Provided by: makebootfat_1.4-5_amd64 bug

NAME

       makebootfat ‐ Makebootfat Bootable FAT Disk Creation

SYNOPSIS

       makebootfat [options] IMAGE

DESCRIPTION

       This utility creates a bootable FAT filesystem and populates it with files and boot tools.

       It is mainly designed to create bootable USB and Fixed disk for the AdvanceCD project.

       The official site of AdvanceCD and makebootfat is:

           http://advancemame.sourceforge.net/

OPTIONS

       ‐o, ‐‐output DEVICE
              Specify  the output device. It must be the device where you want to setup the filesystem.  You can
              use the special ˝usb˝ value to automatically select the USB Mass Storage device connected  at  the
              system.  This option is always required.

       ‐b, ‐‐boot FILE

       ‐1, ‐‐boot‐fat12 FILE

       ‐2, ‐‐boot‐fat16 FILE

       ‐3, ‐‐boot‐fat32 FILE
              Specify  the  FAT  boot  sector  images to use. The ‐b option uses the same sector for all the FAT
              types. The other options can be used to specify a different sector for different  FAT  types.  The
              FAT types for which a boot sector is not specified are not used.  This option is always required.

       ‐m, ‐‐mbr FILE
              Specify  the MBR sector image to use.  If this option is specified a partition table is created on
              the disk. Otherwise the disk is filled without a partition table like a floppy disk.

       ‐F, ‐‐mbrfat
              Change the MBR image specified with the ‐m option to pretend to be a FAT filesystem starting  from
              the  first  sector  of the disk. This allows booting from USB‐FDD (Floppy Disk Drive) also using a
              partition table generally required by USB‐HDD (Hard Disk Drive).  The MBR image specified with the
              ‐m  option  must  have executable code positioned like a FAT boot sector. You can use the included
              ‘mbrfat.bin’ file.

       ‐c, ‐‐copy FILE
              Copy the specified file in the root directory of the disk.  The file is copied using the  readonly
              attribute.

       ‐x, ‐‐exclude FILE
              Exclude  the  specified  files and subdirectories in the IMAGE directory to copy. The path must be
              specified using the same format used in the IMAGE directory specification.

       ‐X, ‐‐syslinux2
              Enforce the syslinux 2.xx FAT limitations. Syslinux 2.xx doesn’t support FAT32 at all,  and  FAT16
              with  64  and  128  sectors  per  cluster  formats.   This option excludes all the FAT formats not
              supported by syslinux. Please note that it limits the maximum size of filesystem to 1 GB.

       ‐Y, ‐‐syslinux3
              Enforce the syslinux 3.xx FAT support. Syslinux 3.00 supports all the FAT types and sizes  but  it
              requires  a  special  customisation of the boot sector and of the file ‘ldlinux.sys’.  This option
              does this customisation without the need to use the syslinux installer if the  ‘ldlinux.sys’  file
              is copied on disk with the ‐c option.

       ‐Z, ‐‐zip
              If  possible  force  the ZIP‐Disk compatibility. It sets a geometry of 32 sectors and 64 heads. It
              also uses the 4’th partition entry in the partition table.  It’s required to boot also in  USB‐ZIP
              mode.

       ‐P, ‐‐partition
              Ensure to operate on a partition and not on a disk.

       ‐D, ‐‐disk
              Ensure to operate on a disk and not on a partition.

       ‐L, ‐‐label LABEL
              Set the FAT label. The label is a string of 11 chars.

       ‐O, ‐‐oem OEM
              Set the FAT OEM name. The OEM name is a string of 11 chars.

       ‐S, ‐‐serial SERIAL
              Set the FAT serial number. The serial number is a 32 bit unsigned integer.

       ‐E, ‐‐drive DRIVE
              Set  the  BIOS  drive  to  setup  in the FAT boot sector.  Generally this value is ignored by boot
              sectors, with the exception of the FAT12 and FAT16 FreeDOS boot sectors that require  the  correct
              value or the value 255 to force auto detection.

       ‐v, ‐‐verbose
              Print some information on the device and on the filesystem created.

       ‐i, ‐‐interactive
              Show the errors in a message box. Only for Windows.

       ‐h, ‐‐help
              Print a short help.

       ‐V, ‐‐version
              Print the version number.

       IMAGE  Directory  image  to  copy on the disk. All the files and subdirectories present in this directory
              are copied on the disk.

DISKS AND PARTITIONS NAMES

       In Linux disk devices are named /dev/hdX or /dev/sdX where X is a letter.  Partition  devices  are  named
       /dev/hdXN or /dev/sdXN where X is a letter and N a digit.

       In  Windows  disk  devices  are  named \\.\PhysicalDriveN where N is a digit. Partition devices are named
       \\.\X: where X is a letter, but sometimes \\.\X: is a disk and not a partition, for example  on  floppies
       and on all the USB Mass Storage devices without a partition table.

