mke2fs.conf
Section: File Formats (5)
Updated: August 2017
Index
Return to Main Contents
NAME
mke2fs.conf - Configuration file for mke2fs
DESCRIPTION
mke2fs.conf
is the configuration file for
mke2fs(8).
It controls the default parameters used by
mke2fs(8)
when it is creating ext2, ext3, or ext4 filesystems.
The
mke2fs.conf
file uses an INI-style format. Stanzas, or top-level sections, are
delimited by square braces: [ ]. Within each section, each line
defines a relation, which assigns tags to values, or to a subsection,
which contains further relations or subsections.
An example of the INI-style format used by this configuration file
follows below:
[section1]
tag1 = value_a
tag1 = value_b
tag2 = value_c
[section 2]
tag3 = {
subtag1 = subtag_value_a
subtag1 = subtag_value_b
subtag2 = subtag_value_c
}
tag1 = value_d
tag2 = value_e
}
Comments are delimited by a semicolon (';') or a hash ('#') character
at the beginning of the comment, and are terminated by the end of
line character.
Tags and values must be quoted using double quotes if they contain
spaces. Within a quoted string, the standard backslash interpretations
apply: "\n" (for the newline character),
"\t" (for the tab character), "\b" (for the backspace character),
and "\\" (for the backslash character).
Some relations expect a boolean value. The parser is quite liberal on
recognizing ``yes'', '`y'', ``true'', ``t'', ``1'', ``on'', etc. as a
boolean true value, and ``no'', ``n'', ``false'', ``nil'', ``0'',
``off'' as a boolean false value.
The following stanzas are used in the
mke2fs.conf
file. They will be described in more detail in future sections of this
document.
- [options]
-
Contains relations which influence how mke2fs behaves.
- [defaults]
-
Contains relations which define the default parameters
used by
mke2fs(8).
In general, these defaults may be overridden by a definition in the
fs_types
stanza, or by an command-line option provided by the user.
- [fs_types]
-
Contains relations which define defaults that should be used for specific
file system and usage types. The file system type and usage type can be
specified explicitly using
the
-tand-T
options to
mke2fs(8),
respectively.
THE [options] STANZA
The following relations are defined in the
[options]
stanza.
- proceed_delay
-
If this relation is set to a positive integer, then if mke2fs will
proceed after waiting
proceed_delay
seconds, after asking the user for permission to proceed, even if the
user has not answered the question. Defaults to 0, which means to wait
until the user answers the question one way or another.
THE [defaults] STANZA
The following relations are defined in the
[defaults]
stanza.
- base_features
-
This relation specifies the filesystems features which are enabled in
newly created filesystems. It may be overridden by the
base_features
relation found in the filesystem or usage type subsection of
the
[fs_types]
stanza.
- default_features
-
This relation specifies a set of features that should be added or
removed to the features listed in the
base_features
relation. It may be overridden by the filesystem-specific
default_features
in the filesystem or usage type subsection of
[fs_types],
and by the
-O
command-line option
to
mke2fs(8).
- enable_periodic_fsck
-
This boolean relation specifies whether periodic filesystem checks should be
enforced at boot time. If set to true, checks will be forced every
180 days, or after a random number of mounts. These values may
be changed later via the
-i
and
-c
command-line options to
tune2fs(8).
- force_undo
-
This boolean relation, if set to a value of true, forces
mke2fs
to always try to create an undo file, even if the undo file might be
huge and it might extend the time to create the filesystem image
because the inode table isn't being initialized lazily.
- fs_type
-
This relation specifies the default filesystem type if the user does not
specify it via the
-t
option, or if
mke2fs
is not started using a program name of the form
mkfs.fs-type.
If both the user and the
mke2fs.conf
file do not specify a default filesystem type, mke2fs will use a
default filesystem type of
ext3
if a journal was requested via a command-line option, or
ext2
if not.
- undo_dir
-
This relation specifies the directory where the undo file should be
stored. It can be overridden via the
E2FSPROGS_UNDO_DIR
environment variable. If the directory location is set to the value
none,
mke2fs
will not create an undo file.
In addition, any tags that can be specified in a per-file system tags
subsection as defined below (e.g.,
blocksize,
hash_alg,
inode_ratio,
inode_size,
reserved_ratio,
etc.) can also be specified in the
defaults
stanza to specify the default value to be used if the user does not
specify one on the command line, and the filesystem-type
specific section of the configuration file does not specify a default value.
