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NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | BUGS | SEE ALSO | HOMEPAGE | AUTHORS | COLOPHON |
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MKFS.FAT(8) System Manager's Manual MKFS.FAT(8)
mkfs.fat - create an MS-DOS FAT filesystem
mkfs.fat [OPTIONS] DEVICE [BLOCK-COUNT]
mkfs.fat is used to create a FAT filesystem on a device or in an
image file. DEVICE is the special file corresponding to the
device (e.g. /dev/sdXX) or the image file (which does not need to
exist when the option -C is given). BLOCK-COUNT is the number of
blocks on the device. If omitted, mkfs.fat automatically chooses
a filesystem size to fill the available space.
Two different variants of the FAT filesystem are supported.
Standard is the FAT12, FAT16 and FAT32 filesystems as defined by
Microsoft and widely used on hard disks and removable media like
USB sticks and SD cards. The other is the legacy Atari variant
used on Atari ST.
In Atari mode, if not directed otherwise by the user, mkfs.fat
will always use 2 sectors per cluster, since GEMDOS doesn't like
other values very much. It will also obey the maximum number of
sectors GEMDOS can handle. Larger filesystems are managed by
raising the logical sector size. An Atari-compatible serial
number for the filesystem is generated, and a 12 bit FAT is used
only for filesystems that have one of the usual floppy sizes
(720k, 1.2M, 1.44M, 2.88M), a 16 bit FAT otherwise. This can be
overridden with the -F option. Some PC-specific boot sector
fields aren't written, and a boot message (option -m) is ignored.
-a Normally, for any filesystem except very small ones, mkfs.fat
will align all the data structures to cluster size, to make
sure that as long as the partition is properly aligned, so
will all the data structures in the filesystem. This option
disables alignment; this may provide a handful of additional
clusters of storage at the expense of a significant
performance degradation on RAIDs, flash media or large-sector
hard disks.
-A Select using the Atari variation of the FAT filesystem if
that isn't active already, otherwise select standard FAT
filesystem. This is selected by default if mkfs.fat is run
on 68k Atari Linux.
-b SECTOR-OF-BACKUP
Selects the location of the backup boot sector for FAT32.
Default depends on number of reserved sectors, but usually is
sector 6. The backup must be within the range of reserved
sectors.
-c Check the device for bad blocks before creating the
filesystem.
-C Create the file given as DEVICE on the command line, and
write the to-be-created filesystem to it. This can be used
to create the new filesystem in a file instead of on a real
device, and to avoid using dd in advance to create a file of
appropriate size. With this option, the BLOCK-COUNT must be
given, because otherwise the intended size of the filesystem
wouldn't be known. The file created is a sparse file, which
actually only contains the meta-data areas (boot sector,
FATs, and root directory). The data portions won't be stored
on the disk, but the file nevertheless will have the correct
size. The resulting file can be copied later to a floppy
disk or other device, or mounted through a loop device.
-D DRIVE-NUMBER
Specify the BIOS drive number to be stored in the FAT boot
sector. This value is usually 0x80 for hard disks and 0x00
for floppy devices or partitions to be used for floppy
emulation.
-f NUMBER-OF-FATS
Specify the number of file allocation tables in the
filesystem. The default is 2.
-F FAT-SIZE
Specifies the type of file allocation tables used (12, 16 or
32 bit). If nothing is specified, mkfs.fat will
automatically select between 12, 16 and 32 bit, whatever fits
better for the filesystem size.
-h NUMBER-OF-HIDDEN-SECTORS
Specify the number of so-called hidden sectors, as stored in
the FAT boot sector: this number represents the beginning
sector of the partition containing the file system. Normally
this is an offset (in sectors) relative to the start of the
disk, although for MBR logical volumes contained in an
extended partition of type 0x05 (a non-LBA extended
partition), a quirk in the MS-DOS implementation of FAT
requires it to be relative to the partition's immediate
containing Extended Boot Record. Boot code and other software
handling FAT volumes may also rely on this field being set up
correctly; most modern FAT implementations will ignore it.
By default, if the DEVICE is a partition block device,
mkfs.fat uses the partition offset relative to disk start.
Otherwise, mkfs.fat assumes zero. Use this option to override
this behaviour.
-i VOLUME-ID
Sets the volume ID of the newly created filesystem; VOLUME-ID
is a 32-bit hexadecimal number (for example, 2e24ec82). The
default is a number which depends on the filesystem creation
time.
