AskOverflow.Dev

AskOverflow.Dev Logo AskOverflow.Dev Logo

AskOverflow.Dev Navigation

  • Início
  • system&network
  • Ubuntu
  • Unix
  • DBA
  • Computer
  • Coding
  • LangChain

Mobile menu

Close
  • Início
  • system&network
    • Recentes
    • Highest score
    • tags
  • Ubuntu
    • Recentes
    • Highest score
    • tags
  • Unix
    • Recentes
    • tags
  • DBA
    • Recentes
    • tags
  • Computer
    • Recentes
    • tags
  • Coding
    • Recentes
    • tags
Início / computer / Perguntas / 1593881
Accepted
Madhubala
Madhubala
Asked: 2020-10-13 22:19:08 +0800 CST2020-10-13 22:19:08 +0800 CST 2020-10-13 22:19:08 +0800 CST

Como imprimir a lista de partições na ordem de presença no disco (Manjaro linux)

  • 772

Sda é particionado desta maneira:

insira a descrição da imagem aqui

Observe a sequência específica:sda11 > sda6 > sda7 > sda9 > ...

Deseja imprimir as informações das partições nesta mesma sequência e armazená-las em um arquivo de texto.

O que eu tentei -

gdisk -l /dev/sda

[manjaro@manjaro-10ahs0wn00 ~]$ sudo gdisk -l /dev/sda
GPT fdisk (gdisk) version 1.0.5

Partition table scan:
  MBR: protective
  BSD: not present
  APM: not present
  GPT: present

Found valid GPT with protective MBR; using GPT.
Disk /dev/sda: 500118192 sectors, 238.5 GiB
Model: Lexar 256GB SSD 
Sector size (logical/physical): 512/512 bytes
Disk identifier (GUID): F07CA5E4-85FA-F247-855D-4DB101931C1C
Partition table holds up to 128 entries
Main partition table begins at sector 2 and ends at sector 33
First usable sector is 34, last usable sector is 500118158
Partitions will be aligned on 1-sector boundaries
Total free space is 135154 sectors (66.0 MiB)

Number  Start (sector)    End (sector)  Size       Code  Name
   1        19255304       500118143   229.3 GiB   8300  STATE
   2         2117638         2183173   32.0 MiB    7F00  KERN-A
   3        10866696        19255303   4.0 GiB     7F01  ROOT-A
   4         2183174         2248709   32.0 MiB    7F00  KERN-B
   5         2478088        10866695   4.0 GiB     7F01  ROOT-B
   6           16448           16448   512 bytes   7F00  KERN-C
   7           16456         2113607   1024.0 MiB  7F01  ROOT-C
   8         2248712         2281479   16.0 MiB    8300  OEM
   9         2113608         2113608   512 bytes   7F02  reserved
  10         2113609         2113609   512 bytes   7F02  reserved
  11              64           16447   8.0 MiB     FFFF  RWFW
  12         2412552         2478087   32.0 MiB    EF00  EFI-SYSTEM

fdisk -l /dev/sda

[manjaro@manjaro-10ahs0wn00 ~]$ sudo fdisk -l /dev/sda
[sudo] password for manjaro: 
Disk /dev/sda: 238.47 GiB, 256060514304 bytes, 500118192 sectors
Disk model: Lexar 256GB SSD 
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disklabel type: gpt
Disk identifier: F07CA5E4-85FA-F247-855D-4DB101931C1C

Device        Start       End   Sectors   Size Type
/dev/sda1  19255304 500118143 480862840 229.3G Linux filesystem
/dev/sda2   2117638   2183173     65536    32M ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda3  10866696  19255303   8388608     4G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda4   2183174   2248709     65536    32M ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda5   2478088  10866695   8388608     4G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda6     16448     16448         1   512B ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda7     16456   2113607   2097152     1G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda8   2248712   2281479     32768    16M Linux filesystem
/dev/sda9   2113608   2113608         1   512B ChromeOS reserved
/dev/sda10  2113609   2113609         1   512B ChromeOS reserved
/dev/sda11       64     16447     16384     8M unknown
/dev/sda12  2412552   2478087     65536    32M EFI System

Partition table entries are not in disk order.

sfdisk -d /dev/sda

[manjaro@manjaro-10ahs0wn00 ~]$ sudo sfdisk -d /dev/sda
[sudo] password for manjaro: 
label: gpt
label-id: F07CA5E4-85FA-F247-855D-4DB101931C1C
device: /dev/sda
unit: sectors
first-lba: 34
last-lba: 500118158
sector-size: 512

