GUID Partition Table
TheGUID Partition Table(GPT) is a standard for the layout ofpartition tablesof a physicalcomputer storage device,such as ahard disk driveorsolid-state drive,usinguniversally unique identifiers(UUIDs), which are also known as globally unique identifiers (GUIDs). Forming a part of theUnified Extensible Firmware Interface(UEFI) standard (Unified EFI Forum-proposed replacement for thePCBIOS), it is nevertheless also used for some BIOSs, because of the limitations ofmaster boot record(MBR) partition tables, which use 32 bits forlogical block addressing(LBA) of traditional 512-bytedisk sectors.
All modern personal computeroperating systemssupport GPT. Some, includingmacOSandMicrosoft Windowson the x86 architecture, support booting from GPT partitions only on systems with EFI firmware, butFreeBSDand mostLinux distributionscan boot from GPT partitions on systems with either the BIOS or the EFI firmware interface.
History
[edit]The Master Boot Record (MBR) partitioning scheme, widely used since the early 1980s, imposed limitations for use of modern hardware. The available size for block addresses and related information is limited to 32 bits. For hard disks with 512‑byte sectors, the MBR partition table entries allow a maximum size of 2TiB(2³² × 512‑bytes) or 2.20TB(2.20 × 10¹² bytes).[1]
In the late 1990s,Inteldeveloped a new partition table format as part of what eventually became theUnified Extensible Firmware Interface(UEFI). The GUID Partition Table is specified in chapter 5 of the UEFI 2.8 specification.[2]GPT uses 64 bits for logical block addresses, allowing a maximum disk size of 264sectors. For disks with 512‑byte sectors, the maximum size is 8ZiB(264× 512‑bytes) or 9.44ZB(9.44 × 10²¹ bytes).[1]For disks with 4,096‑byte sectors the maximum size is 64ZiB(264× 4,096‑bytes) or 75.6ZB(75.6 × 10²¹ bytes).
In 2010, hard-disk manufacturers introduced drives with 4,096‑byte sectors (Advanced Format).[3]For compatibility with legacy hardware and software, those drives include an emulation technology (512e) that presents 512‑byte sectors to the entity accessing the hard drive, despite their underlying 4,096‑byte physical sectors.[4]Performance could be degraded on write operations, when the drive is forced to perform two read-modify-write operations to satisfy a single misaligned 4,096‑byte write operation.[4]Since April 2014, enterprise-class drives without emulation technology (4K native) have been available on the market.[5][6]
Readiness of the support for 4 KB logical sectors within operating systems differs among their types, vendors and versions.[7]For example,Microsoft Windowssupports 4K native drives sinceWindows 8andWindows Server 2012(both released in 2012) inUEFI.[8]
Features
[edit]Like MBR, GPT useslogical block addressing(LBA) in place of the historicalcylinder-head-sector(CHS) addressing. The protective MBR is stored at LBA 0, and the GPT header is in LBA 1, with a backup GPT header stored at the final LBA. The GPT header has apointerto the partition table (Partition Entry Array), which is typically at LBA 2. Each entry on the partition table has a size of 128 bytes. The UEFI specification stipulates that a minimum of 16,384 bytes, regardless of sector size, are allocated for the Partition Entry Array.[9]Thus, on a disk with 512-byte sectors, at least 32 sectors are used for the Partition Entry Array, and the first usable block is at LBA 34 or higher, while on a 4,096-byte sectors disk, at least 4 sectors are used for the Partition Entry Array, and the first usable block is at LBA 6 or higher.
MBR variants
[edit]Protective MBR (LBA 0)
[edit]For limited backward compatibility, the space of the legacyMaster Boot Record(MBR) is still reserved in the GPT specification, but it is now used in a way that prevents MBR-based disk utilities from misrecognizing and possibly overwriting GPT disks. This is referred to as aprotective MBR.[10]
A single partition of typeEEh,encompassing the entire GPT drive (where "entire" actually means as much of the drive as can be represented in an MBR), is indicated and identifies it as GPT. Operating systems and tools which cannot read GPT disks will generally recognize the disk as containing one partition of unknown type and no empty space, and will typically refuse to modify the disk unless the user explicitly requests and confirms the deletion of this partition. This minimizes accidental erasures.[10]Furthermore, GPT-aware OSes may check the protective MBR and if the enclosed partition type is not of typeEEhor if there are multiple partitions defined on the target device, the OS may refuse to manipulate the partition table.[11]
If the actual size of the disk exceeds the maximum partition size representable using the legacy 32-bit LBA entries in the MBR partition table, the recorded size of this partition is clipped at the maximum, thereby ignoring the rest of the disk. This amounts to a maximum reported size of 2 TiB, assuming a disk with 512 bytes per sector (see512e). It would result in 16 TiB with 4 KiB sectors (4Kn), but since many older operating systems and tools are hard coded for a sector size of 512 bytes or are limited to 32-bit calculations, exceeding the 2 TiB limit could cause compatibility problems.[10]
Hybrid MBR (LBA 0 + GPT)
[edit]In operating systems that support GPT-based boot through BIOS services rather than EFI, the first sector may also still be used to store the first stage of the bootloader code, but modified to recognize GPT partitions. The bootloader in the MBR must not assume a sector size of 512 bytes.[10]
Partition table header (LBA 1)
[edit]Offset | Length | Contents |
---|---|---|
0 (0x00) | 8 bytes | Signature ( "EFI PART",45h 46h 49h 20h 50h 41h 52h 54hor0x5452415020494645ULL[a]onlittle-endianmachines) |
8 (0x08) | 4 bytes | Revision number of header - 1.0 (00h 00h 01h 00h) for UEFI 2.10 |
12 (0x0C) | 4 bytes | Header size in little endian (in bytes, usually5Ch 00h 00h 00hor 92 bytes) |
16 (0x10) | 4 bytes | CRC32of header (offset +0 to +0x5c) in little endian, with this field zeroed during calculation |
20 (0x14) | 4 bytes | Reserved; must be zero |
24 (0x18) | 8 bytes | Current LBA (location of this header copy) |
32 (0x20) | 8 bytes | Backup LBA (location of the other header copy) |
40 (0x28) | 8 bytes | First usable LBA for partitions (primary partition table last LBA + 1) |
48 (0x30) | 8 bytes | Last usable LBA (secondary partition table first LBA − 1) |
56 (0x38) | 16 bytes | Disk GUID in mixed endian[11] |
72 (0x48) | 8 bytes | Starting LBA of array of partition entries (usually 2 for compatibility) |
80 (0x50) | 4 bytes | Number of partition entries in array |
84 (0x54) | 4 bytes | Size of a single partition entry (usually80hor 128) |
88 (0x58) | 4 bytes | CRC32 of partition entries array in little endian |
92 (0x5C) | * | Reserved; must be zeroes for the rest of the block (420 bytes for a sector size of 512 bytes; but can be more with larger sector sizes) |
The partition table header defines the usable blocks on the disk. It also defines the number and size of the partition entries that make up the partition table (offsets 80 and 84 in the table).[2]: 119