-I It is typical for fixed disk devices to be partitioned so, by
default, you are not permitted to create a filesystem across
the entire device. mkfs.fat will complain and tell you that
it refuses to work. This is different when using MO disks.
One doesn't always need partitions on MO disks. The
filesystem can go directly to the whole disk. Under other
OSes this is known as the 'superfloppy' format. This switch
will force mkfs.fat to work properly.
-l FILENAME
Read the bad blocks list from FILENAME.
-m MESSAGE-FILE
Sets the message the user receives on attempts to boot this
filesystem without having properly installed an operating
system. The message file must not exceed 418 bytes once line
feeds have been converted to carriage return-line feed
combinations, and tabs have been expanded. If the filename
is a hyphen (-), the text is taken from standard input.
-M FAT-MEDIA-TYPE
Specify the media type to be stored in the FAT boot sector.
This value is usually 0xF8 for hard disks and is 0xF0 or a
value from 0xF9 to 0xFF for floppies or partitions to be used
for floppy emulation.
-n VOLUME-NAME
Sets the volume name (label) of the filesystem. The volume
name can be up to 11 characters long. Supplying an empty
string, a string consisting only of white space or the string
"NO NAME" as VOLUME-NAME has the same effect as not giving
the -n option. The default is no label.
--codepage=PAGE
Use DOS codepage PAGE to encode label. By default codepage
850 is used.
-r ROOT-DIR-ENTRIES
Select the number of entries available in the root directory.
The default is 112 or 224 for floppies and 512 for hard
disks.
-R NUMBER-OF-RESERVED-SECTORS
Select the number of reserved sectors. With FAT32 format at
least 2 reserved sectors are needed, the default is 32.
Otherwise the default is 1 (only the boot sector).
-s SECTORS-PER-CLUSTER
Specify the number of disk sectors per cluster. Must be a
power of 2, i.e. 1, 2, 4, 8, ... 128.
-S LOGICAL-SECTOR-SIZE
Specify the number of bytes per logical sector. Must be a
power of 2 and greater than or equal to 512, i.e. 512, 1024,
2048, 4096, 8192, 16384, or 32768. Values larger than 4096
are not conforming to the FAT file system specification and
may not work everywhere.
-v Verbose execution.
--offset SECTOR
Write the filesystem at a specific sector into the device
file. This is useful for creating a filesystem in a
partitioned disk image without having to set up a loop
device.
--variant TYPE
Create a filesystem of variant TYPE. Acceptable values are
'standard' and 'atari' (in any combination of upper/lower
case). See above under DESCRIPTION for the differences.
--help
Display option summary and exit.
--invariant
Use constants for normally randomly generated or time based
data such as volume ID and creation time. Multiple runs of
mkfs.fat on the same device create identical results with
this option. Its main purpose is testing mkfs.fat.
mkfs.fat can not create boot-able filesystems. This isn't as
easy as you might think at first glance for various reasons and
has been discussed a lot already. mkfs.fat simply will not
support it ;)
fatlabel(8), fsck.fat(8)
The home for the dosfstools project is its GitHub project page
⟨https://github.com/dosfstools/dosfstools⟩.
dosfstools were written by Werner Almesberger
⟨werner.almesberger@lrc.di.epfl.ch⟩, Roman Hodek ⟨Roman.Hodek@
informatik.uni-erlangen.de⟩, and others. The current maintainer
is Andreas Bombe ⟨aeb@debian.org⟩.
This page is part of the dosfstools (Tools for making and
checking MS-DOS FAT filesystems) project. Information about the
project can be found at
⟨https://github.com/dosfstools/dosfstools⟩. If you have a bug
report for this manual page, see
⟨https://github.com/dosfstools/dosfstools/issues⟩. This page was
obtained from the project's upstream Git repository
⟨https://github.com/dosfstools/dosfstools.git⟩ on 2020-12-18.
(At that time, the date of the most recent commit that was found
in the repository was 2020-02-14.) If you discover any rendering
problems in this HTML version of the page, or you believe there
is a better or more up-to-date source for the page, or you have
corrections or improvements to the information in this COLOPHON
(which is not part of the original manual page), send a mail to
man-pages@man7.org
dosfstools 4.1+git 2017-10-01 MKFS.FAT(8)
Pages that refer to this page: dosfsck(8), dosfslabel(8), fatlabel(8), fsck.fat(8), fsck.msdos(8), fsck.vfat(8), systemd-makefs@.service(8)