/dev/sda1 : start=    19255304, size=   480862840, type=0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4, uuid=0D2E3A01-7890-074A-9801-9407ED8D90E3, name="STATE"
/dev/sda2 : start=     2117638, size=       65536, type=FE3A2A5D-4F32-41A7-B725-ACCC3285A309, uuid=417541BD-8D79-A34C-AE63-CB8B79BE3D03, name="KERN-A", attrs="GUID:48,49,50,51,52,53,54,55"
/dev/sda3 : start=    10866696, size=     8388608, type=3CB8E202-3B7E-47DD-8A3C-7FF2A13CFCEC, uuid=C9D9828E-5FC8-9A42-A6A0-6E64FF8F3383, name="ROOT-A"
/dev/sda4 : start=     2183174, size=       65536, type=FE3A2A5D-4F32-41A7-B725-ACCC3285A309, uuid=3E6C72E3-744D-1B40-825D-570F4D1CB0DF, name="KERN-B", attrs="GUID:52,53,54,55"
/dev/sda5 : start=     2478088, size=     8388608, type=3CB8E202-3B7E-47DD-8A3C-7FF2A13CFCEC, uuid=4393B767-9292-3E4F-BC6A-FFCB3BB76B4C, name="ROOT-B"
/dev/sda6 : start=       16448, size=           1, type=FE3A2A5D-4F32-41A7-B725-ACCC3285A309, uuid=A2E8DF92-A885-D64A-9DCE-109DFD3A912D, name="KERN-C", attrs="GUID:52,53,54,55"
/dev/sda7 : start=       16456, size=     2097152, type=3CB8E202-3B7E-47DD-8A3C-7FF2A13CFCEC, uuid=105C4E07-0CD3-9A4D-8C31-E3D75A0B80AF, name="ROOT-C"
/dev/sda8 : start=     2248712, size=       32768, type=0FC63DAF-8483-4772-8E79-3D69D8477DE4, uuid=D80BFCAD-4771-6C48-9DBB-0ADFBE10DBF1, name="OEM"
/dev/sda9 : start=     2113608, size=           1, type=2E0A753D-9E48-43B0-8337-B15192CB1B5E, uuid=6D272F77-489E-E94A-B903-59BFD612F648, name="reserved"
/dev/sda10 : start=     2113609, size=           1, type=2E0A753D-9E48-43B0-8337-B15192CB1B5E, uuid=E0C92DB9-1C4D-9B4C-92C6-D002B685E39C, name="reserved"
/dev/sda11 : start=          64, size=       16384, type=CAB6E88E-ABF3-4102-A07A-D4BB9BE3C1D3, uuid=E9016D9E-426D-434E-ABA0-614273D7BA5A, name="RWFW"
/dev/sda12 : start=     2412552, size=       65536, type=C12A7328-F81F-11D2-BA4B-00A0C93EC93B, uuid=EE625F5C-40D7-614D-80A3-0C4DA423711B, name="EFI-SYSTEM"

sfdisk /dev/sda

[manjaro@manjaro-10ahs0wn00 ~]$ sudo sfdisk /dev/sda

Welcome to sfdisk (util-linux 2.36).
Changes will remain in memory only, until you decide to write them.
Be careful before using the write command.

Checking that no-one is using this disk right now ... OK

Disk /dev/sda: 238.47 GiB, 256060514304 bytes, 500118192 sectors
Disk model: Lexar 256GB SSD 
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disklabel type: gpt
Disk identifier: F07CA5E4-85FA-F247-855D-4DB101931C1C

Old situation:

Device        Start       End   Sectors   Size Type
/dev/sda1  19255304 500118143 480862840 229.3G Linux filesystem
/dev/sda2   2117638   2183173     65536    32M ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda3  10866696  19255303   8388608     4G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda4   2183174   2248709     65536    32M ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda5   2478088  10866695   8388608     4G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda6     16448     16448         1   512B ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda7     16456   2113607   2097152     1G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda8   2248712   2281479     32768    16M Linux filesystem
/dev/sda9   2113608   2113608         1   512B ChromeOS reserved
/dev/sda10  2113609   2113609         1   512B ChromeOS reserved
/dev/sda11       64     16447     16384     8M unknown
/dev/sda12  2412552   2478087     65536    32M EFI System

Partition table entries are not in disk order.

Type 'help' to get more information.

