kpartx − Create device maps from partition tables.
kpartx [−a|−d|−u|−l] [−r] [−p] [−f] [−g] [−s|−n] [−v] wholedisk
This tool, derived from util-linux’ partx, reads partition tables on specified device and create device maps over partitions segments detected. It is called from hotplug upon device maps creation and deletion.
−a |
Add partition mappings. | ||
−d |
Delete partition mappings. | ||
−u |
Update partition mappings. | ||
−l |
List partition mappings that would be added −a. | ||
−r |
Read-only partition mappings. | ||
−p |
Set device name-partition number delimiter. | ||
−f |
Force creation of mappings; overrides ’no_partitions’ feature. | ||
−g |
Force GUID partition table (GPT). | ||
−s |
Sync mode (Default). Don’t return until the partitions are created. | ||
−n |
Nosync mode. Return before the partitions are created. | ||
−v |
Operate verbosely. |
To mount all the partitions in a raw disk image:
kpartx −av disk.img
This will output lines such as:
add map loop1p1 (254:4): 0 409597 linear 7:1 3
The loop1p1 is the name of a device file under /dev/mapper which you can use to access the partition, for example to fsck it:
fsck /dev/mapper/loop1p1
When you’re done, you need to remove the devices:
kpartx −d disk.img
multipath(8) multipathd(8) hotplug(8)
This man page was assembled By Patrick Caulfield for the Debian project.
multipath-tools was developed by Christophe Varoqui <[email protected]> and others.