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NAMEmmls - Display the partition layout of a volume system (partition tables)SYNOPSISmmls [-t mmtype ] [-o offset ] [ -i imgtype ] [-b dev_sector_size] [-BrvV] [-aAmM] image [images]DESCRIPTIONmmls displays the layout of the partitions in a volume system, which include partition tables and disk labels.ARGUMENTS
´mmls´ is similar to 'fdisk -lu' in Linux with a few differences. Namely, it will show which sectors are not being used so that those can be searched for hidden data. It also gives the length value so that it can be plugged into 'dd' more easily for extracting the partitions. It also will show BSD disk labels for Free, Open, and NetBSD and will display the output in sectors and not cylinders. Lastly, it works on non-Linux systems. If none of -a, -A, -m, or -M are given then all volume types will be listed. If any of them are given, then only the types specified on the command line will be listed. Allocated volumes are those that are listed in a partition table in the volume system AND can store data. Unallocated volumes are virtually created by mmls to show you which sectors have not been allocated to a volume. The metadata volumes overlap the allocated and unallocated volumes and describe where the partition tables and other metadata structures are located. In some volume systems, these structures are in allocated space and in others they are in unallocated space. In some volume systems, their location is explicitly given in the partition tables and in others they are not. EXAMPLESTo list the partition table of a Windows system using autodetect:# mmls disk_image.dd To list the contents of a BSD system that starts in sector 12345 of a split image: # mmls -t bsd -o 12345 -i split disk-1.dd disk-2.dd AUTHORBrian Carrier <carrier at sleuthkit dot org> Visit the GSP FreeBSD Man Page Interface. |