Partition entries (LBA 2–33)
[edit]Offset | Length | Contents |
---|---|---|
0 (0x00) | 16 bytes | Partition type GUID(mixed endian[11]) |
16 (0x10) | 16 bytes | Unique partition GUID (mixed endian) |
32 (0x20) | 8 bytes | First LBA (little endian) |
40 (0x28) | 8 bytes | Last LBA (inclusive, usually odd) |
48 (0x30) | 8 bytes | Attribute flags (e.g. bit 60 denotes read-only) |
56 (0x38) | 72 bytes | Partition name (36UTF-16LE code units) |
After the primary header and before the backup header, the Partition Entry Array describes partitions, using a minimum size of 128 bytes for each entry block.[12]The starting location of the array on disk, and the size of each entry, are given in the GPT header. The first 16 bytes of each entry designate the partition type's globally unique identifier (GUID). For example, the GUID for anEFI system partitionisC12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B.The second 16 bytes are a GUID unique to the partition. Then follow the starting and ending 64 bit LBAs, partition attributes, and the 36 character (max.)Unicodepartition name. As is the nature and purpose of GUIDs and as per RFC 4122, no central registry is needed to ensure the uniqueness of the GUID partition type designators.[13][2]: 2200
The 64-bit partition table attributes are shared between 48-bit common attributes for all partition types, and 16-bit type-specific attributes:
Bit | Content |
---|---|
0 | Platform required (required by the computer to function properly, OEM partition for example,disk partitioningutilities must preserve the partition as is) |
1 | EFI firmware should ignore the content of the partition and not try to read from it |
2 | Legacy BIOS bootable (equivalent toactive flag(typically bit 7 set) at offset+0hin partition entries of theMBR partition table)[14] |
3–47 | Reserved for future use |
48–63 | Defined and used by the individual partition type |
Microsoft defines the type-specific attributes forbasic data partitionas:[15][16]
Bit | Content |
---|---|
60 | Read-only |
61 | Shadow copy (of another partition) |
62 | Hidden |
63 | No drive letter (i.e. do not automount) |
Google defines the type-specific attributes for ChromeOS kernel as:[17]
Bit | Content |
---|---|
56 | Successful boot flag |
55–52 | Tries remaining |
51–48 | Priority (15: highest, 1: lowest, 0: not bootable) |
Operating-system support
[edit]UNIX and Unix-like systems
[edit]OS family | Version or edition | Platform | Read and write support | Boot support | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
FreeBSD | Since 7.0 | IA-32,x86-64,ARM | Yes | Yes | In a hybrid configuration, both GPT and MBR partition identifiers may be used. |
Linux | Most of the x86 Linux distributions Fedora8+ andUbuntu8.04+[18] |
IA-32, x86-64, ARM | Yes | Yes | Tools such as gdisk,GNU Parted,[19][20]util-linuxv2.23+fdisk,[21][22]SYSLINUX,GRUB 0.96 + patchesandGRUB 2have been GPT-enabled. Limited to 256 partitions per disk.[23] |
macOS | Since 10.4.0 (some features since 10.4.6)[24] | IA-32, x86-64,PowerPC,Apple silicon | Yes | Yes | Only Intel and Apple silicon Macintosh computers can boot from GPT. |
MidnightBSD | Since 0.4-CURRENT | IA-32, x86-64 | Yes | Requires CSM | In a hybrid configuration, both GPT and MBR partition identifiers may be used. |
NetBSD | Since 6.0[25] | IA-32,[26]x86-64,[27]ARM | Yes | Yes | |
OpenBSD | Since 5.9 | IA-32, x86-64, ARM | Yes | Yes | [28] |
Solaris | Since Solaris 10 | IA-32, x86-64,SPARC | Yes | Yes | [29] |
HP-UX | Since HP-UX 11.20 | IA-64 | Yes | Yes | [30] |
Windows: 32-bit versions
[edit]Windows 7 and earlier do not support UEFI on 32-bit platforms, and therefore do not allow booting from GPT partitions.[31]
OS version | Release date | Platform | Read or write support | Boot support | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Windows 9x | 1995-08-24 | IA-32 | No[b] | No | |
Windows XP | 2001-10-25 | IA-32 | No | No | |
Windows Server 2003 | 2003-04-24 | IA-32 | No | No | |
Windows Server 2003 SP1 | 2005-03-30 | IA-32 | Yes | No | MBRtakes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Vista | 2006-07-22 | IA-32 | Yes | No | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2008 | 2008-02-27 | IA-32 | Yes | No | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 7 | 2009-10-22 | IA-32 | Yes | No | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 8 | 2012-08-01 | IA-32 | Yes | RequiresUEFI[32] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 8.1 | 2013-08-27 | IA-32 | Yes | Requires UEFI[33] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 10 | 2015-07-29 | IA-32 | Yes | Requires UEFI[34] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows: 64-bit versions
[edit]Limited to 128 partitions per disk.[31]
OS version | Release date | Platform | Read and write support | Boot support | Note |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
Windows XP 64-Bit Edition for Itanium systems, Version 2002 | 2001-10-25 | IA-64 | Yes | Yes | MBRtakes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows XP 64-Bit Edition, Version 2003 | 2003-03-28 | IA-64 | Yes | Yes | MBRtakes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows XP Professional x64 Edition Windows Server 2003 |
2005-04-25[35] | x64 | Yes | No[c] | MBRtakes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2003 | 2005-04-25 | IA-64 | Yes | Yes | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Vista | 2006-07-22 | x64 | Yes | RequiresUEFI[d] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2008 | 2008-02-27 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2008 | 2008-02-27 | IA-64 | Yes | Yes | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 7 | 2009-10-22 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI[e] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2008 R2 | 2009-10-22 | IA-64 | Yes | Yes | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 8 Windows Server 2012 |
2012-08-01 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI[37] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 8.1 | 2013-08-27 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI[38] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 10 | 2015-07-29 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI[39] | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2016 | 2016-10-12 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2019 | 2018-10-02 | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows Server 2022 | 2021-08-18[40] | x64 | Yes | Requires UEFI | MBR takes precedence in hybrid configuration. |
Windows 11 | 2021-10-05 | x64, ARM64 | Yes | Yes | UEFI is a system requirement for Windows 11. |
Partition type GUIDs
[edit]Theaccessibilityof this table is in question.The specific issue is:screen readerscan not read content that iscollapsed and hidden.Relevant discussion may be found on thetalk page.(September 2024) |
"Partition type GUID" means that each partition type is strictly identified by a GUID number unique to that type, and therefore partitions of the same type will all have the same "partition type GUID". Each partition also has a "partition unique GUID" as a separate entry, which as the name implies is a unique id for each partition.
