1MKE2FS(8)                   System Manager's Manual                  MKE2FS(8)
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NAME

6       mke2fs - create an ext2/ext3/ext4 file system
7

SYNOPSIS

9       mke2fs  [ -c | -l filename ] [ -b block-size ] [ -C cluster-size ] [ -d
10       root-directory ] [ -D ] [ -g blocks-per-group ] [ -G number-of-groups ]
11       [  -i bytes-per-inode ] [ -I inode-size ] [ -j ] [ -J journal-options ]
12       [ -N number-of-inodes ] [ -n ] [ -m reserved-blocks-percentage ]  [  -o
13       creator-os ] [ -O [^]feature[,...]  ] [ -q ] [ -r fs-revision-level ] [
14       -E extended-options ] [ -v ] [ -F ] [ -L  volume-label  ]  [  -M  last-
15       mounted-directory ] [ -S ] [ -t fs-type ] [ -T usage-type ] [ -U UUID ]
16       [ -V ] [ -e errors-behavior ] [ -z undo_file ] device [ fs-size ]
17
18       mke2fs -O journal_dev [ -b block-size ] [ -L volume-label ] [ -n ] [ -q
19       ] [ -v ] external-journal [ fs-size ]
20

DESCRIPTION

22       mke2fs is used to create an ext2, ext3, or ext4 file system, usually in
23       a disk partition (or file) named by device.
24
25       The file system size is specified by fs-size.  If fs-size does not have
26       a  suffix,  it  is interpreted as power-of-two kilobytes, unless the -b
27       blocksize option is specified, in which case fs-size is interpreted  as
28       the  number  of  blocksize blocks.   If the fs-size is suffixed by 'k',
29       'm', 'g', 't' (either upper-case or lower-case), then it is interpreted
30       in  power-of-two  kilobytes,  megabytes, gigabytes, terabytes, etc.  If
31       fs-size is omitted, mke2fs will create the file system based on the de‐
32       vice size.
33
34       If mke2fs is run as mkfs.XXX (i.e., mkfs.ext2, mkfs.ext3, or mkfs.ext4)
35       the option -t XXX is implied; so mkfs.ext3 will create  a  file  system
36       for  use  with  ext3,  mkfs.ext4 will create a file system for use with
37       ext4, and so on.
38
39       The defaults of the parameters for the newly created  file  system,  if
40       not  overridden  by  the  options  listed  below, are controlled by the
41       /etc/mke2fs.conf configuration file.   See  the  mke2fs.conf(5)  manual
42       page for more details.
43

