NAME
fsdb —
FFS debugging/editing tool
SYNOPSIS
fsdb |
[-d] [-f]
[-r] fsname |
DESCRIPTION
The fsdb utility opens
fsname (usually a raw disk partition) and runs a
command loop allowing manipulation of the file system's inode data. You are
prompted to enter a command with fsdb (inum X)>
where X is the currently selected i-number. The
initial selected inode is the root of the file system (i-number 2). The
command processor uses the
editline(3) library, so you can use command line editing to reduce
typing if desired. When you exit the command loop, the file system
superblock is marked dirty and any buffered blocks are written to the file
system.
The following options are available:
-d- Enable additional debugging output (which comes primarily from fsck(8)-derived code).
-f- Left for historical reasons and has no meaning.
-r- Open the file system read/only, and disables all commands that would write to it.
COMMANDS
Besides the built-in
editline(3) commands, fsdb supports these
commands:
help- Print out the list of accepted commands.
inodei-number- Select inode i-number as the new current inode.
back- Revert to the previously current inode.
clrii-number- Clear i-number.
lookupnamecdname- Find name in the current directory and make its inode the current inode. Name may be a multi-component name or may begin with slash to indicate that the root inode should be used to start the lookup. If some component along the pathname is not found, the last valid directory encountered is left as the active inode. This command is valid only if the starting inode is a directory.
activeprint- Print out the active inode.
blocks- Print out the block list of the active inode. Note that the printout can become long for large files, since all indirect block pointers will also be printed.
findblkdisk_block_number ...- Find the inode(s) owning the specified disk block(s) number(s). Note that these are not absolute disk blocks numbers, but offsets from the start of the partition.
uplink- Increment the active inode's link count.
downlink- Decrement the active inode's link count.
linkcountnumber- Set the active inode's link count to number.
ls- List the current inode's directory entries. This command is valid only if the current inode is a directory.
rmnamedelname- Remove the entry name from the current directory inode. This command is valid only if the current inode is a directory.
lnino name- Create a link to inode ino under the name name in the current directory inode. This command is valid only if the current inode is a directory.
chinumdirslot inum- Change the i-number in directory entry dirslot to inum.
chnamedirslot name- Change the name in directory entry dirslot to name. This command cannot expand a directory entry. You can only rename an entry if the name will fit into the existing directory slot.
chtypetype- Change the type of the current inode to type. Type may be one of: file, dir, socket, or fifo.
chmodmode- Change the mode bits of the current inode to mode.
You cannot change the file type with this subcommand; use
chtypeto do that. chflagsflags- Change the file flags of the current inode to flags.
chownuid- Change the owner of the current inode to uid.
chgrpgid- Change the group of the current inode to gid.
chgengen- Change the generation number of the current inode to gen.
btimetimemtimetimectimetimeatimetime- Change the creation (birth), modification, change, or access time
(respectively) on the current inode to time.
Time should be in the format
YYYYMMDDHHMMSS[.nsec]
where
nsec is
an optional nanosecond specification. If no nanoseconds are specified, the
birthnsec, mtimensec,
ctimensec, or atimensec field
will be set to zero. Note that
btimeis available on UFS2 file systems only. quit,q,exit, <EOF>- Exit the program.
SEE ALSO
HISTORY
The fsdb utility appeared in
4.3BSD-Tahoe. It used the source code for
fsck(8) to implement most of the file system manipulation code. The
remainder of fsdb appeared in
NetBSD 1.1 written by John T.
Kohl. It first appeared in FreeBSD 2.1.5
ported by Peter Wemm.
BUGS
Manipulation of ``short'' symlinks has no effect. In particular, one should not try changing a symlink's type.
You must specify modes as numbers rather than symbolic names.
There are a bunch of other things that you might want to do which
fsdb does not implement.
WARNING
Use this tool with extreme caution--you can damage an FFS file system beyond what fsck(8) can repair.