Operating system | Partition type | Globally unique identifier (GUID)[f] |
---|---|---|
— | Unused entry | 00000000-0000-0000-0000-000000000000 |
MBRpartition scheme | 024DEE41-33E7-11D3-9D69-0008C781F39F | |
EFI System partition | C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B | |
BIOS boot partition[g] | 21686148-6449-6E6F-744E-656564454649 | |
Intel Fast Flash (iFFS) partition (for Intel Rapid Start technology)[41][42] | D3BFE2DE-3DAF-11DF-BA40-E3A556D89593 | |
Sony boot partition[h] | F4019732-066E-4E12-8273-346C5641494F | |
Lenovo boot partition[h] | BFBFAFE7-A34F-448A-9A5B-6213EB736C22 | |
Windows | Microsoft Reserved Partition(MSR)[44] | E3C9E316-0B5C-4DB8-817D-F92DF00215AE |
Basic data partition[44][i] | EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7 | |
Logical Disk Manager(LDM) metadata partition[44] | 5808C8AA-7E8F-42E0-85D2-E1E90434CFB3 | |
Logical Disk Manager data partition[44] | AF9B60A0-1431-4F62-BC68-3311714A69AD | |
Windows Recovery Environment[44] | DE94BBA4-06D1-4D40-A16A-BFD50179D6AC | |
IBM General Parallel File System(GPFS) partition | 37AFFC90-EF7D-4E96-91C3-2D7AE055B174 | |
Storage Spacespartition[46] | E75CAF8F-F680-4CEE-AFA3-B001E56EFC2D | |
Storage Replica partition[47] | 558D43C5-A1AC-43C0-AAC8-D1472B2923D1 | |
HP-UX | Data partition | 75894C1E-3AEB-11D3-B7C1-7B03A0000000 |
Service partition | E2A1E728-32E3-11D6-A682-7B03A0000000 | |
Linux[48][49][50][51] | Linux filesystem data[i] | 0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4 |
RAID partition | A19D880F-05FC-4D3B-A006-743F0F84911E | |
Root partition (Alpha)[48] | 6523F8AE-3EB1-4E2A-A05A-18B695AE656F | |
Root partition (ARC)[48] | D27F46ED-2919-4CB8-BD25-9531F3C16534 | |
Root partition (ARM32‐bit)[48] | 69DAD710-2CE4-4E3C-B16C-21A1D49ABED3 | |
Root partition (AArch64)[48] | B921B045-1DF0-41C3-AF44-4C6F280D3FAE | |
Root partition (IA-64)[48] | 993D8D3D-F80E-4225-855A-9DAF8ED7EA97 | |
Root partition (LoongArch64‐bit)[48] | 77055800-792C-4F94-B39A-98C91B762BB6 | |
Root partition (mips: 32‐bitMIPSbig‐endian)[48] | E9434544-6E2C-47CC-BAE2-12D6DEAFB44C | |
Root partition (mips64: 64‐bitMIPSbig‐endian)[48] | D113AF76-80EF-41B4-BDB6-0CFF4D3D4A25 | |
Root partition (mipsel: 32‐bitMIPSlittle‐endian)[48] | 37C58C8A-D913-4156-A25F-48B1B64E07F0 | |
Root partition (mips64el: 64‐bitMIPSlittle‐endian)[48] | 700BDA43-7A34-4507-B179-EEB93D7A7CA3 | |
Root partition (PA-RISC)[48] | 1AACDB3B-5444-4138-BD9E-E5C2239B2346 | |
Root partition (32‐bitPowerPC)[48] | 1DE3F1EF-FA98-47B5-8DCD-4A860A654D78 | |
Root partition (64‐bit PowerPC big‐endian)[48] | 912ADE1D-A839-4913-8964-A10EEE08FBD2 | |
Root partition (64‐bit PowerPC little‐endian)[48] | C31C45E6-3F39-412E-80FB-4809C4980599 | |
Root partition (RISC-V32‐bit)[48] | 60D5A7FE-8E7D-435C-B714-3DD8162144E1 | |
Root partition (RISC-V 64‐bit)[48] | 72EC70A6-CF74-40E6-BD49-4BDA08E8F224 | |
Root partition (s390)[48] | 08A7ACEA-624C-4A20-91E8-6E0FA67D23F9 | |
Root partition (s390x)[48] | 5EEAD9A9-FE09-4A1E-A1D7-520D00531306 | |
Root partition (TILE-Gx)[48] | C50CDD70-3862-4CC3-90E1-809A8C93EE2C | |
Root partition (x86)[48] | 44479540-F297-41B2-9AF7-D131D5F0458A | |
Root partition (x86-64)[48] | 4F68BCE3-E8CD-4DB1-96E7-FBCAF984B709 | |
/usrpartition (Alpha)[48] | E18CF08C-33EC-4C0D-8246-C6C6FB3DA024 | |
/usrpartition (ARC)[48] | 7978A683-6316-4922-BBEE-38BFF5A2FECC | |
/usrpartition (ARM 32‐bit)[48] | 7D0359A3-02B3-4F0A-865C-654403E70625 | |
/usrpartition (AArch64)[48] | B0E01050-EE5F-4390-949A-9101B17104E9 | |
/usrpartition (IA-64)[48] | 4301D2A6-4E3B-4B2A-BB94-9E0B2C4225EA | |
/usrpartition (LoongArch 64‐bit)[48] | E611C702-575C-4CBE-9A46-434FA0BF7E3F | |
/usrpartition (mips: 32‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 773B2ABC-2A99-4398-8BF5-03BAAC40D02B | |
/usrpartition (mips64: 64‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 57E13958-7331-4365-8E6E-35EEEE17C61B | |
/usrpartition (mipsel: 32‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | 0F4868E9-9952-4706-979F-3ED3A473E947 | |
/usrpartition (mips64el: 64‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | C97C1F32-BA06-40B4-9F22-236061B08AA8 | |
/usrpartition (PA-RISC)[48] | DC4A4480-6917-4262-A4EC-DB9384949F25 | |
/usrpartition (32‐bit PowerPC)[48] | 7D14FEC5-CC71-415D-9D6C-06BF0B3C3EAF | |
/usrpartition (64‐bit PowerPC big‐endian)[48] | 2C9739E2-F068-46B3-9FD0-01C5A9AFBCCA | |
/usrpartition (64‐bit PowerPC little‐endian)[48] | 15BB03AF-77E7-4D4A-B12B-C0D084F7491C | |
/usrpartition (RISC-V 32‐bit)[48] | B933FB22-5C3F-4F91-AF90-E2BB0FA50702 | |
/usrpartition (RISC-V 64‐bit)[48] | BEAEC34B-8442-439B-A40B-984381ED097D | |
/usrpartition (s390)[48] | CD0F869B-D0FB-4CA0-B141-9EA87CC78D66 | |
/usrpartition (s390x)[48] | 8A4F5770-50AA-4ED3-874A-99B710DB6FEA | |
/usrpartition (TILE-Gx)[48] | 55497029-C7C1-44CC-AA39-815ED1558630 | |
/usrpartition (x86)[48] | 75250D76-8CC6-458E-BD66-BD47CC81A812 | |
/usrpartition (x86-64)[48] | 8484680C-9521-48C6-9C11-B0720656F69E | |
Root verity partition fordm-verity(Alpha)[48] | FC56D9E9-E6E5-4C06-BE32-E74407CE09A5 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (ARC)[48] | 24B2D975-0F97-4521-AFA1-CD531E421B8D | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (ARM 32‐bit)[48] | 7386CDF2-203C-47A9-A498-F2ECCE45A2D6 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (AArch64)[48] | DF3300CE-D69F-4C92-978C-9BFB0F38D820 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (IA-64)[48] | 86ED10D5-B607-45BB-8957-D350F23D0571 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (LoongArch 64‐bit)[48] | F3393B22-E9AF-4613-A948-9D3BFBD0C535 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (mips: 32‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 7A430799-F711-4C7E-8E5B-1D685BD48607 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (mips64: 64‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 579536F8-6A33-4055-A95A-DF2D5E2C42A8 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (mipsel: 32‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | D7D150D2-2A04-4A33-8F12-16651205FF7B | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (mips64el: 64‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | 16B417F8-3E06-4F57-8DD2-9B5232F41AA6 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (PA-RISC)[48] | D212A430-FBC5-49F9-A983-A7FEEF2B8D0E | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC little‐endian)[48] | 906BD944-4589-4AAE-A4E4-DD983917446A | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC big‐endian)[48] | 9225A9A3-3C19-4D89-B4F6-EEFF88F17631 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (32‐bit PowerPC)[48] | 98CFE649-1588-46DC-B2F0-ADD147424925 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 32‐bit)[48] | AE0253BE-1167-4007-AC68-43926C14C5DE | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 64‐bit)[48] | B6ED5582-440B-4209-B8DA-5FF7C419EA3D | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (s390)[48] | 7AC63B47-B25C-463B-8DF8-B4A94E6C90E1 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (s390x)[48] | B325BFBE-C7BE-4AB8-8357-139E652D2F6B | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (TILE-Gx)[48] | 966061EC-28E4-4B2E-B4A5-1F0A825A1D84 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (x86-64)[48] | 2C7357ED-EBD2-46D9-AEC1-23D437EC2BF5 | |