OPTIONS

45       -b block-size
46              Specify  the  size  of blocks in bytes.  Valid block-size values
47              are powers of two from 1024 up to 65536 (however note  that  the
48              kernel  is  able  to  mount  only  file  systems with block-size
49              smaller or equal to the system page size - 4k on x86 systems, up
50              to  64k  on ppc64 or aarch64 depending on kernel configuration).
51              If omitted, block-size is heuristically determined by  the  file
52              system  size  and the expected usage of the file system (see the
53              -T option).  In most common cases, the default block size is 4k.
54              If  block-size is preceded by a negative sign ('-'), then mke2fs
55              will use heuristics to determine  the  appropriate  block  size,
56              with  the constraint that the block size will be at least block-
57              size bytes.  This is useful for certain hardware  devices  which
58              require that the blocksize be a multiple of 2k.
59
60       -c     Check the device for bad blocks before creating the file system.
61              If this option is specified twice, then a slower read-write test
62              is used instead of a fast read-only test.
63
64       -C  cluster-size
65              Specify  the size of cluster in bytes for file systems using the
66              bigalloc feature.  Valid cluster-size values are  from  2048  to
67              256M  bytes  per cluster.  This can only be specified if the bi‐
68              galloc feature is enabled.  (See the ext4 (5) man page for  more
69              details  about bigalloc.)   The default cluster size if bigalloc
70              is enabled is 16 times the block size.
71
72       -d root-directory
73              Copy the contents of the given directory into the root directory
74              of the file system.
75
76       -D     Use  direct  I/O  when  writing to the disk.  This avoids mke2fs
77              dirtying a lot of buffer cache memory, which  may  impact  other
78              applications  running  on a busy server.  This option will cause
79              mke2fs to run much more slowly, however, so there is a  tradeoff
80              to using direct I/O.
81
82       -e error-behavior
83              Change the behavior of the kernel code when errors are detected.
84              In all cases, a file system error will cause e2fsck(8) to  check
85              the  file system on the next boot.  error-behavior can be one of
86              the following:
87
88                   continue    Continue normal execution.
89
90                   remount-ro  Remount file system read-only.
91
92                   panic       Cause a kernel panic.
93
94       -E extended-options
95              Set extended options for the file system.  Extended options  are
96              comma separated, and may take an argument using the equals ('=')
97              sign.  The -E option used  to  be  -R  in  earlier  versions  of
98              mke2fs.   The -R option is still accepted for backwards compati‐
99              bility, but is deprecated.  The following extended  options  are
100              supported:
101
102                   encoding=encoding-name
103                          Enable  the  casefold feature in the super block and
104                          set encoding-name as the encoding to  be  used.   If
105                          encoding-name is not specified, the encoding defined
106                          in mke2fs.conf(5) is used.
107
108                   encoding_flags=encoding-flags
109                          Define parameters for file name  character  encoding
110                          operations.  If a flag is not changed using this pa‐
111                          rameter, its default value is used.   encoding-flags
112                          should be a comma-separated lists of flags to be en‐
113                          abled.  To disable a flag, add it to the  list  with
114                          the prefix "no".
115
116                          The  only  flag  that can be set right now is strict
117                          which means that invalid strings should be  rejected
118                          by  the  file system.  In the default configuration,
119                          the strict flag is disabled.
120
121                   mmp_update_interval=interval
122                          Adjust the initial MMP update interval  to  interval
123                          seconds.   Specifying  an interval of 0 means to use
124                          the default interval.  The specified  interval  must
125                          be  less  than  300  seconds.  Requires that the mmp
126                          feature be enabled.
127
128                   stride=stride-size
129                          Configure the file system  for  a  RAID  array  with
130                          stride-size  file  system blocks. This is the number
131                          of blocks read or written to disk before  moving  to
132                          the next disk, which is sometimes referred to as the
133                          chunk size.  This mostly affects placement  of  file
134                          system metadata like bitmaps at mke2fs time to avoid
135                          placing them on a single disk, which can  hurt  per‐
136                          formance.   It may also be used by the block alloca‐
137                          tor.
138
139                   stripe_width=stripe-width
140                          Configure the file system  for  a  RAID  array  with
141                          stripe-width  file system blocks per stripe. This is
142                          typically stride-size * N, where N is the number  of
143                          data-bearing  disks  in  the  RAID  (e.g. for RAID 5
144                          there is one parity disk, so N will be the number of
145                          disks  in the array minus 1).  This allows the block
146                          allocator to prevent read-modify-write of the parity
147                          in  a RAID stripe if possible when the data is writ‐
148                          ten.
149
150                   offset=offset
151                          Create the file system at an offset from the  begin‐
152                          ning of the device or file.  This can be useful when
153                          creating disk images for virtual machines.
154
155                   resize=max-online-resize
156                          Reserve enough space so that  the  block  group  de‐
157                          scriptor  table  can  grow  to support a file system
158                          that has max-online-resize blocks.
159
160                   lazy_itable_init[= <0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
161                          If enabled and the uninit_bg feature is enabled, the
162                          inode table will not be fully initialized by mke2fs.
163                          This speeds up file  system  initialization  notice‐
164                          ably,  but it requires the kernel to finish initial‐
165                          izing the file system in  the  background  when  the
166                          file  system  is first mounted.  If the option value
167                          is omitted, it defaults to 1 to  enable  lazy  inode
168                          table zeroing.
169
170                   lazy_journal_init[= <0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
