• pfr@lemmy.sdf.orgM
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    21 days ago

    gpt show sd0 and gpt show -l sd0 will show partition labels (if using GPT)

    Could also use dkctl sd0 listwedges to show wedge names…

    I’ll have a little play and see what might work best

    • vermaden@lemmy.mlOP
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      19 days ago

      I would love to sit down on this and just port it to NetBSD … but this month time is my ‘valuable’ thing - and I need to provide some things that I need to do for a living - please try and share what you found to work - I would really like to make lsblk(8) also work on NetBSD - as if FreeBSD would not exist - the NetBSD UNIX is the system I would be using instead :)

      • pfr@lemmy.sdf.orgM
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        16 days ago

        Yeah, I looked deeper into it and there’s just too many differences between each system to make a completely portable *BSD script. Well, is out of scope for my skills at least.

        I whipped up a quick and dirty script that sort of emulates lsblk on NetBSD…

        Not my finest, but it works on my machine

        NetBSD-lsblk.sh

        • vermaden@lemmy.mlOP
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          10 days ago

          Thanks - I tried it under NetBSD in FreeBSD Bhyve VM - but no luck for me:

          netbsd# uname -prsm
          NetBSD 10.1 amd64 x86_64
          
          netbsd# ./lsblk.NetBSD
          DEV      LABEL        FS     SIZE   USED USE% MOUNT
          ----------------------------------------------------------------------
          disklabel: ioctl DIOCGDINFO: Inappropriate ioctl for device