Root verity partition for dm-verity (x86)[48] | D13C5D3B-B5D1-422A-B29F-9454FDC89D76 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (Alpha)[48] | 8CCE0D25-C0D0-4A44-BD87-46331BF1DF67 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (ARC)[48] | FCA0598C-D880-4591-8C16-4EDA05C7347C | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (ARM 32‐bit)[48] | C215D751-7BCD-4649-BE90-6627490A4C05 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (AArch64)[48] | 6E11A4E7-FBCA-4DED-B9E9-E1A512BB664E | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (IA-64)[48] | 6A491E03-3BE7-4545-8E38-83320E0EA880 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (LoongArch 64‐bit)[48] | F46B2C26-59AE-48F0-9106-C50ED47F673D | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (mips: 32‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 6E5A1BC8-D223-49B7-BCA8-37A5FCCEB996 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (mips64: 64‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 81CF9D90-7458-4DF4-8DCF-C8A3A404F09B | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (mipsel: 32‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | 46B98D8D-B55C-4E8F-AAB3-37FCA7F80752 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (mips64el: 64‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | 3C3D61FE-B5F3-414D-BB71-8739A694A4EF | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (PA-RISC)[48] | 5843D618-EC37-48D7-9F12-CEA8E08768B2 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC little‐endian)[48] | EE2B9983-21E8-4153-86D9-B6901A54D1CE | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC big‐endian)[48] | BDB528A5-A259-475F-A87D-DA53FA736A07 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (32‐bit PowerPC)[48] | DF765D00-270E-49E5-BC75-F47BB2118B09 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 32‐bit)[48] | CB1EE4E3-8CD0-4136-A0A4-AA61A32E8730 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 64‐bit)[48] | 8F1056BE-9B05-47C4-81D6-BE53128E5B54 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (s390)[48] | B663C618-E7BC-4D6D-90AA-11B756BB1797 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (s390x)[48] | 31741CC4-1A2A-4111-A581-E00B447D2D06 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (TILE-Gx)[48] | 2FB4BF56-07FA-42DA-8132-6B139F2026AE | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (x86-64)[48] | 77FF5F63-E7B6-4633-ACF4-1565B864C0E6 | |
/usrverity partition for dm-verity (x86)[48] | 8F461B0D-14EE-4E81-9AA9-049B6FB97ABD | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (Alpha)[48] | D46495B7-A053-414F-80F7-700C99921EF8 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (ARC)}[48] | 143A70BA-CBD3-4F06-919F-6C05683A78BC | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (ARM 32‐bit)[48] | 42B0455F-EB11-491D-98D3-56145BA9D037 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (AArch64)[48] | 6DB69DE6-29F4-4758-A7A5-962190F00CE3 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (IA-64)[48] | E98B36EE-32BA-4882-9B12-0CE14655F46A | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (LoongArch 64‐bit)[48] | 5AFB67EB-ECC8-4F85-AE8E-AC1E7C50E7D0 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (mips: 32‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | BBA210A2-9C5D-45EE-9E87-FF2CCBD002D0 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (mips64: 64‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 43CE94D4-0F3D-4999-8250-B9DEAFD98E6E | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (mipsel: 32‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | C919CC1F-4456-4EFF-918C-F75E94525CA5 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (mips64el: 64‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | 904E58EF-5C65-4A31-9C57-6AF5FC7C5DE7 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (PA-RISC)[48] | 15DE6170-65D3-431C-916E-B0DCD8393F25 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC little‐endian)[48] | D4A236E7-E873-4C07-BF1D-BF6CF7F1C3C6 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC big‐endian)[48] | F5E2C20C-45B2-4FFA-BCE9-2A60737E1AAF | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (32‐bit PowerPC)[48] | 1B31B5AA-ADD9-463A-B2ED-BD467FC857E7 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 32‐bit)[48] | 3A112A75-8729-4380-B4CF-764D79934448 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 64‐bit)[48] | EFE0F087-EA8D-4469-821A-4C2A96A8386A | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (s390)[48] | 3482388E-4254-435A-A241-766A065F9960 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (s390x)[48] | C80187A5-73A3-491A-901A-017C3FA953E9 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (TILE-Gx)[48] | B3671439-97B0-4A53-90F7-2D5A8F3AD47B | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (x86-64)[48] | 41092B05-9FC8-4523-994F-2DEF0408B176 | |
Root verity signature partition for dm-verity (x86)[48] | 5996FC05-109C-48DE-808B-23FA0830B676 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (Alpha)[48] | 5C6E1C76-076A-457A-A0FE-F3B4CD21CE6E | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (ARC)[48] | 94F9A9A1-9971-427A-A400-50CB297F0F35 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (ARM 32‐bit)[48] | D7FF812F-37D1-4902-A810-D76BA57B975A | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (AArch64)[48] | C23CE4FF-44BD-4B00-B2D4-B41B3419E02A | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (IA-64)[48] | 8DE58BC2-2A43-460D-B14E-A76E4A17B47F | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (LoongArch 64‐bit)[48] | B024F315-D330-444C-8461-44BBDE524E99 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (mips: 32‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 97AE158D-F216-497B-8057-F7F905770F54 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (mips64: 64‐bit MIPS big‐endian)[48] | 05816CE2-DD40-4AC6-A61D-37D32DC1BA7D | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (mipsel: 32‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | 3E23CA0B-A4BC-4B4E-8087-5AB6A26AA8A9 