171                          If  enabled, the journal inode will not be fully ze‐
172                          roed out by mke2fs.  This speeds up file system ini‐
173                          tialization  noticeably, but carries some small risk
174                          if the system crashes before the  journal  has  been
175                          overwritten  entirely one time.  If the option value
176                          is omitted, it defaults to 1 to enable lazy  journal
177                          inode zeroing.
178
179                   no_copy_xattrs
180                          Normally mke2fs will copy the extended attributes of
181                          the files in the directory hierarchy  specified  via
182                          the  (optional)  -d  option.   This will disable the
183                          copy and leaves the files in the newly created  file
184                          system without any extended attributes.
185
186                   num_backup_sb=<0|1|2>
187                          If  the sparse_super2 file system feature is enabled
188                          this option controls whether there will be 0, 1,  or
189                          2 backup superblocks created in the file system.
190
191                   packed_meta_blocks[= <0 to disable, 1 to enable>]
192                          Place  the allocation bitmaps and the inode table at
193                          the beginning of the  disk.   This  option  requires
194                          that  the  flex_bg file system feature to be enabled
195                          in order for it to have effect, and will also create
196                          the  journal  at  the  beginning of the file system.
197                          This option is useful for flash devices that use SLC
198                          flash  at  the beginning of the disk.  It also maxi‐
199                          mizes the range of contiguous data blocks, which can
200                          be useful for certain specialized use cases, such as
201                          supported Shingled Drives.
202
203                   root_owner[=uid:gid]
204                          Specify the numeric user and group ID  of  the  root
205                          directory.  If no UID:GID is specified, use the user
206                          and group ID of the user running mke2fs.  In  mke2fs
207                          1.42  and earlier the UID and GID of the root direc‐
208                          tory were set by default to the UID and GID  of  the
209                          user  running  the  mke2fs command.  The root_owner=
210                          option allows explicitly  specifying  these  values,
211                          and  avoid side-effects for users that do not expect
212                          the contents of the file system to change  based  on
213                          the user running mke2fs.
214
215                   test_fs
216                          Set  a flag in the file system superblock indicating
217                          that it may be  mounted  using  experimental  kernel
218                          code, such as the ext4dev file system.
219
220                   discard
221                          Attempt  to  discard blocks at mkfs time (discarding
222                          blocks initially is useful on  solid  state  devices
223                          and sparse / thin-provisioned storage). When the de‐
224                          vice advertises that discard also zeroes  data  (any
225                          subsequent  read  after the discard and before write
226                          returns zero), then mark  all  not-yet-zeroed  inode
227                          tables  as zeroed. This significantly speeds up file
228                          system initialization. This is set as default.
229
230                   nodiscard
231                          Do not attempt to discard blocks at mkfs time.
232
233                   quotatype
234                          Specify the which  quota types (usrquota,  grpquota,
235                          prjquota)  which  should  be  enabled in the created
236                          file system.  The argument of this  extended  option
237                          should  be  a colon separated list.  This option has
238                          effect only if the quota feature is set.    The  de‐
239                          fault  quota  types to be initialized if this option
240                          is not specified is both user and group quotas.   If
241                          the  project  feature is enabled that project quotas
242                          will be initialized as well.
243
244       -F     Force mke2fs to create a file system, even if the specified  de‐
245              vice  is  not a partition on a block special device, or if other
246              parameters do not make sense.  In order to force mke2fs to  cre‐
247              ate  a  file system even if the file system appears to be in use
248              or is mounted (a truly dangerous thing to do), this option  must
249              be specified twice.
250
251       -g blocks-per-group
252              Specify  the number of blocks in a block group.  There is gener‐
253              ally no reason for the user to ever set this parameter,  as  the
254              default is optimal for the file system.  (For administrators who
255              are creating file systems on RAID arrays, it  is  preferable  to
256              use  the  stride  RAID parameter as part of the -E option rather
257              than manipulating the number of blocks per group.)  This  option
258              is generally used by developers who are developing test cases.
259
260              If  the  bigalloc feature is enabled, the -g option will specify
261              the number of clusters in a block group.
262
263       -G number-of-groups
264              Specify the number of block groups that will be packed  together
265              to  create  a larger virtual block group (or "flex_bg group") in
266              an ext4 file system.  This improves meta-data locality and  per‐
267              formance  on  meta-data  heavy  workloads.  The number of groups
268              must be a power of 2 and may only be specified  if  the  flex_bg
269              file system feature is enabled.
270
271       -i bytes-per-inode
272              Specify  the bytes/inode ratio.  mke2fs creates an inode for ev‐
273              ery bytes-per-inode bytes of space on the disk.  The larger  the
274              bytes-per-inode  ratio,  the fewer inodes will be created.  This
275              value generally shouldn't be smaller than the blocksize  of  the
276              file  system,  since in that case more inodes would be made than
277              can ever be used.  Be warned that it is not possible  to  change
278              this  ratio  on a file system after it is created, so be careful
279              deciding the correct value for this parameter.  Note that resiz‐
280              ing  a file system changes the number of inodes to maintain this
281              ratio.
282
283       -I inode-size
284              Specify the size of each inode in bytes.  The  inode-size  value
285              must be a power of 2 larger or equal to 128.  The larger the in‐
286              ode-size the more space the inode table will consume,  and  this
287              reduces  the  usable space in the file system and can also nega‐
288              tively impact performance.  It is not possible  to  change  this
