The GUID Partiton Table layout maintains two synonymous partition tables on a block device, one starting in sector 1 and one in the very last sectors of the block device. This is useful if one of the tables gets accidentally corrupted (e.g. through a partial write because of an unexpected power loss). Linux normally only boots if the primary GPT is valid. It will not even try to find the alternative GPT to an invalid primary one unless the "gpt" command line option forces more aggressive detection. This doesn't really make any sense... if the "gpt" option is not set, the code validates the protective or hybrid MBR in sector 0 anyway before it even starts looking for the actual GPTs. If we get to the point where a valid proctective or hybrid MBR was found but the primary GPT was not found (valid), checking the alternative GPT is our best bet: we know that this block device is meant to use GPT (because any other partitioning system would've presumably overwritten sector 0), and we know that if the alternative GPT is valid it should contain more accurate information than parsing the protective/hybrid MBR with msdos_partition() would yield (which would otherwise be what happens next). Signed-off-by: Julius Werner <jwerner@xxxxxxxxxxxx> --- block/partitions/efi.c | 2 +- 1 file changed, 1 insertion(+), 1 deletion(-) diff --git a/block/partitions/efi.c b/block/partitions/efi.c index 26cb624..0d4ca8e 100644 --- a/block/partitions/efi.c +++ b/block/partitions/efi.c @@ -625,7 +625,7 @@ static int find_valid_gpt(struct parsed_partitions *state, gpt_header **gpt, good_agpt = is_gpt_valid(state, le64_to_cpu(pgpt->alternate_lba), &agpt, &aptes); - if (!good_agpt && force_gpt) + if (!good_agpt) good_agpt = is_gpt_valid(state, lastlba, &agpt, &aptes); /* The obviously unsuccessful case */ -- 2.1.2 -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-efi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html