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (mips64el: 64‐bit MIPS little‐endian)[48] | F2C2C7EE-ADCC-4351-B5C6-EE9816B66E16 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (PA-RISC)[48] | 450DD7D1-3224-45EC-9CF2-A43A346D71EE | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC little‐endian)[48] | C8BFBD1E-268E-4521-8BBA-BF314C399557 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (64‐bit PowerPC big‐endian)[48] | 0B888863-D7F8-4D9E-9766-239FCE4D58AF | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (32‐bit PowerPC)[48] | 7007891D-D371-4A80-86A4-5CB875B9302E | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 32‐bit)[48] | C3836A13-3137-45BA-B583-B16C50FE5EB4 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (RISC-V 64‐bit)[48] | D2F9000A-7A18-453F-B5CD-4D32F77A7B32 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (s390)[48] | 17440E4F-A8D0-467F-A46E-3912AE6EF2C5 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (s390x)[48] | 3F324816-667B-46AE-86EE-9B0C0C6C11B4 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (TILE-Gx)[48] | 4EDE75E2-6CCC-4CC8-B9C7-70334B087510 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (x86-64)[48] | E7BB33FB-06CF-4E81-8273-E543B413E2E2 | |
/usrverity signature partition for dm-verity (x86)[48] | 974A71C0-DE41-43C3-BE5D-5C5CCD1AD2C0 | |
/boot,as an Extended Boot Loader (XBOOTLDR) partition[48][49] | BC13C2FF-59E6-4262-A352-B275FD6F7172 | |
Swap partition[48][49] | 0657FD6D-A4AB-43C4-84E5-0933C84B4F4F | |
Logical Volume Manager(LVM) partition | E6D6D379-F507-44C2-A23C-238F2A3DF928 | |
/homepartition[48][49] | 933AC7E1-2EB4-4F13-B844-0E14E2AEF915 | |
/srv(server data) partition[48][49] | 3B8F8425-20E0-4F3B-907F-1A25A76F98E8 | |
Per‐user home partition[48] | 773F91EF-66D4-49B5-BD83-D683BF40AD16 | |
Plaindm-cryptpartition[52][53][54] | 7FFEC5C9-2D00-49B7-8941-3EA10A5586B7 | |
LUKSpartition[52][53][54][55] | CA7D7CCB-63ED-4C53-861C-1742536059CC | |
Reserved | 8DA63339-0007-60C0-C436-083AC8230908 | |
GNU/Hurd[56] | Linux filesystem data[57] | 0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4 |
Linux Swap partition[58] | 0657FD6D-A4AB-43C4-84E5-0933C84B4F4F | |
FreeBSD | Boot partition[59] | 83BD6B9D-7F41-11DC-BE0B-001560B84F0F |
BSD disklabelpartition[59] | 516E7CB4-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B | |
Swap partition[59] | 516E7CB5-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B | |
Unix File System(UFS) partition[59] | 516E7CB6-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B | |
Vinum volume managerpartition[59] | 516E7CB8-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B | |
ZFSpartition[59] | 516E7CBA-6ECF-11D6-8FF8-00022D09712B | |
nandfs partition[60] | 74BA7DD9-A689-11E1-BD04-00E081286ACF | |
macOS Darwin |
Hierarchical File System Plus(HFS+) partition | 48465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC |
AppleAPFScontainer APFSFileVaultvolume container |
7C3457EF-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
AppleUFScontainer | 55465300-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
ZFS[j] | 6A898CC3-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
Apple RAID partition | 52414944-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Apple RAID partition, offline | 52414944-5F4F-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Apple Boot partition (Recovery HD) | 426F6F74-0000-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Apple Label | 4C616265-6C00-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Apple TV Recovery partition | 5265636F-7665-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
AppleCore StorageContainer HFS+FileVaultvolume container |
53746F72-6167-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Apple APFS Preboot partition | 69646961-6700-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Apple APFS Recovery partition | 52637672-7900-11AA-AA11-00306543ECAC | |
Solaris illumos |
Boot partition | 6A82CB45-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 |
Root partition | 6A85CF4D-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
Swap partition | 6A87C46F-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
Backup partition | 6A8B642B-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
/usrpartition[j] | 6A898CC3-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
/varpartition | 6A8EF2E9-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
/homepartition | 6A90BA39-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
Alternate sector | 6A9283A5-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
Reserved partition | 6A945A3B-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | |
6A9630D1-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | ||
6A980767-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | ||
6A96237F-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | ||
6A8D2AC7-1DD2-11B2-99A6-080020736631 | ||
NetBSD[61][k] | Swap partition | 49F48D32-B10E-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648 |
FFSpartition | 49F48D5A-B10E-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648 | |
LFSpartition | 49F48D82-B10E-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648 | |
RAID partition | 49F48DAA-B10E-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648 | |
Concatenated partition | 2DB519C4-B10F-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648 | |
Encrypted partition | 2DB519EC-B10F-11DC-B99B-0019D1879648 | |
ChromeOS[62][63] | ChromeOS kernel | FE3A2A5D-4F32-41A7-B725-ACCC3285A309 |
ChromeOS rootfs | 3CB8E202-3B7E-47DD-8A3C-7FF2A13CFCEC | |
ChromeOS firmware | CAB6E88E-ABF3-4102-A07A-D4BB9BE3C1D3 | |
ChromeOS future use | 2E0A753D-9E48-43B0-8337-B15192CB1B5E | |
ChromeOS miniOS | 09845860-705F-4BB5-B16C-8A8A099CAF52 | |
ChromeOS hibernate | 3F0F8318-F146-4E6B-8222-C28C8F02E0D5 | |
Container Linux by CoreOS[64] | /usr partition (coreos-usr) | 5DFBF5F4-2848-4BAC-AA5E-0D9A20B745A6 |
Resizable rootfs (coreos-resize) | 3884DD41-8582-4404-B9A8-E9B84F2DF50E | |
OEM customizations (coreos-reserved) | C95DC21A-DF0E-4340-8D7B-26CBFA9A03E0 | |
Root filesystem on RAID (coreos-root-raid) | BE9067B9-EA49-4F15-B4F6-F36F8C9E1818 | |
Haiku[65] | Haiku BFS | 42465331-3BA3-10F1-802A-4861696B7521 |
MidnightBSD[66][k] | Boot partition | 85D5E45E-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7 |
Data partition | 85D5E45A-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7 | |
Swap partition | 85D5E45B-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7 | |
Unix File System(UFS) partition | 0394EF8B-237E-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7 | |
Vinum volume managerpartition | 85D5E45C-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7 | |
