
                          value  must  be  a  multiple  of  the  filesystem  block  size.  Version  2  logs  are
                          automatically selected if the log sunit suboption is specified.

                          The su suboption is an alternative to using sunit.

                   su=value
                          This is used to specify the log stripe. The  value  has  to  be  specified  in  bytes,
                          (usually  using  the s or b suffixes). This value must be a multiple of the filesystem
                          block size.  Version 2 logs are automatically selected if  the  log  su  suboption  is
                          specified.

                   lazy-count=value
                          This  changes  the  method  of  logging various persistent counters in the superblock.
                          Under metadata intensive workloads, these counters are updated and  logged  frequently
                          enough that the superblock updates become a serialization point in the filesystem. The
                          value can be either 0 or 1.

                          With lazy-count=1, the superblock is not modified or logged on  every  change  of  the
                          persistent  counters.  Instead,  enough  information  is  kept  in  other parts of the
                          filesystem to be able to maintain the persistent counter values without needed to keep
                          them  in  the  superblock.  This gives significant improvements in performance on some
                          configurations.  The default value is 1 (on) so you must specify lazy-count=0  if  you
                          want to disable this feature for older kernels which don't support it.

                          This option is only tunable on the deprecated V4 format.

                   concurrency=value
                          Allocate  a  log  that  is estimated to be large enough to handle the desired level of
                          concurrency without userspace program threads contending for log space.   This  scheme
                          will  neither  create a log smaller than the minimum required, nor create a log larger
                          than the maximum possible.  This option is only valid for internal  logs  and  is  not
                          compatible  with  the  size  option.  This option is not compatible with the logdev or
                          size options.  The magic value nr_cpus or 1 or no value at all will set this parameter
                          to the number of active processors in the system.

       -n naming_options
       Section Name: [naming]
              These  options  specify  the  version  and  size parameters for the naming (directory) area of the
              filesystem. The valid naming_options are:

                   size=value
                          The directory block size is specified with a value in bytes.  The block size must be a
                          power  of 2 and cannot be less than the filesystem block size.  The default size value
                          for version 2 directories is 4096 bytes (4 KiB), unless the filesystem block  size  is
                          larger  than  4096, in which case the default value is the filesystem block size.  For
                          version 1 directories the block size is the same as the filesystem block size.

                   version=value
                          The naming (directory) version value can be either 2  or  'ci',  defaulting  to  2  if
                          unspecified.  With version 2 directories, the directory block size can be any power of
                          2 size from the filesystem block size up to 65536.

                          If the version=ci option is specified, the kernel  will  transform  certain  bytes  in
                          filenames  before  performing  lookup-related  operations.  The byte sequence given to
                          create a directory entry is persisted without alterations.  The lookup transformations
                          are defined as follows:

                              0x41-0x5a -> 0x61-0x7a

                              0xc0-0xd6 -> 0xe0-0xf6

                              0xd8-0xde -> 0xf8-0xfe

                          This  transformation  roughly  corresponds  to  case insensitivity in ISO 8859-1.  The
                          transformations are not compatible with other encodings (e.g. UTF8).   Do  not  enable
                          this  feature  unless  your  entire  environment has been coerced to ISO 8859-1.  This
                          feature is deprecated and will be removed in September 2030.

                          Note: Version 1 directories are not supported.

                   ftype=value
                          This feature allows the inode type to be stored in the directory structure so that the
                          readdir(3)  and  getdents(2)  do  not need to look up the inode to determine the inode
                          type.

                          The value is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying that filetype information will be stored
                          in the directory structure.  The default value is 1.

                          When  CRCs  are  enabled (the default), the ftype functionality is always enabled, and
                          cannot be turned off.

                          In other words, this option is only tunable on the deprecated V4 format.

       -p protofile_options
       Section Name: [proto]
              These options  specify  the  protofile  parameters  for  populating  the  filesystem.   The  valid
              protofile_options are:

                   [file=]protofile
                          The  file=  prefix  is  not  required  for  this  CLI argument for legacy reasons.  If
                          specified as a config file directive, the prefix is required.

                          If the optional protofile argument is given, mkfs.xfs uses protofile  as  a  prototype
                          file and takes its directions from that file.  The blocks and inodes specifiers in the
                          protofile are provided for backwards compatibility, but  are  otherwise  unused.   The
                          syntax  of  the  protofile  is  defined  by  a number of tokens separated by spaces or
                          newlines. Note that the line numbers are not part of the syntax but are meant to  help
                          you in the following discussion of the file contents.

                               1       /stand/diskboot
                               2       4872 110
                               3       d--777 3 1
                               4       usr     d--777 3 1
                               5       sh      ---755 3 1 /bin/sh
                               6       ken     d--755 6 1
                               7               $
                               8       b0      b--644 3 1 0 0
                               9       c0      c--644 3 1 0 0
                               10      fifo    p--644 3 1
                               11      slink   l--644 3 1 /a/symbolic/link
                               12      :  This is a comment line
                               13      $
                               14      $

                          Line  1  is  a  dummy  string.  (It was formerly the bootfilename.)  It is present for
                          backward compatibility; boot blocks are not used on SGI systems.

                          Note that some string of characters must be present as the first  line  of  the  proto
                          file  to cause it to be parsed correctly; the value of this string is immaterial since
                          it is ignored.

                          Line 2 contains two numeric values (formerly the numbers of blocks and inodes).  These
                          are  also  merely  for  backward compatibility: two numeric values must appear at this
                          point for the proto file to be correctly parsed, but their values are immaterial since
                          they are ignored.