289              value after the file system is created.
290
291              File  systems  with  an  inode  size of 128 bytes do not support
292              timestamps beyond January 19, 2038.  Inodes which are 256  bytes
293              or  larger  will  support extended timestamps, project id's, and
294              the ability to store some extended attributes in the inode table
295              for improved performance.
296
297              The default inode size is controlled by the mke2fs.conf(5) file.
298              In the mke2fs.conf file shipped with e2fsprogs, the default  in‐
299              ode  size  is  256 bytes for most file systems, except for small
300              file systems where the inode size will be 128 bytes.
301
302       -j     Create the file system with an ext3 journal.  If the  -J  option
303              is not specified, the default journal parameters will be used to
304              create an appropriately sized journal (given  the  size  of  the
305              file  system) stored within the file system.  Note that you must
306              be using a kernel which has ext3 support in  order  to  actually
307              make use of the journal.
308
309       -J journal-options
310              Create  the ext3 journal using options specified on the command-
311              line.  Journal options are comma separated, and may take an  ar‐
312              gument  using the equals ('=')  sign.  The following journal op‐
313              tions are supported:
314
315                   size=journal-size
316                          Create an internal journal (i.e., stored inside  the
317                          file  system)  of  size journal-size megabytes.  The
318                          size of the journal must be at least 1024 file  sys‐
319                          tem blocks (i.e., 1MB if using 1k blocks, 4MB if us‐
320                          ing 4k blocks,  etc.)   and  may  be  no  more  than
321                          10,240,000 file system blocks or half the total file
322                          system size (whichever is smaller)
323
324                   fast_commit_size=fast-commit-size
325                          Create an additional fast  commit  journal  area  of
326                          size  fast-commit-size  kilobytes.   This  option is
327                          only valid if fast_commit feature is enabled on  the
328                          file  system. If this option is not specified and if
329                          fast_commit feature is turned on, fast  commit  area
330                          size  defaults  to  journal-size / 64 megabytes. The
331                          total size of the journal with  fast_commit  feature
332                          set  is  journal-size  +  ( fast-commit-size * 1024)
333                          megabytes. The total journal size  may  be  no  more
334                          than 10,240,000 file system blocks or half the total
335                          file system size (whichever is smaller).
336
337                   location=journal-location
338                          Specify the location of the journal.   The  argument
339                          journal-location  can either be specified as a block
340                          number, or if the number has a units  suffix  (e.g.,
341                          'M',  'G', etc.) interpret it as the offset from the
342                          beginning of the file system.
343
344                   device=external-journal
345                          Attach the file system to the journal  block  device
346                          located  on  external-journal.  The external journal
347                          must already have been created using the command
348
349                          mke2fs -O journal_dev external-journal
350
351                          Note that external-journal must  have  been  created
352                          with the same block size as the new file system.  In
353                          addition, while there is support for attaching  mul‐
354                          tiple file systems to a single external journal, the
355                          Linux kernel and e2fsck(8) do not currently  support
356                          shared external journals yet.
357
358                          Instead of specifying a device name directly, exter‐
359                          nal-journal can also  be  specified  by  either  LA‐
360                          BEL=label  or UUID=UUID to locate the external jour‐
361                          nal by either the volume label or UUID stored in the
362                          ext2  superblock  at  the start of the journal.  Use
363                          dumpe2fs(8) to display a journal device's volume la‐
364                          bel and UUID.  See also the -L option of tune2fs(8).
365
366              Only  one  of the size or device options can be given for a file
367              system.
368
369       -l filename
370              Read the bad blocks list from filename.   Note  that  the  block
371              numbers  in  the bad block list must be generated using the same
372              block size as used by mke2fs.  As a result,  the  -c  option  to
373              mke2fs is a much simpler and less error-prone method of checking
374              a disk for bad blocks before formatting it, as mke2fs will auto‐
375              matically pass the correct parameters to the badblocks program.
376
377       -L new-volume-label
378              Set  the  volume  label for the file system to new-volume-label.
379              The maximum length of the volume label is 16 bytes.
380
381       -m reserved-blocks-percentage
382              Specify the percentage of the file system  blocks  reserved  for
383              the  super-user.   This  avoids  fragmentation, and allows root-
384              owned daemons, such as syslogd(8), to continue to function  cor‐
385              rectly after non-privileged processes are prevented from writing
386              to the file system.  The default percentage is 5%.
387
388       -M last-mounted-directory
389              Set the last mounted directory for the file system.  This  might
390              be  useful  for  the  sake of utilities that key off of the last
391              mounted directory to determine where the file system  should  be
392              mounted.
393
394       -n     Causes  mke2fs to not actually create a file system, but display
395              what it would do if it were to create a file system.   This  can
396              be  used to determine the location of the backup superblocks for
397              a particular file system, so long as the mke2fs parameters  that
398              were passed when the file system was originally created are used
399              again.  (With the -n option added, of course!)
400
401       -N number-of-inodes
402              Overrides the default calculation of the number of  inodes  that
403              should  be  reserved  for the file system (which is based on the
404              number of blocks and the bytes-per-inode  ratio).   This  allows
405              the user to specify the number of desired inodes directly.
406
407       -o creator-os
408              Overrides  the  default  value of the "creator operating system"
409              field of the file system.  The creator field is set  by  default
410              to the name of the OS the mke2fs executable was compiled for.
411
412       -O [^]feature[,...]
413              Create  a  file  system with the given features (file system op‐