SYSLINUX

       To  make  a  bootable  FAT  using syslinux you must use the ‐X option for syslinux version 2.xx or the ‐Y
       option for syslinux version 3.xx. You must also copy in the root directory of the disk the files:
       ldlinux.sys The syslinux loader.
       syslinux.cfg The syslinux configuration file.
       linux The Linux kernel image  (the file name may be different).
       initrd.img The initrd filesystem (the file name may be different or missing).

       You must also specify the ‘ldlinux.bss’ boot sector with the ‐b option and possibily  the  ‘mbr.bin’  MBR
       sector with the ‐m option.  Both the sector images are present in the syslinux package.

       For example:

           makebootfat ‐o usb \
                ‐Y \
                ‐b ldlinux.bss ‐m mbr.bin \
                ‐c ldlinux.sys ‐c syslinux.cfg \
                ‐c linux ‐c initrd.img \
                image

LOADLIN AND FREEDOS

       To  make  a  bootable  FAT  using loadlin and FreeDOS you must copy in the root directory of the disk the
       files:
       kernel.sys The FreeDOS kernel. Remember to use the ˝32˝ kernel version to support FAT32.
       command.com The FreeDOS shell.
       autoexec.bat Used to start loadlin.
       loadlin.exe The loadlin executable.
       linux The Linux kernel image  (the file name may be different).
       initrd.img The initrd filesystem (the file name may be different or missing).

       You must also specify the FreeDOS boot sectors available on the FreeDOS ‘sys’ source package with the ‐1,
       ‐2,  ‐3  option.   For  the  MBR  you  can  use the sectors image available on the FreeDOS ‘fdisk’ source
       package.

       For example:

           makebootfat ‐o /dev/hda1 \
                ‐E 255 \
                ‐1 fat12com.bin ‐2 fat16com.bin ‐3 fat32lba.bin \
                ‐c kernel.sys ‐c command.com \
                ‐c autoexec.bat ‐c loadlin.exe \
                ‐c linux ‐c initrd.img \
                image

MULTI STANDARD USB BOOTING

       The BIOS USB boot support is generally differentiated in three categories: USB‐HDD, USB‐FDD and USB‐ZIP.

       The USB‐HDD (Hard Disk Drive) standard is the  preferred  choice  and  it  requires  the  presence  of  a
       partition table in the first sector of the disk. You can create this type of disk using the ‐m option.

       The  USB‐FDD  (Floppy  Disk Drive) standard requires the presence of a filesystem starting from the first
       sector of the disk without a partition table.  You can create this type of  disk  without  using  the  ‐m
       option.

       The  USB‐ZIP  (ZIP  Drive)  standard  requires  the  presence  of a device with a very specific geometry.
       Specifically, it requires a geometry with 32 sectors and 64 heads. It also requires  the  presence  of  a
       partition  table  with  only  a  bootable partition in the fourth entry. You can create this type of disk
       using the ‐m and ‐Z option.

       Generally these standards are incompatible, but using the ‐m, ‐F and ‐Z options you  can  create  a  disk
       compatible with all of them.

       To use the ‐F option, the MBR image specified must follow the constrains:
       •      It must start with a standard FAT 3 bytes jump instruction.
       •      It must have the bytes from address 3 to 89 (included) unused.

       And example of such image is in the ‘mbrfat.bin’ file.

       For example to create a syslinux image:

           makebootfat ‐o usb \
                ‐Y \
                ‐Z \
                ‐b ldlinux.bss ‐m mbrfat.bin ‐F \
                ‐c ldlinux.sys ‐c syslinux.cfg \
                ‐c linux ‐c initrd.img \
                image
       and for a FreeDOS and loadlin image:

           makebootfat ‐o usb \
                ‐E 255 \
                ‐Z \
                ‐1 fat12com.bin ‐2 fat16com.bin ‐3 fat32chs.bin \
                ‐m mbrfat.bin ‐F \
                ‐c kernel.sys ‐c command.com \
                ‐c autoexec.bat ‐c loadlin.exe \
                ‐c linux ‐c initrd.img \
                image
       Please note that FreeDos has some problems booting from USB. It works only on very few conditions.

EXCLUSION

       To  exclude  some  files  or directories in the image copy, you can use the ‐x option using the same path
       specification which are you using for the image directory.

       For example, if you need to exclude  the  ‘isolinux’  and  ‘syslinux’  subdirectories  from  the  ‘image’
       directory you can use the command:

           makebootfat ... \
                ‐x image/isolinux \
                ‐x image/syslinux \
                image

COPYRIGHT

       This file is Copyright (C) 2004, 2005 Andrea Mazzoleni

SEE ALSO

       syslinux(1), mkdosfs(1), dosfsck(1)

                                                                       Makebootfat Bootable FAT Disk Creation(1)