Apple Partition Map

Apple Partition Map (APM) is a partition scheme used to define the low-level organization of data on disks formatted for use with 68k and PowerPC Macintosh computers. It was introduced with the Macintosh II.[1]

Disks using the Apple Partition Map are divided into logical blocks, with 512 bytes usually belonging to each block. The first block, Block 0, contains an Apple-specific data structure called “Driver Descriptor Map” for the Macintosh Toolbox ROM to load driver updates and patches before loading from a MFS or HFS partition.[2] Because APM allows 32 bits worth of logical blocks, the historical size of an APM formatted disk using small blocks[3] is limited to 2 TiB.[4]

The Apple Partition Map maps out all space used (including the map) and unused (free space) on disk, unlike the minimal x86 master boot record that only accounts for used non-map partitions. This means that every block on the disk (with the exception of the first block, Block 0) belongs to a partition.

Some hybrid disks contain both an ISO 9660 primary volume descriptor and an Apple Partition Map, thus allowing the disc to work on different types of computers, including Apple systems.

Intel-based Macs

For accessing volumes, both APM and GUID partitions can be used in a standard manner with Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) and higher. For starting an operating system, PowerPC-based systems can only boot from APM disks[5] whereas Intel-based systems generally boot from GUID disks.[1][6][7] Nevertheless, Intel-based Macs are able to boot from APM, GPT (GUID Partition Table) and MBR (Master Boot Record, using the BIOS-Emulation called EFI-CSM i.e. the Compatibility Support Module provided by EFI).

Intel-based models that came with Mac OS X Tiger (10.4) or Leopard (10.5) preinstalled had to be able to boot from both APM and GUID disks due to the installation media for these universal versions of Mac OS X, which are APM partitioned in order to remain compatible with PowerPC-based systems.[8] However, the installation of OS X on an Intel-based Mac demands a GUID partitioned disk or will refuse to continue, the same way installation on a PowerPC-based system will demand an APM partitioned destination volume. Cloning an already installed OS X to an APM partition on Intel systems will remain bootable even on 2011 Intel-based Macs. Despite this apparent APM support, Apple never officially supported booting from an internal APM disk on an Intel-based system. The one exception for a universal version of Mac OS X (Tiger or Leopard) is an official Apple document describing how to set up a dual bootable external APM disk for use with PowerPC and Intel.[9]

Layout

Each entry of the partition table is the size of one data block, which is normally 512 bytes.[1][10] Each partition entry on the table is the size of one block or sector of data. Because the partition table itself is also a partition, the size of this first partition limits the number of entries to the partition table itself.

The normal case is that 64 sectors (64 × 512 = 32 KB) are used by the Apple Partition Map: one block for the Driver Descriptor Map as Block 0, one block for the partition table itself and 62 blocks for a maximum of 62 data partitions.[11]

Each partition entry includes the starting sector and the size, but also a name, a type, a position of the data area and possible boot code. It also includes the total number of partitions in that partition table.[12] This ensures that, after reading the first partition table entry, the firmware is aware of how many blocks more to read from the media in order to have processed every partition table entry. All entries are in big-endian byte-order.

AddressSize
in bytes
ContentsRequired?
DecimalHex
00x00001signature1 (ASCII value "P")No
10x00011signature2 (ASCII value "M")No
2–30x00022reservedNo
4–70x00044number of partitions (total)Yes
8–110x00084starting sector of partitionYes
12–150x000C4size of partition (in sectors)Yes
16–470x001032name of partition (fixed ASCII right-side NULL padded)No
48–790x003032type of partition (fixed ASCII right-side NULL padded)No
80–830x00504starting sector of data area in partitionNo
84–870x00544size of data area in partition (in sectors)No
88–910x00584status of partitionNo
92–950x005C4starting sector of boot codeNo
96–990x00604size of boot code (in bytes)No
100–1030x00644address of bootloader codeNo
104–1070x00684reservedNo
108–1110x006C4boot code entry pointNo
112–1150x00704reservedNo
116–1190x00744boot code checksumNo
120–1350x007816processor type (fixed ASCII right-side NULL padded)No
136–5110x0088376reservedNo

Partition identifiers

Types beginning with "Apple_" are reserved for assignment by Apple, all other custom defined types are free to use. However registration with Apple is encouraged.

