Re: git: 1dfcff294e44 - main - release: increase IMAGE_SIZE for arm, arm64, riscv [odd alignment for SBC images]
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Date: Sun, 17 Jul 2022 06:45:41 UTC
On 2022-Jul-16, at 23:24, Mark Millard <marklmi@yahoo.com> wrote: > On 2022-Jul-15, at 17:41, Mark Millard <marklmi@yahoo.com> wrote: > >> FYI for the new snapshot build of 13.1-STABLE: >> >> # mdconfig -u0 -f FreeBSD-13.1-STABLE-arm64-aarch64-RPI-20220715-831c6b8edda-251792.img >> # gpart show md0 >> => 63 10485697 md0 MBR (5.0G) >> 63 2016 - free - (1.0M) >> 2079 102312 1 fat32lba [active] (50M) >> 104391 10381329 2 freebsd (5.0G) >> 10485720 40 - free - (20K) >> >> So: still has the 2016 and 2079 that do not seem to match >> what /usr/src/release/ materials would indicate --and the >> 2079 leads to poor alignment for a microsd cards, for >> example. >> >> But, at least something was produced this time. There is >> now a 13.1-STABLE snapshot to test the handling related >> to the new UFS/FFS superblock validations. > > In the live build environment that makes the images, > what is: > > # sysctl kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs > kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs: 0 > > I ask because of the description: > > QUOTE > kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs: 0 > Specify how the Master Boot Record (MBR) module does alignment. > If this variable is set to a non-zero value, the module will > automatically recalculate the user-specified offset and size for > alignment with the CHS geometry. Otherwise the values will be > left unchanged. > END QUOTE > > In particular, the text about non-zero values leading to: > > QUOTE > the module will > automatically recalculate the user-specified offset and size for > alignment with the CHS geometry > END QUOTE > > This sounds like a potential way to not end up with the > what the /usr/src/release handling requests for the > small board computer images. It might explain the > mismatched alignment that I've been reporting. I tried it locally and it reproduced the problem alignment: # sysctl kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs=1 kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs: 0 -> 1 # truncate -s3072m mmjnk.test # mdconfig -u0 -fmmjnk.test -x63 -y255 # gpart create -sMBR md0 md0 created # gpart show md0 => 63 6291393 md0 MBR (3.0G) 63 6291393 - free - (3.0G) CA72_16Gp_ZFS aarch64 1400063 1400063 # gpart add -t'!12' -a512k -s50m -b1m md0 md0s1 added CA72_16Gp_ZFS aarch64 1400063 1400063 # gpart show md0 => 63 6291393 md0 MBR (3.0G) 63 2016 - free - (1.0M) 2079 102312 1 fat32lba (50M) 104391 6187065 - free - (3.0G) Note the 2016 and 2079 (instead of 1985 and 2048). Reminder of the old result, reported before, that implicitly had: # sysctl kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs: 0 as its context: QUOTE # truncate -s3072m mmjnk.test # mdconfig -u0 -fmmjnk.test -x63 -y255 # gpart create -sMBR md0 md0 created # gpart show md0 => 63 6291393 md0 MBR (3.0G) 63 6291393 - free - (3.0G) # gpart add -t'!12' -a512k -s50m -b1m md0 md0s1 added # gpart show md0 => 63 6291393 md0 MBR (3.0G) 63 1985 - free - (993K) 2048 102400 1 fat32lba (50M) 104448 6187008 - free - (3.0G) END QUOTE Looks to me like the environment that uses /usr/src/release to produce Small Board Computer images has: # sysctl kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs kern.geom.part.mbr.enforce_chs: 1 and this is leading to the misalignments for the MBR images. === Mark Millard marklmi at yahoo.com