414              tions), overriding the default file system  options.   The  fea‐
415              tures that are enabled by default are specified by the base_fea‐
416              tures  relation,  either  in  the  [defaults]  section  in   the
417              /etc/mke2fs.conf  configuration  file, or in the [fs_types] sub‐
418              sections for the usage types as specified by the -T option, fur‐
419              ther  modified  by the features relation found in the [fs_types]
420              subsections for the  file  system  and  usage  types.   See  the
421              mke2fs.conf(5)  manual  page  for more details.  The file system
422              type-specific configuration setting found in the [fs_types] sec‐
423              tion will override the global default found in [defaults].
424
425              The  file system feature set will be further edited using either
426              the feature set specified by this option, or if this  option  is
427              not  given, by the default_features relation for the file system
428              type being created, or in the [defaults] section of the configu‐
429              ration file.
430
431              The  file system feature set is comprised of a list of features,
432              separated by commas, that are to be enabled.  To disable a  fea‐
433              ture,  simply prefix the feature name with a caret ('^') charac‐
434              ter.  Features with dependencies will not  be  removed  success‐
435              fully.   The  pseudo-file  system  feature "none" will clear all
436              file system features.
437
438       For more information about the features which can be set, please see
439              the manual page ext4(5).
440
441       -q     Quiet execution.  Useful if mke2fs is run in a script.
442
443       -r revision
444              Set the file system revision for the new file system.  Note that
445              1.2  kernels  only support revision 0 file systems.  The default
446              is to create revision 1 file systems.
447
448       -S     Write superblock and group descriptors only.  This is an extreme
449              measure  to  be taken only in the very unlikely case that all of
450              the superblock and backup superblocks are corrupted, and a last-
451              ditch  recovery  method  is  desired  by  experienced users.  It
452              causes mke2fs to reinitialize the superblock and group  descrip‐
453              tors, while not touching the inode table and the block and inode
454              bitmaps.  The e2fsck program should  be  run  immediately  after
455              this  option  is  used,  and there is no guarantee that any data
456              will be salvageable.  Due to the wide variety  of  possible  op‐
457              tions  to  mke2fs that affect the on-disk layout, it is critical
458              to specify exactly the same format options, such  as  blocksize,
459              fs-type,  feature  flags, and other tunables when using this op‐
460              tion, or the file system will be  further  corrupted.   In  some
461              cases,  such as file systems that have been resized, or have had
462              features enabled after format time, it is  impossible  to  over‐
463              write  all  of the superblocks correctly, and at least some file
464              system corruption will occur.  It is best to run this on a  full
465              copy  of  the  file system so other options can be tried if this
466              doesn't work.
467
468       -t fs-type
469              Specify the file system type (i.e., ext2, ext3, ext4, etc.) that
470              is  to be created.  If this option is not specified, mke2fs will
471              pick a default either via how the command was run (for  example,
472              using  a  name  of the form mkfs.ext2, mkfs.ext3, etc.) or via a
473              default as defined by the /etc/mke2fs.conf file.    This  option
474              controls which file system options are used by default, based on
475              the fstypes configuration stanza in /etc/mke2fs.conf.
476
477              If the -O option is used to explicitly add or remove file system
478              options that should be set in the newly created file system, the
479              resulting file system may not be supported by the requested  fs-
480              type.  (e.g., "mke2fs -t ext3 -O extent /dev/sdXX" will create a
481              file system that is not supported by the ext3 implementation  as
482              found  in  the Linux kernel; and "mke2fs -t ext3 -O ^has_journal
483              /dev/hdXX" will create a file system that does not have a  jour‐
484              nal and hence will not be supported by the ext3 file system code
485              in the Linux kernel.)
486
487       -T usage-type[,...]
488              Specify how the file system is going to be used, so that  mke2fs
489              can choose optimal file system parameters for that use.  The us‐
490              age types that are supported are defined  in  the  configuration
491              file  /etc/mke2fs.conf.   The user may specify one or more usage
492              types using a comma separated list.
493
494              If this option is is not specified, mke2fs will  pick  a  single
495              default  usage  type  based on the size of the file system to be
496              created.  If the file system size  is  less  than  3  megabytes,
497              mke2fs will use the file system type floppy.  If the file system
498              size is greater than or equal to 3 but less than 512  megabytes,
499              mke2fs(8) will use the file system type small.  If the file sys‐
500              tem size is greater than or equal to 4 terabytes but  less  than
501              16  terabytes,  mke2fs(8) will use the file system type big.  If
502              the file system size is greater than or equal to  16  terabytes,
503              mke2fs(8)  will  use  the  file  system  type  huge.  Otherwise,
504              mke2fs(8) will use the default file system type default.
505
506       -U UUID
507              Set the universally unique identifier (UUID) of the file  system
508              to UUID.  The format of the UUID is a series of hex digits sepa‐
509              rated          by          hyphens,          like          this:
510              "c1b9d5a2-f162-11cf-9ece-0020afc76f16".   The UUID parameter may
511              also be one of the following:
512
513                   clear  clear the file system UUID
514
515                   random generate a new randomly-generated UUID
516
517                   time   generate a new time-based UUID
518
519       -v     Verbose execution.
520
521       -V     Print the version number of mke2fs and exit.
522
523       -z undo_file
524              Before overwriting a file system block, write the  old  contents
525              of  the  block to an undo file.  This undo file can be used with
526              e2undo(8) to restore the old contents of the file system  should
527              something  go  wrong.   If  the  empty  string  is passed as the
528              undo_file argument, the undo file will  be  written  to  a  file
529              named  mke2fs-device.e2undo  in  the directory specified via the
530              E2FSPROGS_UNDO_DIR environment variable or the  undo_dir  direc‐
531              tive in the configuration file.
532
533              WARNING: The undo file cannot be used to recover from a power or
534              system crash.
535