THE [fs_types] STANZA
Each tag in the
[fs_types]
stanza names a filesystem type or usage type which can be specified via the
-t
or
-T
options to
mke2fs(8),
respectively.
The
mke2fs
program constructs a list of fs_types by concatenating the filesystem
type (i.e., ext2, ext3, etc.) with the usage type list. For most
configuration options,
mke2fs
will look for a subsection in the
[fs_types]
stanza corresponding with each entry in the constructed list, with later
entries overriding earlier filesystem or usage types.
For
example, consider the following
mke2fs.conf
fragment:
[defaults]
base_features = sparse_super,filetype,resize_inode,dir_index
blocksize = 4096
inode_size = 256
inode_ratio = 16384
[fs_types]
ext3 = {
features = has_journal
}
ext4 = {
features = extents,flex_bg
inode_size = 256
}
small = {
blocksize = 1024
inode_ratio = 4096
}
floppy = {
features = ^resize_inode
blocksize = 1024
inode_size = 128
}
If mke2fs started with a program name of
mke2fs.ext4,
then the filesystem type of ext4 will be used. If the filesystem is
smaller than 3 megabytes, and no usage type is specified, then
mke2fs
will use a default
usage type of
floppy.
This results in an fs_types list of "ext4, floppy". Both the ext4
subsection and the floppy subsection define an
inode_size
relation, but since the later entries in the fs_types list supersede
earlier ones, the configuration parameter for fs_types.floppy.inode_size
will be used, so the filesystem will have an inode size of 128.
The exception to this resolution is the
features
tag, which specifies a set of changes to the features used by the
filesystem, and which is cumulative. So in the above example, first
the configuration relation defaults.base_features would enable an
initial feature set with the sparse_super, filetype, resize_inode, and
dir_index features enabled. Then configuration relation
fs_types.ext4.features would enable the extents and flex_bg
features, and finally the configuration relation
fs_types.floppy.features would remove
the resize_inode feature, resulting in a filesystem feature set
consisting of the sparse_super, filetype, dir_index,
extents_and flex_bg features.
For each filesystem type, the following tags may be used in that
fs_type's subsection. These tags may also be used in the
default
section:
- base_features
-
This relation specifies the features which are initially enabled for this
filesystem type. Only one
base_features
will be used, so if there are multiple entries in the fs_types list
whose subsections define the
base_features
relation, only the last will be used by
mke2fs(8).
- errors
-
Change the behavior of the kernel code when errors are detected.
In all cases, a filesystem error will cause
e2fsck(8)
to check the filesystem on the next boot.
errors
can be one of the following:
-
- continue
-
Continue normal execution.
- remount-ro
-
Remount filesystem read-only.
- panic
-
Cause a kernel panic.
- features
-
This relation specifies a comma-separated list of features edit
requests which modify the feature set
used by the newly constructed filesystem. The syntax is the same as the
-O
command-line option to
mke2fs(8);
that is, a feature can be prefixed by a caret ('^') symbol to disable
a named feature. Each
feature
relation specified in the fs_types list will be applied in the order
found in the fs_types list.
- default_features
-
This relation specifies set of features which should be enabled or
disabled after applying the features listed in the
base_features
and
features
relations. It may be overridden by the
-O
command-line option to
mke2fs(8).
- auto_64-bit_support
-
This relation is a boolean which specifies whether
mke2fs(8)
should automatically add the 64bit feature if the number of blocks for
the file system requires this feature to be enabled. The resize_inode
feature is also automatically disabled since it doesn't support 64-bit
block numbers.
- default_mntopts
-
This relation specifies the set of mount options which should be enabled
by default. These may be changed at a later time with the
-o
command-line option to
tune2fs(8).
- blocksize
-
This relation specifies the default blocksize if the user does not
specify a blocksize on the command line.
- lazy_itable_init
-
This boolean relation specifies whether the inode table should
be lazily initialized. It only has meaning if the uninit_bg feature is
enabled. If lazy_itable_init is true and the uninit_bg feature is
enabled, the inode table will
not be fully initialized by
mke2fs(8).
This speeds up filesystem
initialization noticeably, but it requires the kernel to finish
initializing the filesystem in the background when the filesystem is
first mounted.
- journal_location
-
This relation specifies the location of the journal.
- num_backup_sb
-
This relation indicates whether file systems with the
sparse_super2
feature enabled should be created with 0, 1, or 2 backup superblocks.
