APPLE_VOID partition is just a partition entry holder, so you don't have to resize the partition table but it occupies no space on disk. APPLE_FREE however, indicates free space on disk.
This is, if my memory don't fail, on Inside Macintosh books, Volume 2 or 4.
Sorry no link I have the books in paper :p
El 10/08/2011, a las 16:28, William Hahne escribió:
On Wed, Aug 10, 2011 at 5:50 AM, Mark Cave-Ayland mark.cave-ayland@siriusit.co.uk wrote: On 09/08/11 22:54, William Hahne wrote:
The void partitions can be occasionally found on Mac OS discs (10.2 for example.) Previously mac-parts would just stop at the first void partition meaning it would never try to boot from the HFS partition.
Index: packages/mac-parts.c
--- packages/mac-parts.c (revision 1041) +++ packages/mac-parts.c (working copy) @@ -165,9 +165,12 @@ for (parnum = 1; parnum <= __be32_to_cpu(par.pmMapBlkCnt); parnum++) { SEEK( bs * parnum ); READ( &par, sizeof(par) );
- if( __be16_to_cpu(par.pmSig) != DESC_PART_SIGNATURE ||
!__be32_to_cpu(par.pmPartBlkCnt) )
- if( __be16_to_cpu(par.pmSig) != DESC_PART_SIGNATURE) {
break;
- }
- if ( !__be32_to_cpu(par.pmPartBlkCnt) ) {
- continue; /* Just a void partition, ignore it. */
- }
DPRINTF("found partition type: %s with status %x\n", par.pmPartType, __be32_to_cpu(par.pmPartStatus));
Same as my comment for patch 2/10.
This was also found through testing although I would assume it is documented. If you have a 10.2 disc (or I would assume most other early Mac OS X discs) lying around you can look at the partition table and see the void partitions.
William Hahne
ATB,
Mark.
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