ENVIRONMENT

537       MKE2FS_SYNC
538              If set to non-zero integer value, its value is used to determine
539              how often sync(2) is called during inode table initialization.
540
541       MKE2FS_CONFIG
542              Determines   the   location   of  the  configuration  file  (see
543              mke2fs.conf(5)).
544
545       MKE2FS_FIRST_META_BG
546              If set to non-zero integer value, its value is used to determine
547              first meta block group. This is mostly for debugging purposes.
548
549       MKE2FS_DEVICE_SECTSIZE
550              If set to non-zero integer value, its value is used to determine
551              logical sector size of the device.
552
553       MKE2FS_DEVICE_PHYS_SECTSIZE
554              If set to non-zero integer value, its value is used to determine
555              physical sector size of the device.
556
557       MKE2FS_SKIP_CHECK_MSG
558              If  set,  do not show the message of file system automatic check
559              caused by mount count or check interval.
560

AUTHOR

562       This  version  of  mke2fs   has   been   written   by   Theodore   Ts'o
563       <tytso@mit.edu>.
564

AVAILABILITY

566       mke2fs  is  part  of  the  e2fsprogs  package  and  is  available  from
567       http://e2fsprogs.sourceforge.net.
568

SEE ALSO

570       mke2fs.conf(5),  badblocks(8),  dumpe2fs(8),   e2fsck(8),   tune2fs(8),
571       ext4(5)
572
573
574
575E2fsprogs version 1.46.5         December 2021                       MKE2FS(8)
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