                          The  lines  3 through 11 specify the files and directories you want to include in this
                          filesystem. Line 3 defines the root directory. Other directories and  files  that  you
                          want in the filesystem are indicated by lines 4 through 6 and lines 8 through 10. Line
                          11 contains symbolic link syntax.

                          Notice the dollar sign ($) syntax on line 7. This syntax directs the mkfs.xfs  command
                          to  terminate  the  branch of the filesystem it is currently on and then continue from
                          the directory specified by the next line, in this case line 8.  It must  be  the  last
                          character  on  a  line.   The colon on line 12 introduces a comment; all characters up
                          until the following newline are ignored.  Note that this means you cannot have a  file
                          in  a  prototype  file  whose name contains a colon.  The $ on lines 13 and 14 end the
                          process, since no additional specifications follow.

                          File specifications provide the following:

                            * file mode
                            * user ID
                            * group ID
                            * the file's beginning contents

                          A 6-character string defines the mode for a file. The first character of  this  string
                          defines the file type. The character range for this first character is -bcdpl.  A file
                          may be a regular file, a block special  file,  a  character  special  file,  directory
                          files,  named  pipes  (first-in,  first  out  files),  and symbolic links.  The second
                          character of the mode string is used to specify setuserID mode, in which case it is u.
                          If setuserID mode is not specified, the second character is -.  The third character of
                          the mode string is used to specify the setgroupID mode, in which case  it  is  g.   If
                          setgroupID  mode is not specified, the third character is -.  The remaining characters
                          of the mode string are a three digit octal  number.  This  octal  number  defines  the
                          owner,   group,  and  other  read,  write,  and  execute  permissions  for  the  file,
                          respectively.  For more information on file permissions, see the chmod(1) command.

                          Following the mode character string are two decimal number  tokens  that  specify  the
                          user and group IDs of the file's owner.

                          In  a  regular file, the next token specifies the pathname from which the contents and
                          size of the file are copied.  In a block or character special file, the next token are
                          two decimal numbers that specify the major and minor device numbers.  When a file is a
                          symbolic link, the next token specifies the contents of the link.

                          When the file is a directory, the mkfs.xfs command creates the  entries  dot  (.)  and
                          dot-dot  (..)  and then reads the list of names and file specifications in a recursive
                          manner for all of the entries in the directory. A scan  of  the  protofile  is  always
                          terminated with the dollar ( $ ) token.

                   slashes_are_spaces=value
                          If  set  to  1,  slashes  ("/")  in  the first token of each line of the protofile are
                          converted to spaces.  This enables the creation of a filesystem  containing  filenames
                          with spaces.  By default, this is set to 0.

       -q     Quiet  option. Normally mkfs.xfs prints the parameters of the filesystem to be constructed; the -q
              flag suppresses this.

       -r realtime_section_options
       Section Name: [realtime]
              These options specify the location, size, and other parameters of the  real-time  section  of  the
              filesystem. The valid realtime_section_options are:

                   rtdev=device
                          This  is  used to specify the device which should contain the real-time section of the
                          filesystem.  The suboption value is the name of a block device.

                   extsize=value
                          This is used to specify the size of  the  blocks  in  the  real-time  section  of  the
                          filesystem.  This  value  must be a multiple of the filesystem block size. The minimum
                          allowed size is the filesystem block size or 4 KiB (whichever is larger); the  default
                          size  is  the  stripe width for striped volumes or 64 KiB for non-striped volumes; the
                          maximum allowed size is 1 GiB. The real-time extent size should be carefully chosen to
                          match the parameters of the physical media used.

                   size=value
                          This  is  used  to  specify the size of the real-time section.  This suboption is only
                          needed if the real-time section of the filesystem should occupy less  space  than  the
                          size of the partition or logical volume containing the section.

                   noalign
                          This option disables stripe size detection, enforcing a realtime device with no stripe
                          geometry.

       -s sector_size_options
       Section Name: [sector]
              This option specifies the fundamental sector size of the filesystem.  The valid sector_size_option
              is:

                   size=value
                          The  sector  size  is specified with a value in bytes.  The default sector_size is 512
                          bytes. The minimum value for sector size is 512; the maximum is 32768  (32  KiB).  The
                          sector_size  must  be  a power of 2 size and cannot be made larger than the filesystem
                          block size.

       -L label
              Set the filesystem label.  XFS filesystem labels can be at most 12 characters long;  if  label  is
              longer  than  12 characters, mkfs.xfs will not proceed with creating the filesystem.  Refer to the
              mount(8) and xfs_admin(8) manual entries for additional information.

       -N     Causes the file system parameters to be printed out without really creating the file system.

       -K     Do not attempt to discard blocks at mkfs time.

       -V     Prints the version number and exits.

Configuration File Format

       The configuration file uses a basic INI format to specify sections and options within a section.  Section
       and  option names are case sensitive.  Section names must not contain whitespace.  Options are name-value
       pairs, ended by the first whitespace in the line.  Option names cannot  contain  whitespace.   Full  line
       comments  can be added by starting a line with a # symbol.  If values contain whitespace, then it must be
       quoted.

       The following example configuration file sets the block size to 4096  bytes,  turns  on  reverse  mapping
       btrees and sets the inode size to 2048 bytes.

       # Example mkfs.xfs configuration file

       [block]
       size=4k

       [metadata]
       rmapbt=1

       [inode]
       size=2048

SEE ALSO

       xfs(5), mkfs(8), mount(8), xfs_info(8), xfs_admin(8).

BUGS

       With a prototype file, it is not possible to specify hard links.

                                                                                                     mkfs.xfs(8)