ZFSpartition | 85D5E45D-237C-11E1-B4B3-E89A8F7FC3A7 | |
Ceph[l] | Journal | 45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-B4B80CEFF106 |
dm-cryptjournal | 45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-5EC00CEFF106 | |
OSD | 4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-062C0CEFF05D | |
dm-cryptOSD | 4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-5EC00CEFF05D | |
Disk in creation | 89C57F98-2FE5-4DC0-89C1-F3AD0CEFF2BE | |
dm-cryptdisk in creation | 89C57F98-2FE5-4DC0-89C1-5EC00CEFF2BE | |
Block | CAFECAFE-9B03-4F30-B4C6-B4B80CEFF106 | |
Block DB | 30CD0809-C2B2-499C-8879-2D6B78529876 | |
Block write-ahead log | 5CE17FCE-4087-4169-B7FF-056CC58473F9 | |
Lockbox fordm-cryptkeys | FB3AABF9-D25F-47CC-BF5E-721D1816496B | |
Multipath OSD | 4FBD7E29-8AE0-4982-BF9D-5A8D867AF560 | |
Multipath journal | 45B0969E-8AE0-4982-BF9D-5A8D867AF560 | |
Multipath block | CAFECAFE-8AE0-4982-BF9D-5A8D867AF560 | |
Multipath block | 7F4A666A-16F3-47A2-8445-152EF4D03F6C | |
Multipath block DB | EC6D6385-E346-45DC-BE91-DA2A7C8B3261 | |
Multipath block write-ahead log | 01B41E1B-002A-453C-9F17-88793989FF8F | |
dm-cryptblock | CAFECAFE-9B03-4F30-B4C6-5EC00CEFF106 | |
dm-cryptblock DB | 93B0052D-02D9-4D8A-A43B-33A3EE4DFBC3 | |
dm-cryptblock write-ahead log | 306E8683-4FE2-4330-B7C0-00A917C16966 | |
dm-cryptLUKS journal | 45B0969E-9B03-4F30-B4C6-35865CEFF106 | |
dm-cryptLUKS block | CAFECAFE-9B03-4F30-B4C6-35865CEFF106 | |
dm-cryptLUKS block DB | 166418DA-C469-4022-ADF4-B30AFD37F176 | |
dm-cryptLUKS block write-ahead log | 86A32090-3647-40B9-BBBD-38D8C573AA86 | |
dm-cryptLUKS OSD | 4FBD7E29-9D25-41B8-AFD0-35865CEFF05D | |
OpenBSD | Data partition | 824CC7A0-36A8-11E3-890A-952519AD3F61 |
QNX | Power-safe (QNX6) file system[69] | CEF5A9AD-73BC-4601-89F3-CDEEEEE321A1 |
Plan 9 | Plan 9 partition | C91818F9-8025-47AF-89D2-F030D7000C2C |
VMware ESX | vmkcore (coredumppartition) | 9D275380-40AD-11DB-BF97-000C2911D1B8 |
VMFSfilesystem partition | AA31E02A-400F-11DB-9590-000C2911D1B8 | |
VMware Reserved | 9198EFFC-31C0-11DB-8F78-000C2911D1B8 | |
Android-IA[70][71][72][73] | Bootloader | 2568845D-2332-4675-BC39-8FA5A4748D15 |
Bootloader2 | 114EAFFE-1552-4022-B26E-9B053604CF84 | |
Boot | 49A4D17F-93A3-45C1-A0DE-F50B2EBE2599 | |
Recovery | 4177C722-9E92-4AAB-8644-43502BFD5506 | |
Misc | EF32A33B-A409-486C-9141-9FFB711F6266 | |
Metadata | 20AC26BE-20B7-11E3-84C5-6CFDB94711E9 | |
System | 38F428E6-D326-425D-9140-6E0EA133647C | |
Cache | A893EF21-E428-470A-9E55-0668FD91A2D9 | |
Data | DC76DDA9-5AC1-491C-AF42-A82591580C0D | |
Persistent | EBC597D0-2053-4B15-8B64-E0AAC75F4DB1 | |
Vendor | C5A0AEEC-13EA-11E5-A1B1-001E67CA0C3C | |
Config | BD59408B-4514-490D-BF12-9878D963F378 | |
Factory | 8F68CC74-C5E5-48DA-BE91-A0C8C15E9C80 | |
Factory (alt)[74] | 9FDAA6EF-4B3F-40D2-BA8D-BFF16BFB887B | |
Fastboot / Tertiary[75][76] | 767941D0-2085-11E3-AD3B-6CFDB94711E9 | |
OEM | AC6D7924-EB71-4DF8-B48D-E267B27148FF | |
Android 6.0+ ARM | Android Meta | 19A710A2-B3CA-11E4-B026-10604B889DCF |
Android EXT | 193D1EA4-B3CA-11E4-B075-10604B889DCF | |
Open Network Install Environment (ONIE) | Boot | 7412F7D5-A156-4B13-81DC-867174929325 |
Config | D4E6E2CD-4469-46F3-B5CB-1BFF57AFC149 | |
PowerPC | PReP boot | 9E1A2D38-C612-4316-AA26-8B49521E5A8B |
freedesktop.orgOSes (Linux, etc.) | Shared boot loader configuration[77] | BC13C2FF-59E6-4262-A352-B275FD6F7172 |
Atari TOS | Basic data partition (GEM, BGM, F32) | 734E5AFE-F61A-11E6-BC64-92361F002671 |
Atari TOS | Raw data partition (RAW), XHDI | 35540011-B055-499F-842D-C69AECA357B7 |
VeraCrypt | Encrypted data partition | 8C8F8EFF-AC95-4770-814A-21994F2DBC8F |
OS/2 | ArcaOSType 1 | 90B6FF38-B98F-4358-A21F-48F35B4A8AD3 |
Storage Performance Development Kit (SPDK) | SPDK block device[78] | 7C5222BD-8F5D-4087-9C00-BF9843C7B58C |
bareboxbootloader | barebox-state[79] | 4778ED65-BF42-45FA-9C5B-287A1DC4AAB1 |
U-Bootbootloader | U-Boot environment[80][81] | 3DE21764-95BD-54BD-A5C3-4ABE786F38A8 |
SoftRAID[citation needed] | SoftRAID_Status | B6FA30DA-92D2-4A9A-96F1-871EC6486200 |
SoftRAID_Scratch | 2E313465-19B9-463F-8126-8A7993773801 | |
SoftRAID_Volume | FA709C7E-65B1-4593-BFD5-E71D61DE9B02 | |
SoftRAID_Cache | BBBA6DF5-F46F-4A89-8F59-8765B2727503 | |
Fuchsiastandard partitions[82] | Bootloader (slot A/B/R) | FE8A2634-5E2E-46BA-99E3-3A192091A350 |
Durable mutable encrypted system data | D9FD4535-106C-4CEC-8D37-DFC020CA87CB | |
Durable mutable bootloader data (including A/B/R metadata) | A409E16B-78AA-4ACC-995C-302352621A41 | |
Factory-provisioned read-only system data | F95D940E-CABA-4578-9B93-BB6C90F29D3E | |
Factory-provisioned read-only bootloader data | 10B8DBAA-D2BF-42A9-98C6-A7C5DB3701E7 | |
Fuchsia Volume Manager | 49FD7CB8-DF15-4E73-B9D9-992070127F0F | |
Verified boot metadata (slot A/B/R) | 421A8BFC-85D9-4D85-ACDA-B64EEC0133E9 | |
Zircon boot image (slot A/B/R) | 9B37FFF6-2E58-466A-983A-F7926D0B04E0 | |
Fuchsialegacy partitions[82][m] | ||
fuchsia-esp | C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B | |
fuchsia-system | 606B000B-B7C7-4653-A7D5-B737332C899D | |
fuchsia-data | 08185F0C-892D-428A-A789-DBEEC8F55E6A | |
fuchsia-install | 48435546-4953-2041-494E-5354414C4C52 | |
fuchsia-blob | 2967380E-134C-4CBB-B6DA-17E7CE1CA45D | |
fuchsia-fvm | 41D0E340-57E3-954E-8C1E-17ECAC44CFF5 | |
Zircon boot image (slot A) | DE30CC86-1F4A-4A31-93C4-66F147D33E05 | |
Zircon boot image (slot B) | 23CC04DF-C278-4CE7-8471-897D1A4BCDF7 | |
Zircon boot image (slot R) | A0E5CF57-2DEF-46BE-A80C-A2067C37CD49 | |
sys-config | 4E5E989E-4C86-11E8-A15B-480FCF35F8E6 | |
factory-config | 5A3A90BE-4C86-11E8-A15B-480FCF35F8E6 | |
bootloader | 5ECE94FE-4C86-11E8-A15B-480FCF35F8E6 | |
guid-test | 8B94D043-30BE-4871-9DFA-D69556E8C1F3 | |
Verified boot metadata (slot A) | A13B4D9A-EC5F-11E8-97D8-6C3BE52705BF | |
Verified boot metadata (slot B) | A288ABF2-EC5F-11E8-97D8-6C3BE52705BF | |
Verified boot metadata (slot R) | 6A2460C3-CD11-4E8B-80A8-12CCE268ED0A | |
misc | 1D75395D-F2C6-476B-A8B7-45CC1C97B476 | |
emmc-boot1 | 900B0FC5-90CD-4D4F-84F9-9F8ED579DB88 | |
emmc-boot2 | B2B2E8D1-7C10-4EBC-A2D0-4614568260AD | |
Minix | Minix filesystem | 481B2A38-0561-420B-B72A-F1C4988EFC16 |
See also
[edit]Notes
[edit]- ^Adding
ULL
suffix to an integer constant makes it of typeunsigned long long int
. - ^Third party implementation exists (GPTTSD)
- ^Windows XP 64-bit does not normally support booting from GPT disks, but unofficial methods exist to boot XP from it.[36]
- ^Only if using its service pack 1 or 2
- ^In a multi-disk setup, non-UEFI bootloader (boot drive) requires MBR-based partitioning, while a system drive can use GUID partitioning.
