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Operating Systems BSD OpenBSD fdisk - Linux fdisk compatibility ? Post 302756613 by RudiC on Wednesday 16th of January 2013 07:25:35 AM
Old 01-16-2013
The first partition table(s) has the correct - whatever this means - standard structure as introduced, I think, by Microsoft (?) centuries ago. Which is boot sector with partition entries, one of which points to a chain of partition tables each consisting of one entry and a link entry.
I've spent ages fiddling around with non-standard structures in extended partitions without any luck, esp. when it comes to coexistence of several OSs on the same disk.
On the other hand, linux should at least recognize the partition entries in the boot sector of your experiment. Mysterious. Not sure what the zero disk identifier does.
Did you try to use another partition tool (cfdisk, parted, sfdisk)? Did you try to read the sectors binarily (od, hexdump)?

BTW - you are fdisking sdc in your first quote and sdb in the second...
 

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disktab(5)							File Formats Manual							disktab(5)

Name
       disktab - disk description file

Syntax
       #include <disktab.h>

Description
       The file is a simple data base that describes disk geometries and disk partition characteristics.  The format is patterned after the termi-
       nal data base.  Entries in consist of a number of fields separated by colons (:).  The first entry for each disk gives the names  that  are
       known for the disk, separated by vertical bars (|).  The last name given should be a long name fully identifying the disk.

       The following list indicates the normal values stored for each disk entry:
       Name Type Description
       ns   num  Number of sectors per track
       nt   num  Number of tracks per cylinder
       nc   num  Total number of cylinders on the disk
       ba   num  Block size for partition `a' (bytes)
       bd   num  Block size for partition `d' (bytes)
       be   num  Block size for partition `e' (bytes)
       bf   num  Block size for partition `f' (bytes)
       bg   num  Block size for partition `g' (bytes)
       bh   num  Block size for partition `h' (bytes)
       fa   num  Fragment size for partition `a' (bytes)
       fd   num  Fragment size for partition `d' (bytes)
       fe   num  Fragment size for partition `e' (bytes)
       ff   num  Fragment size for partition `f' (bytes)
       fg   num  Fragment size for partition `g' (bytes)
       fh   num  Fragment size for partition `h' (bytes)
       pa   num  Size of partition `a' in sectors
       pb   num  Size of partition `b' in sectors
       pc   num  Size of partition `c' in sectors
       pd   num  Size of partition `d' in sectors
       pe   num  Size of partition `e' in sectors
       pf   num  Size of partition `f' in sectors
       pg   num  Size of partition `g' in sectors
       ph   num  Size of partition `h' in sectors
       se   num  Sector size in bytes
       ty   str  Type of disk (e.g. removable, winchester)

       The entries can be automatically generated with the program.

Files
See Also
       chpt(8), newfs(8)

																	disktab(5)
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