
On Mon, Dec 4, 2017 at 1:12 PM, Lukasz Majewski l.majewski@majess.pl wrote:
Hi Andrey,
Hi Lukasz,
On Tue, Nov 14, 2017 at 1:45 AM, Lukasz Majewski l.majewski@majess.pl wrote:
Hi Andrey,
Hi Lukasz,
On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 2:28 PM, Lukasz Majewski l.majewski@majess.pl wrote:
On Thu, 9 Nov 2017 07:34:44 -0800 Andrey Yurovsky yurovsky@gmail.com wrote:
On Thu, Nov 9, 2017 at 1:55 AM, Lukasz Majewski l.majewski@majess.pl wrote: > Hi Andrey, > >> Hi Otavio, >> >> On Wed, Nov 8, 2017 at 2:47 AM, Otavio Salvador >> otavio.salvador@ossystems.com.br wrote: >> > On Tue, Nov 7, 2017 at 10:43 PM, your name >> > yurovsky@gmail.com wrote: >> >> From: Andrey Yurovsky yurovsky@gmail.com >> >> >> >> It is useful to be able to retrieve a partition UUID or >> >> number given the partition label, for instance some >> >> systems use the partition label to indicate the purpose >> >> of the partition (such as "rootfs0" being the 0th root >> >> file system in an A/B image scheme). >> >> >> >> Add "gpt part-uuid" to retrieve the partition UUID for a >> >> given label and "gpt part-num" to retrieve the partition >> >> number for a given label along with some documentation. >> >> >> >> Signed-off-by: Andrey Yurovsky yurovsky@gmail.com >> > >> > Why not use the 'part' cmd? it provides it. >> >> Sorry, I missed the part cmd, it doesn't seem to be >> documented in doc/ and it's unclear what <dev> means there. > > If I may ask - Andrey, if you are now on this "topic" - would > you dare to add some ./doc entry for 'part' command?
Yes, I will do that.
Thanks :-)
On further investigation I am not sure that it's possible to extend the part command to retrieve UUIDs by label because of the design of the partition type drivers. Here is how I understand it to work:
- the "part" command uses part_get_info() and in turn gets a
partition driver and can call print() there (which is how EFI/GPT disks are printed with "part list"). The right information (including label) is printed but it's not tied to the caller in any way.
Maybe you can set some env variable with proper data?
For example, please refer to ./cmd/part.c do_part_start() function.
Example call from envs (include/configs/display5.h): "part start mmc ${mmcdev} ${kernel_part} lba_start; " \
Again that assumes the partition is referred to by number, I need it to be by label, and the part/disk interface does not seem to have any way to utilize labels. Unfortunately it looks like my original approach with the gpt command is the only way to implement this with the current design (at least from what I see here). Please let me know if I've missed something. Thanks!
Please correct me if I'm wrong - you need the starting LBA of the partition named e.g. "FOO" in gpt ?
Conceptually it would be correct to have:
part start <interface> <dev> <NAME - e.g.'FOO'> <env to set> gpt start <interface> <dev> <NAME- e.g. 'FOO'> <env to set>
If your code is really _small_ and can be used only with GPT, then lets go for the second option.
The use cases I have in mind:
1. determine which root file system to use by label, let's say "rootfs1" and pass its UUID to the Linux kernel via the command line, ex: "PART-UUID=${uuid}". To do this we need a way to ask for a UUID corresponding to a label in the partition table (given duplicate labels, assume it gives us the first or last match). 2. determine which file system to load a file from (ex: fatload) given a label. I'm not sure that the starting LBA is helpful here, we really are looking to map a label to a partition number in the table.
The implementation of "part start" interprets the argument as a partition number, so I can get the stating LBA if I know the partition number but I don't see a way (via cmd/disk.c) to get anything useful if all I know is a label, and that is what I'm trying to solve.