- ^The GUIDs in this table are written as per RFC 4122, i.e.big-endianbyte order,recognizable by the position of the version bits. For example, the GUID for an EFI System partition (
C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B
), when serialized in GPT data structures (little-endian), corresponds to the hex sequence28 73 2A C1 1F F8 D2 11 BA 4B 00 A0 C9 3E C9 3B
.The first three blocks are byte-swapped to little-endian, the last is a byte array. See details in TN2166[11] - ^The formation of this GUID does not follow the GUID definition; it is formed by using theASCIIcodes for the string "Hah!IdontNeedEFI".Such formation of" GUID "value breaks down the guaranteed uniqueness of GUID.
- ^abSome computer manufacturers have their own GUIDs for partitions that are analogous to the EFI System Partition, but that hold boot loaders to launch manufacturer-specific recovery tools.[43]
- ^abPreviously, Linux used the same GUID for the data partitions as Windows (Basic data partition:EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433-87C0-68B6B72699C7). Linux never had a separate unique partition type GUID defined for its data partitions. This created problems when dual-booting Linux and Windows in UEFI-GPT setup. The new GUID (Linux filesystem data:0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4) was defined jointly by GPT fdisk and GNU Parted developers.[45]It is identified as type code0x8300in GPT fdisk.
- ^abThe GUID for
/usr
on Solaris is used as a generic GUID for ZFS by macOS. - ^abNetBSD and MidnightBSD had used the FreeBSD GUIDs before their unique GUIDs were created.
- ^The Ceph filesystem uses GUIDs to mark the state of preparation a disk is in.[67][68]
- ^The legacy Fuchsia GUIDs had two oddities: UUIDs were not generated randomly (several runs of bits were common between partitions), and partitions were uniquely identified by type GUID. The standardized scheme uses randomly-generated GUIDs, and slotted partitions (e.g.
zircon_{a,b,r}
) share the same type and are distinguished by name and unique GUID.[83]
References
[edit]- ^ab"FAQ: Drive Partition Limits"(PDF).uefi.org.2010.Retrieved12 December2020.
- ^abc"Unified Extensible Firmware Interface (UEFI) Specification"(PDF).uefi.org.29 August 2022. p. 110.Retrieved23 June2023.
- ^Swinburne, Richard (1 April 2010)."The Facts: 4K Advanced Format Hard Disks".bit-tech.net.Retrieved12 December2020.
- ^abSmith, Ryan (18 December 2009)."Western Digital's Advanced Format: The 4K Sector Transition Begins".anandtech.Archivedfrom the original on 28 December 2020.Retrieved12 December2020.
- ^"Enterprise Capacity 3.5 HDD Data Sheet"(PDF).Seagate Technology.April 23, 2014. p. 2.Archived(PDF)from the original on 2014-08-12.RetrievedAugust 10,2014.
- ^"WD Re Datacenter Distribution Specification Sheet"(PDF).Western Digital.January 21, 2016. p. 2.Archived(PDF)from the original on 2015-09-06.RetrievedFebruary 14,2016.
- ^"Advanced format (4K) disk compatibility update (Windows)".November 28, 2012.Archivedfrom the original on 2013-01-11.RetrievedJanuary 3,2013.
- ^"Microsoft support policy for 4K sector hard drives in Windows".Microsoft.Archivedfrom the original on 2011-08-19.RetrievedOctober 24,2013.
- ^"UEFI specification".UEFI.org.
- ^abcdSmith, Roderick (3 July 2012)."Make the most of large drives with GPT and Linux".IBM.Retrieved14 December2020.
- ^abcd"Technical Note TN2166: Secrets of the GPT".Apple Developer.Apple.2006-11-06.Retrieved2014-04-16.
- ^The GPT header contains a field that specifies the size of a partition table entry. The minimum required is 128 bytes, but implementations must allow for other values. See"Mac Developer Library".Developer.Apple.Apple.Retrieved2014-07-13.
- ^Leach, P.; Mealling, M.; Salz, R. (July 2005).A Universally Unique IDentifier (UUID) URN Namespace.Internet Engineering Task Force.doi:10.17487/RFC4122.RFC4122.Retrieved18 December2020.
{{citation}}
:CS1 maint: year (link) - ^Elliott, Rob (4 January 2010)."e09127r3 EDD-4 Hybrid MBR Boot Code Annex"(PDF).t13.org.Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 20 August 2020.Retrieved16 December2020.
- ^"GPT | Microsoft Docs".31 August 2016.
- ^"CREATE_PARTITION_PARAMETERS (vds.h) - Win32 apps | Microsoft Docs".9 February 2023.
- ^"Disk Format".Chromium.org.Retrieved2022-02-09.
- ^"Ubuntu on MacBook".Community Documentation.Ubuntu.
- ^"GNU Parted FAQ".
- ^"mklabel".Parted Manual.GNU.
- ^"fdisk: add GPT support".kernel.org. 2013-09-27.Retrieved2013-10-18.
- ^Bueso, Davidlohr (2013-09-28)."fdisk updates and GPT support".Retrieved2013-10-18.
- ^"DISK_MAX_PARTS define".Archived fromthe originalon 2020-03-26.Retrieved2020-03-26.
- ^"Myths and Facts About Intel Macs".rEFIt.Source forge.