- packed_meta_blocks
-
This boolean relation specifes whether the allocation bitmaps, inode
table, and journal should be located at the beginning of the file system.
- inode_ratio
-
This relation specifies the default inode ratio if the user does not
specify one on the command line.
- inode_size
-
This relation specifies the default inode size if the user does not
specify one on the command line.
- reserved_ratio
-
This relation specifies the default percentage of filesystem blocks
reserved for the super-user, if the user does not specify one on the command
line.
- hash_alg
-
This relation specifies the default hash algorithm used for the
new filesystems with hashed b-tree directories. Valid algorithms
accepted are:
legacy,
half_md4,
and
tea.
- flex_bg_size
-
This relation specifies the number of block groups that will be packed
together to create one large virtual block group on an ext4 filesystem.
This improves meta-data locality and performance on meta-data heavy
workloads. The number of groups must be a power of 2 and may only be
specified if the flex_bg filesystem feature is enabled.
- options
-
This relation specifies additional extended options which should be
treated by
mke2fs(8)
as if they were prepended to the argument of the
-E
option. This can be used to configure the default extended options used
by
mke2fs(8)
on a per-filesystem type basis.
- discard
-
This boolean relation specifies whether the
mke2fs(8)
should attempt to discard device prior to filesystem creation.
- cluster_size
-
This relation specifies the default cluster size if the bigalloc file
system feature is enabled. It can be overridden via the
-C
command line option to
mke2fs(8)
- make_hugefiles
-
This boolean relation enables the creation of pre-allocated files as
part of formatting the file system. The extent tree blocks for these
pre-allocated files will be placed near the beginning of the file
system, so that if all of the other metadata blocks are also configured
to be placed near the beginning of the file system (by disabling the
backup superblocks, using the packed_meta_blocks option, etc.), the data
blocks of the pre-allocated files will be contiguous.
- hugefiles_uid
-
This relation controls the user ownership for all of the files and
directories created by the
make_hugefiles
feature.
- hugefiles_gid
-
This relation controls the group ownership for all of the files and
directories created by the
make_hugefiles
feature.
- hugefiles_umask
-
This relation specifies the umask used when creating the files and
directories by the
make_hugefiles
feature.
- num_hugefiles
-
This relation specifies the number of huge files to be created. If this
relation is not specified, or is set to zero, and the
hugefiles_size
relation is non-zero, then
make_hugefiles
will create as many huge files as can fit to fill the entire file system.
- hugefiles_slack
-
This relation specifies how much space should be reserved for other
files.
- hugefiles_size
-
This relation specifies the size of the huge files. If this relation is
not specified, the default is to fill the entire file system.
- hugefiles_align
-
This relation specifies the alignment for the start block of the huge
files. It also forces the size of huge files to be a multiple of the
requested alignment. If this relation is not specified, no alignment
requirement will be imposed on the huge files.
- hugefiles_align_disk
-
This relations specifies whether the alignment should be relative to the
beginning of the hard drive (assuming that the starting offset of the
partition is available to mke2fs). The default value is false, which
will cause hugefile alignment to be relative to the beginning of the
file system.
- hugefiles_name
-
This relation specifies the base file name for the huge files.
- hugefiles_digits
-
This relation specifies the (zero-padded) width of the field for the
huge file number.
- zero_hugefiles
-
This boolean relation specifies whether or not zero blocks will be
written to the hugefiles while
mke2fs(8)
is creating them. By default, zero blocks will be written to the huge
files to avoid stale data from being made available to potentially
untrusted user programs, unless the device supports a discard/trim
operation which will take care of zeroing the device blocks. By setting
zero_hugefiles
to false, this step will always be skipped, which can be useful if it is
known that the disk has been previously erased, or if the user programs
that will have access to the huge files are trusted to not reveal stale
data.
THE [devices] STANZA
Each tag in the
[devices]
stanza names device name so that per-device defaults can be specified.
- fs_type
-
This relation specifies the default parameter for the
-t
option, if this option isn't specified on the command line.
- usage_types
-
This relation specifies the default parameter for the
-T
option, if this option isn't specified on the command line.
FILES
- /etc/mke2fs.conf
-
The configuration file for
mke2fs(8).
SEE ALSO
mke2fs(8)
Index
- NAME
-
- DESCRIPTION
-
- THE [options] STANZA
-
- THE [defaults] STANZA
-
- THE [fs_types] STANZA
-
- THE [devices] STANZA
-
- FILES
-
- SEE ALSO
-