>>> ^C

sfdisk -l /dev/sda

[manjaro@manjaro-10ahs0wn00 ~]$ sudo sfdisk -l /dev/sda
[sudo] password for manjaro: 
Disk /dev/sda: 238.47 GiB, 256060514304 bytes, 500118192 sectors
Disk model: Lexar 256GB SSD 
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
Disklabel type: gpt
Disk identifier: F07CA5E4-85FA-F247-855D-4DB101931C1C

Device        Start       End   Sectors   Size Type
/dev/sda1  19255304 500118143 480862840 229.3G Linux filesystem
/dev/sda2   2117638   2183173     65536    32M ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda3  10866696  19255303   8388608     4G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda4   2183174   2248709     65536    32M ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda5   2478088  10866695   8388608     4G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda6     16448     16448         1   512B ChromeOS kernel
/dev/sda7     16456   2113607   2097152     1G ChromeOS root fs
/dev/sda8   2248712   2281479     32768    16M Linux filesystem
/dev/sda9   2113608   2113608         1   512B ChromeOS reserved
/dev/sda10  2113609   2113609         1   512B ChromeOS reserved
/dev/sda11       64     16447     16384     8M unknown
/dev/sda12  2412552   2478087     65536    32M EFI System

Partition table entries are not in disk order.

Como fica claro na saída, todos os comandos que tentei estão organizando os números das partições em vez de mostrar a sequência real das partições que é 11>6>7>9>...

Usando Manjaro linux

Minha pergunta é como imprimir partições nessa mesma ordem?

linux hard-drive
  • 1 1 respostas
  • 1684 Views

1 respostas

  • Voted
  1. Best Answer
    lin
    2020-10-13T23:08:43+08:002020-10-13T23:08:43+08:00

    tentarsudo parted -l

    alguns resultados podem ser vistos aqui https://unix.stackexchange.com/questions/364164/fdisk-partition-table-not-in-disk-order-but-order-is-correct-already-and-g

    • 0

relate perguntas

  • Existe um equivalente a cd - para cp ou mv?

  • execute o contêiner do docker como root

  • O fenômeno 'Write cliff' só acontece com discos SSD?

  • Como ativar o sensor de impressão digital no domínio e no diretório ativo do Linux

  • Como alterar permanentemente Ctrl + C para Ctrl + K no CentOS 7?

Sidebar

Stats

  • Perguntas 205573
  • respostas 270741
  • best respostas 135370
  • utilizador 68524
  • Highest score
  • respostas
  • Marko Smith

    Como posso reduzir o consumo do processo `vmmem`?

    • 11 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    Baixar vídeo do Microsoft Stream

    • 4 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    O Google Chrome DevTools falhou ao analisar o SourceMap: chrome-extension

    • 6 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    O visualizador de fotos do Windows não pode ser executado porque não há memória suficiente?

    • 5 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    Como faço para ativar o WindowsXP agora que o suporte acabou?

    • 6 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    Área de trabalho remota congelando intermitentemente

    • 7 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    O que significa ter uma máscara de sub-rede /32?

    • 6 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    Ponteiro do mouse movendo-se nas teclas de seta pressionadas no Windows?

    • 1 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    O VirtualBox falha ao iniciar com VERR_NEM_VM_CREATE_FAILED

    • 8 respostas
  • Marko Smith

    Os aplicativos não aparecem nas configurações de privacidade da câmera e do microfone no MacBook

    • 5 respostas
  • Martin Hope
    CiaranWelsh Como posso reduzir o consumo do processo `vmmem`? 2020-06-10 02:06:58 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    Jim Pesquisa do Windows 10 não está carregando, mostrando janela em branco 2020-02-06 03:28:26 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    v15 Por que uma conexão de Internet gigabit/s via cabo (coaxial) não oferece velocidades simétricas como fibra? 2020-01-25 08:53:31 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    fixer1234 O "HTTPS Everywhere" ainda é relevante? 2019-10-27 18:06:25 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    andre_ss6 Área de trabalho remota congelando intermitentemente 2019-09-11 12:56:40 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    Riley Carney Por que colocar um ponto após o URL remove as informações de login? 2019-08-06 10:59:24 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    zdimension Ponteiro do mouse movendo-se nas teclas de seta pressionadas no Windows? 2019-08-04 06:39:57 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    jonsca Todos os meus complementos do Firefox foram desativados repentinamente, como posso reativá-los? 2019-05-04 17:58:52 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    MCK É possível criar um código QR usando texto? 2019-04-02 06:32:14 +0800 CST
  • Martin Hope
    SoniEx2 Altere o nome da ramificação padrão do git init 2019-04-01 06:16:56 +0800 CST

Hot tag

windows-10 linux windows microsoft-excel networking ubuntu worksheet-function bash command-line hard-drive

Explore

  • Início
  • Perguntas
    • Recentes
    • Highest score
  • tag
  • help

Footer

AskOverflow.Dev

About Us

  • About Us
  • Contact Us

Legal Stuff

  • Privacy Policy

Language

  • Pt
  • Server
  • Unix

© 2023 AskOverflow.DEV All Rights Reserve