DragonFly On-Line Manual Pages
SCAN_FFS(8) DragonFly System Manager's Manual SCAN_FFS(8)
NAME
scan_ffs - find UFS/FFS partitions on a disk
SYNOPSIS
scan_ffs [-lsv] [-b begin] [-e end] device
DESCRIPTION
This is the life-saver of typos. If you have ever been working too long,
and just happened to type 'disklabel -rw da0 floppy', instead of
'disklabel -rw fd0 floppy', you know what I am talking about.
This little program will take a raw disk device (which you might have to
create) that covers the whole disk, and finds all probable UFS/FFS
partitions on the disk. It has various options to make it go faster, and
to print out information to help in the reconstruction of the disklabel.
The options are as follows:
-l This will make scan_ffs print out a string looking much like the
input to disklabel. With a little massaging, this output can
usually be used in the disklabel edit.
-s This tells scan_ffs to be smart about skipping partitions (when
it thinks it found a valid one). By not scanning partitions for
superblocks, the program completes a couple of orders of
magnitude faster. However, sometimes being smart is too good for
its own good, especially if your disk has had a different layout
previously, or contains other non-UFS/FFS filesystems.
-v Tell scan_ffs to be verbose about what it is doing, and what it
has found.
-b begin
Tell scan_ffs where to begin searching for filesystems. This
makes it easier to skip swap partitions, or other large non-
UFS/FFS partitions.
-e end Ditto for telling scan_ffs where to stop.
device This specifies which device scan_ffs should use to scan for
filesystems. Usually this device should cover the whole disk in
question.
The basic operation of this program is as follows:
1. Panic. You usually do so anyways, so you might as well get it over
with. Just don't do anything stupid. Panic away from your
machine. Then relax, and see if the steps below won't help you
out.
2. Try to find your old disklabel by any other means possible. This
includes printouts, backups, screendumps, and whatever other method
you can think of. The more information you have, the better your
chances are in recovering the disklabel of the disk.
3. Create a disklabel on the affected disk, which covers the whole
disk, and has at least one partition which covers the whole disk.
As the "c" partition usually covers the whole disk anyways, this
sounds like a good place to start.
4. Run scan_ffs over this partition. If you have any information
about the disklabel which used to exist on the disk, keep that in
mind while scan_ffs spews out its things.
5. Use disklabel(8) to reconstruct the disklabel on the affected disk,
using all the information you gathered from scan_ffs and other
sources.
Last but certainly not least, we wish you good luck. The UFS/FFS
filesystems are pretty sturdy. I've seen them reconstructed after some
pretty weird and awesome fumbles. If you can't have backups, at least
have funky tools to help you out of a jam when they happen.
SEE ALSO
disklabel(8)
HISTORY
The scan_ffs utility first appeared in OpenBSD 2.3 and was ported to
FreeBSD by Robert Watson. UFS2 Support was added by Michael Ranner.
BUGS
It is not perfect, and could do a lot more things with date/time
information in the superblocks it finds, but this program has saved more
than one butt, more than once.
DragonFly 6.5-DEVELOPMENT January 31, 1998 DragonFly 6.5-DEVELOPMENT