NAME
fstyp
—
determine filesystem type
SYNOPSIS
fstyp |
[-l ] [-s ]
[-u ] special |
DESCRIPTION
The fstyp
utility is used to determine the
filesystem type on a given device. It can recognize BeFS (BeOS), ISO-9660,
exFAT, Ext2, FAT, NTFS, and UFS filesystems. When the
-u
flag is specified, fstyp
also recognizes certain additional metadata formats that cannot be handled
using mount(8), such as
geli(8) providers, and ZFS pools.
The filesystem name is printed to the standard output as, respectively:
- befs
- cd9660
- exfat
- ext2fs
- geli
- hammer
- hammer2
- msdosfs
- ntfs
- ufs
- zfs
Because fstyp
is built specifically to
detect filesystem types, it differs from
file(1) in several ways. The output is machine-parsable, filesystem
labels are supported, the utility runs sandboxed using
capsicum(4), and does not try to recognize any file format
other than filesystems.
These options are available:
-l
- In addition to filesystem type, print filesystem label if available.
-s
- Ignore file type. By default,
fstyp
only works on regular files and disk-like device nodes. Trying to read other file types might have unexpected consequences or hang indefinitely. -u
- Include filesystems and devices that cannot be mounted directly by mount(8).
EXIT STATUS
The fstyp
utility exits 0 on success, and
>0 if an error occurs or the filesystem type is not recognized.
SEE ALSO
file(1), autofs(4), capsicum(4), geli(8), glabel(8), mount(8), zpool(8)
HISTORY
The fstyp
command appeared in
FreeBSD 10.2.
AUTHORS
The fstyp
utility was developed by
Edward Tomasz Napierala
<trasz@FreeBSD.org>
under sponsorship from the FreeBSD Foundation. ZFS and GELI support was
added by Allan Jude
<allanjude@FreeBSD.org>.