Identifier / typeContents / file systemName (typical)Remarks
Apple_BootbootloaderMOSX_OF3_Booter, eXternal booterThis boot partition is used by Mac OS X on New World Macs (Open Firmware 3.0 and greater) when the file system on the main partition is not supported by Open Firmware, like in a software RAID configuration or when using a HFS+ case-sensitive or a UFS file system. It contains BootX on an HFS filesystem.
Apple_Boot_RAIDbootloaderRaid Partition
Apple_BootstrapNewWorld bootblockAlthough it is a general Open Firmware (New World) boot partition, it is specifically used by yaboot. It must be HFS formatted, so that it can be accessed by Open Firmware.
Apple_Driverdevice driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_Driver43SCSI Manager 4.3 device driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_Driver43_CDSCSI CD-ROM device driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_Driver_ATAATA device driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_Driver_ATAPIATAPI device driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_Driver_IOKitI/O Kit driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_Driver_OpenFirmwareMacintosh
Apple_ExtraunusedThis identifier masks an unused partition map entry.
Apple_Freefree spaceExtraThis identifier masks free space as a partition map entry.
Apple_FWDriverFireWire device driverMacintoshMac OS classic drivers partition
Apple_HFSHierarchical File SystemApple_HFSWhile normally a HFS or HFS+ volume for Mac OS and Mac OS X, it can also contain an MS-DOS formatted file system (File Allocation Table, which can be accessed by Mac OS and Mac OS X).
Apple_HFSXHFS PlusThis partition contains a HFS+ volume without a HFS wrapper. HFSX was introduced with Mac OS X 10.3 and is only used in special cases, like case sensitive HFS+. HFSX is the standard partition type on Intel-based Macs (which use GUID instead of APM).
Apple_LoaderSecondaryLoaderLike Apple_Boot but on Old World Macs, it is used when Mac OS X is installed on a file system not readable by Open Firmware. This partition does not contain a filesystem—instead it contains the BootX machine code in XCOFF format. This partition type was discontinued with Mac OS X 10.3.
Apple_MDFWfirmwarefirmwareThis partition is used by iPod to load the firmware/OS.
Apple_MFSMacintosh File SystemThis partition is used by Mac OS for the Macintosh File System (MFS), which was introduced with the Macintosh 128K in 1984.
Apple_partition_mappartition mapAppleThe partition map is also a partition of its own. It can vary in size depending on how many partitions it may contain.
Apple_PatchespatchesPatch PartitionMac OS classic patch partition
Apple_PRODOSProDOSProDOS file system
Apple_RAIDRAIDApple_RAID_OfflineV2This identifier marks a Mac OS X partition used in a software RAID configuration. It normally contains the same filesystems a regular Mac OS X installation would have, like HFS/HFS+ or UFS. The separate boot partition Apple_Boot is mandatory.
Apple_Rhapsody_UFSUnix File SystemMac OS X ServerThis partition contains a Unix File System (UFS) used by the Apple Rhapsody operating system (a development name marking the transition from OPENSTEP to Mac OS X) and is also used by Mac OS X Server 1.0 through 1.2 v3.
Apple_ScratchemptyThis identifier marks an empty partition.
Apple_SecondSecond stage bootloader
Apple_UFSUnix File SystemMac OS XThis partition contains a Unix File System (UFS) and is used by Mac OS X, Mac OS X Server (Version 10.0 and newer) and various Unix-like operating systems.
Apple_UNIX_SVR2A/UX, UnixOriginally introduced for A/UX (Apple Unix operating system based on System V Release 2, hence SVR2) on the 68k, it was later reused for MkLinux which used the Extended file system. It is the standard partition identifier for many Unix-like operating systems, including Linux and NetBSD. It may contain any file system suitable for the installed operating system. If bootable, a file system that can be read by the Open Firmware bootloader from Apple_Bootstrap (e.g. yaboot) must be used.
Apple_VoidISO9660 paddingA dummy partition map entry to ensure correct partition alignment on bootable media.
Be_BFSBe File SystemThis partition contains a Be File System (BFS) and is normally used by BeOS.
MFS TiVo Media File System MFS application region, MFS media region Used to hold the proprietary Media File System on TiVo hard drives formatted using Apple Partition Map.

Partition status

Partition status is a bit field composed of the flags:

ValueDescriptionSystem
0x00000001entry is validA/UX
0x00000002entry is allocatedA/UX
0x00000004entry in useA/UX
0x00000008entry contains boot informationA/UX
0x00000010partition is readableA/UX
0x00000020partition is writableA/UX, Macintosh
0x00000040boot code is position independentA/UX
0x00000100partition contains chain-compatible driverMacintosh
0x00000200partition contains a real driverMacintosh
0x00000400partition contains a chain driverMacintosh
0x40000000automatically mount at startupMacintosh
0x80000000the startup partitionMacintosh

See also

References

  1. "Technical Note TN2166 – Secrets of the GPT". Apple. Retrieved 2013-02-24. …a standard block size of 512 bytes… [] Apple did consider extending APM to support larger disks. However, as such a change would break all existing partitioning tools…
  2. Mac OS: Technical overview of disk volume structures
  3. Apple Support Communities: Guid Partition or Apple Partition? (2012)
  4. MacTech Magazine: Apple's Transition from Apple Partition Map to the GUID Partition Table by Criss Myers
  5. Apple Mailing List: Subject: Re: Apple Partition Scheme or GUID Partition Scheme Archived 2009-04-06 at the Wayback Machine, Timothy Standing, 2006-04-30
  6. Apple Support Communities: Create a bootable clone using Disk Utility (2014): an example of problems trying to boot on an Intel Mac using an APM partitioned drive.
  7. Apple Support Communities: Running Mavericks + FCPX on External Boot Drive? (2014): OS X Mavericks does not boot from APM partitioned drives.
  8. OWC: Booting your Intel Mac to an APM-formatted drive, M. Christopher Stevens
  9. Mac OS X 10.5: Creating and maintaining a bootable "universal" external disk
  10. Rebe, René; Klaus, Susanne (2007). "Creating custom Linux solutions – Apple Partition Map". T2 System Development Environment. While the original intent was to handle various block sizes, in practice only 512 byte blocks are supported.
  11. "Yellow Dog Solutions – Attaching Firewire Disks to a Linux Box". Fixstars Corporation. Archived from the original on 2009-10-13. Retrieved 2013-02-24. Comment: The command pdisk -l /dev/sda shows a size of 63 blocks for the Apple_partition_map. There is a multitude of examples like this to be found on the internet.
  12. "IOApplePartitionScheme.h". Apple. 2009. Retrieved 2016-08-07.
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.