- ^"Significant changes from NetBSD 5.0 to 6.0"..
- ^"Significant changes from NetBSD 5.0 to 6.0 (NetBSD/i386)"..
- ^"Significant changes from NetBSD 5.0 to 6.0 (NetBSD/amd64)"..
- ^"OpenBSD 5.9"..
- ^"Booting from a ZFS Root File System".Oracle. Archived fromthe originalon 2011-12-10.
- ^"idisk(1M)".Hewlett-Packard.
- ^abcd"Windows and GPT FAQ".msdn.microsoft.1 June 2017.Retrieved14 December2020.
- ^Windows 8 32-bit supports booting from UEFI-based PC (x86-32 only) using GPT-based disks.
- ^Windows 8.1 32-bit supports booting from UEFI-based PC (x86-32 only) using GPT-based disks.
- ^Windows 10 32-bit supports booting from UEFI-based PC (x86-32 only) using GPT-based disks.
- ^Microsoft raises the speed limit with the availability of 64-bit editions of Windows Server 2003 and Windows XP ProfessionalArchived2010-11-10 at theWayback Machine
- ^http://windowsenthusiasts1.epizy /WindowsXPUEFI.html?i=1[bare URL]
- ^Windows 8 64-bit supports booting from UEFI-based PC (x86-64 only) using GPT-based disks.
- ^Windows 8.1 64-bit supports booting from UEFI-based PC (x86-64 only) using GPT-based disks.
- ^Windows 10 64-bit supports booting from UEFI-based PC (x86-64 only) using GPT-based disks.
- ^Microsoft's 'Weirdest Release': Windows Server 2022 Quietly Becomes Generally Available
- ^"Archived copy"(PDF).Archived fromthe original(PDF)on 2013-07-28.
{{cite web}}
:CS1 maint: archived copy as title (link) - ^"F6F: Funtoo Linux and Intel Rapid Start Technology".Blog.adios.tw. 2012-10-30.Retrieved2014-01-29.
- ^GPT fdisk: parttypes.cc, line 198
- ^abcde"PARTITION_INFORMATION_GPT - Win32 apps".Microsoft Docs.Retrieved2021-08-21.
- ^Smith, Rod (23 June 2011)."Need for a unique Linux GPT GUID type code (PATCH included)".bug-parted(Mailing list).Retrieved12 April2016.
- ^Sergei Antonov (2014-07-31)."libfdisk: (gpt) add Microsoft Storage Spaces GUID".util-linux/util-linux.git - The util-linux code repository.Retrieved2021-08-21.
- ^Known issues with Storage Replica
- ^abcdefghijklmnopqrstuvwxyzaaabacadaeafagahaiajakalamanaoapaqarasatauavawaxayazbabbbcbdbebfbgbhbibjbkblbmbnbobpbqbrbsbtbubvbwbxbybzcacbcccdcecfcgchcicjckclcmcncocpcqcrcsctcucvcwcxcyczdadbdcdddedfdgdhdidjdkdldmdndodpdqdrdsdtdudvdwdxdydzeaebThe Discoverable Partitions Specification (DPS)
- ^abcdesystemd-gpt-auto-generator(8)
- ^Home Directories
- ^The Boot Loader Specification
- ^ab"[dm-crypt] LUKS GPT GUID".Saout.de. Archived fromthe originalon 2014-02-03.Retrieved2014-01-29.
- ^ab"[dm-crypt] LUKS GPT GUID".Saout.de. Archived fromthe originalon 2014-02-03.Retrieved2014-01-29.
- ^ab"pyuefi source code".
- ^"udisks-2.7.4 source code".GitHub.10 July 2022.
- ^The GNU/Hurd User's Guide: Installing, Internet Install
- ^HurdandGRUBuse the same Linux ext2 file system to run and it no longer supports"UFS".file system
- ^Hurduses the same Linux swap file system
- ^abcdef"FreeBSD System Manager's Manual gpart(8)".Retrieved2021-08-21.
- ^"Add a partition type for nandfs to the apm, bsd, gpt and vtoc8 schemes. · freebsd/freebsd-src@f24a822 · GitHub".GitHub.Retrieved2021-08-21.
- ^"CVS log for src/sys/sys/disklabel_gpt.h".Cvsweb.netbsd.org.Retrieved2014-01-29.
- ^"Disk Format - The Chromium Projects".Chromium.org.Retrieved2014-01-29.
- ^"Disk Format - The Chromium Projects".Chromium.org.Retrieved2024-01-18.
- ^"Constants and IDs".CoreOS.Retrieved2018-07-26.
- ^src/add-ons/kernel/partitioning_systems/gpt/gpt_known_guids.h
- ^http:// midnightbsd.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/src/sys/sys/gpt.h.diff?r1=1.4;r2=1.5[permanent dead link]src/sys/sys/gpt.h
- ^Script to set up a ceph disk: ceph-disk, lines 76-81
- ^ceph-disk labels
- ^QNX Power-safe filesystem
- ^"gpt.ini (github /android-ia/device-androidia-mixins)".GitHub.
- ^"gpt.ini (github /android-ia/device-androidia)".GitHub.
- ^"gpt.ini (github /android-ia/vendor_intel_baytrail)".GitHub.
- ^"gpt-sample.ini (github /android-ia/platform_bootable_userfastboot)".GitHub.
- ^"gpt_ini2bin.py (android.googlesource /platform/hardware/bsp/intel)".
- ^"gpt.c (github /android-ia/platform_bootable_userfastboot)".GitHub.
- ^"gpt_ini2bin.py (github /android-ia/vendor_intel_common)".GitHub.
- ^"The Boot Loader Specification".freedesktop.org.Retrieved2017-01-05.
- ^"SPDK Block Device User Guide".Retrieved2021-01-20.
- ^"Barebox State Framework".Retrieved2021-05-21.
- ^Villemoes, Rasmus (2020-11-17)."RFC: Partition type GUID for U-Boot environment".U-Boot mailing list(Mailing list).Retrieved2021-09-28.
- ^"U-boot 2021.07 source code: include/part_efi.h".20 November 2020.Retrieved2021-09-28.
- ^abzircon/system/public/zircon/hw/gpt.h
- ^"[paver] add support for new partition scheme".Retrieved2021-10-22.
External links
[edit]- Microsoft TechNet:Disk Sectors on GPT Disks (archived page)
- Microsoft Windows Deployment:Converting MBR to GPT without dats loss
- Microsoft TechNet:Troubleshooting Disks and File Systems
- Microsoft TechNet:Using GPT Drives
- Microsoft:FAQs on Using GPT disks in Windows
- Microsoft Technet:How Basic Disks and Volumes WorkA bit MS-specific but good figures relate GPT to older MBR format and protective-MBR, shows layouts of complete disks, and how to interpret partition-table hexdumps.
- Apple Developer Connection:Secrets of the GPT
- Make the most of large drives with GPT and Linux
- Convert Windows Vista SP1+ or 7 x86_64 boot from BIOS-MBR mode to UEFI-GPT mode without Reinstall
- Support for GPT (Partition scheme) and HDD greater than 2.19 TB in Microsoft Windows XP
- Setting up a RAID volume in Linux with >2TB disks