* [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps @ 2021-03-31 16:39 Peter Humphrey 2021-04-01 2:04 ` William Kenworthy 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Peter Humphrey @ 2021-03-31 16:39 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user Hello list, I use gparted often, usually from SystemRescueCD, and a common task is to move partitions to allow for one to be enlarged. I should be able to specify all the operations in a list, but whenever I do that gparted inserts 1MB gaps between partitions, so I have to do one at a time. Even the latest bootable gparted CD image does the same. Can anyone tell me what causes this? Has it anything to do with my always specifying partition size as a power of 8? (I'm of the old school, having been sent on my first computer hardware course in 1972.) -- Regards, Peter. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps 2021-03-31 16:39 [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps Peter Humphrey @ 2021-04-01 2:04 ` William Kenworthy 2021-04-01 10:13 ` Michael 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: William Kenworthy @ 2021-04-01 2:04 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On 1/4/21 12:39 am, Peter Humphrey wrote: > Hello list, > > I use gparted often, usually from SystemRescueCD, and a common task is to > move partitions to allow for one to be enlarged. I should be able to specify > all the operations in a list, but whenever I do that gparted inserts 1MB gaps > between partitions, so I have to do one at a time. Even the latest bootable > gparted CD image does the same. > > Can anyone tell me what causes this? Has it anything to do with my always > specifying partition size as a power of 8? (I'm of the old school, having been > sent on my first computer hardware course in 1972.) > Forcing alignment on megabyte boundaries? - I cant find a reason, but I think I read in the past it was for efficiency with modern file systems. BillK ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps 2021-04-01 2:04 ` William Kenworthy @ 2021-04-01 10:13 ` Michael 2021-04-01 15:06 ` Peter Humphrey 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Michael @ 2021-04-01 10:13 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 2601 bytes --] On Thursday, 1 April 2021 03:04:31 BST William Kenworthy wrote: > On 1/4/21 12:39 am, Peter Humphrey wrote: > > Hello list, > > > > I use gparted often, usually from SystemRescueCD, and a common task is to > > move partitions to allow for one to be enlarged. I should be able to > > specify all the operations in a list, but whenever I do that gparted > > inserts 1MB gaps between partitions, so I have to do one at a time. Even > > the latest bootable gparted CD image does the same. > > > > Can anyone tell me what causes this? Has it anything to do with my always > > specifying partition size as a power of 8? (I'm of the old school, having > > been sent on my first computer hardware course in 1972.) > > Forcing alignment on megabyte boundaries? - I cant find a reason, but I > think I read in the past it was for efficiency with modern file systems. > > BillK Yes, 4K physical sector size and partition alignment, ubiquitous on modern 'Advanced Format' drives, is used by all partitioning tools these days. There are many references in the interwebs, but in summary modern AF spinning drives have 4096 byte physical sector size with a 512 byte logical sector size. To ensure alignment you could start a partition at an LBA divisible by 8, but since Microsoft came out with Vista's partition manager a convention of 1MB has been set as the starting point: 512 * 2048 = 1,048,576 The 1MB (2048 logical sectors) convention for the start of a partition is used to cater for various hardware and partitioning requirements, inc. different RAID data stripe sizes, SSDs with different erase block sizes, etc. It ensures logical-physical partition alignment to optimise performance when delete/write operations take place and as long as you are not trying to squeeze the very last ounce of usable space out of your terabytes of storage, it achieves its stated aim. Parted has 3 options for aligning the start of a partition: none, minimal and optimal. With 'none' it will start a partition wherever you ask it, without paying heed to logical-to-physical sector alignment. With 'minimal' it will shift the start/end of a partition to make sure the minimum alignment between logical and physical sectors is achieved. With 'optimal' it will check if the partition is aligned to a multiple of the physical block size. 'Optimal' is the default. You could check/set the alignment of logical-physical sectors yourself, by making sure the start of your partitions is divisible by 8, instead of adopting the GParted 1MB default boundary in any cases where it is not necessary. [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps 2021-04-01 10:13 ` Michael @ 2021-04-01 15:06 ` Peter Humphrey 2021-04-01 15:47 ` Michael 0 siblings, 1 reply; 5+ messages in thread From: Peter Humphrey @ 2021-04-01 15:06 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user On Thursday, 1 April 2021 11:13:07 BST Michael wrote: > You could check/set the alignment of logical-physical sectors yourself, by > making sure the start of your partitions is divisible by 8, instead of > adopting the GParted 1MB default boundary in any cases where it is not > necessary. So it seems to be the partition start points that matter; sizes have nothing to do with it. Makes sense, now I think about it. I've just realigned all my partitions to accord with that insight. It turned out that most of them had small differences from 8^n sizes and start points, which would explain all those unpartitioned spaces. All well now. Thanks all. -- Regards, Peter. ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
* Re: [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps 2021-04-01 15:06 ` Peter Humphrey @ 2021-04-01 15:47 ` Michael 0 siblings, 0 replies; 5+ messages in thread From: Michael @ 2021-04-01 15:47 UTC (permalink / raw To: gentoo-user [-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 1594 bytes --] On Thursday, 1 April 2021 16:06:37 BST Peter Humphrey wrote: > On Thursday, 1 April 2021 11:13:07 BST Michael wrote: > > You could check/set the alignment of logical-physical sectors yourself, by > > making sure the start of your partitions is divisible by 8, instead of > > adopting the GParted 1MB default boundary in any cases where it is not > > necessary. > > So it seems to be the partition start points that matter; sizes have nothing > to do with it. Makes sense, now I think about it. Yes, it is the starting point which determines the first 512 byte logical sector and those what follow it, are aligned with the first 4096 byte physical sector and those that follow it. When these are not aligned a write operation instructed by software could straddle more than one physical sector, even when the data to be stored is less than 4096B. This results in moving, deleting, writing more sectors and data than necessary, a measurably inefficient process. This is noticeable on spinning drive benchmarks and can get much worse on flash and SSDs with their coarser erase Vs write pages (a.k.a. write amplification). > I've just realigned all my partitions to accord with that insight. It turned > out that most of them had small differences from 8^n sizes and start > points, which would explain all those unpartitioned spaces. > > All well now. Thanks all. I recall fighting against gparted's optimal alignment myself when partitioning tools first started catering for 4K size sectors, only having to realign my partitions as soon as I realised the error of my ways! ;-) [-- Attachment #2: This is a digitally signed message part. --] [-- Type: application/pgp-signature, Size: 833 bytes --] ^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 5+ messages in thread
end of thread, other threads:[~2021-04-01 15:47 UTC | newest] Thread overview: 5+ messages (download: mbox.gz follow: Atom feed -- links below jump to the message on this page -- 2021-03-31 16:39 [gentoo-user] Gparted leaves gaps Peter Humphrey 2021-04-01 2:04 ` William Kenworthy 2021-04-01 10:13 ` Michael 2021-04-01 15:06 ` Peter Humphrey 2021-04-01 15:47 ` Michael
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