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mkfs.xfs(8)							   mkfs.xfs(8)

NAME
       mkfs.xfs	- construct an XFS filesystem

SYNOPSIS
       mkfs.xfs	 [  -b	block_size  ]  [  -m  global_metadata_options  ]  [ -d
       data_section_options ] [	-f ]  [	 -i  inode_options  ]  [  -l  log_sec-
       tion_options ] [	-n naming_options ] [ -p protofile ] [ -q ] [ -r real-
       time_section_options ] [	-s sector_size ] [ -L label ] [	-N ]  [	 -K  ]
       device
       mkfs.xfs	-V

DESCRIPTION
       mkfs.xfs	 constructs  an	 XFS  filesystem  by writing on	a special file
       using the values	found in the arguments of the  command	line.	It  is
       invoked automatically by	mkfs(8)	when it	is given the -t	xfs option.

       In its simplest (and most commonly used form), the size of the filesys-
       tem is determined from the disk driver.	 As  an	 example,  to  make  a
       filesystem  with	 an  internal  log on the first	partition on the first
       SCSI disk, use:

	      mkfs.xfs /dev/sda1

       The metadata log	can be placed on another device	to reduce  the	number
       of  disk	 seeks.	  To create a filesystem on the	first partition	on the
       first SCSI disk with a 10000 block log located on the  first  partition
       on the second SCSI disk,	use:

	      mkfs.xfs -l logdev=/dev/sdb1,size=10000b /dev/sda1

       Each  of	the option elements in the argument list above can be given as
       multiple	comma-separated	suboptions if multiple suboptions apply	to the
       same  option.   Equivalently,  each  main  option can be	given multiple
       times with different suboptions.	 For example, -l  internal,size=10000b
       and -l internal -l size=10000b are equivalent.

       In  the	descriptions below, sizes are given in sectors,	bytes, blocks,
       kilobytes, megabytes, gigabytes,	etc.  Sizes are	treated	as hexadecimal
       if  prefixed by 0x or 0X, octal if prefixed by 0, or decimal otherwise.
       The following lists possible multiplication suffixes:
	      s	- multiply by sector  size  (default  =	 512,  see  -s	option
		     below).
	      b	- multiply  by	filesystem  block  size	 (default = 4K,	see -b
		     option below).
	      k	- multiply by one kilobyte (1,024 bytes).
	      m	- multiply by one megabyte (1,048,576 bytes).
	      g	- multiply by one gigabyte (1,073,741,824 bytes).
	      t	- multiply by one terabyte (1,099,511,627,776 bytes).
	      p	- multiply by one petabyte (1,024 terabytes).
	      e	- multiply by one exabyte (1,048,576 terabytes).

OPTIONS
       -b block_size_options
	      This option specifies the	fundamental block size of the filesys-
	      tem.   The valid block_size_options are: log=value or size=value
	      and only one can be  supplied.   The  block  size	 is  specified
	      either as	a base two logarithm value with	log=, or in bytes with
	      size=.  The default value	is 4096	bytes (4 KiB), the minimum  is
	      512,  and	the maximum is 65536 (64 KiB).	XFS on Linux currently
	      only supports pagesize or	smaller	blocks.

       -m global_metadata_options
	      These options specify metadata format options that either	 apply
	      to  the  entire  filesystem  or aren't easily characterised by a
	      specific functionality group. The	valid  global_metadata_options
	      are:

		   crc=value
			  This	is used	to create a filesystem which maintains
			  and checks CRC information in	all  metadata  objects
			  on  disk.  The value is either 0 to disable the fea-
			  ture,	or 1 to	enable the use of CRCs.

			  CRCs enable enhanced error detection due to hardware
			  issues,  whilst  the	format	changes	 also improves
			  crash	recovery algorithms and	the ability of various
			  tools	 to  validate  and repair metadata corruptions
			  when they are	found.	 The  CRC  algorithm  used  is
			  CRC32c,  so  the overhead is dependent on CPU	archi-
			  tecture as some CPUs have hardware  acceleration  of
			  this algorithm.  Typically the overhead of calculat-
			  ing and checking the CRCs is not noticable in	normal
			  operation.

			  By default, mkfs.xfs will enable metadata CRCs.

		   finobt=value
			  This option enables the use of a separate free inode
			  btree	index in each allocation group.	The  value  is
			  either  0  to	 disable the feature, or 1 to create a
			  free inode btree in each allocation group.

			  The free inode btree mirrors the existing  allocated
			  inode	 btree	index which indexes both used and free
			  inodes. The free inode btree	does  not  index  used
			  inodes, allowing faster, more	consistent inode allo-
			  cation performance as	filesystems age.

			  By default, mkfs.xfs will create free	 inode	btrees
			  for  filesystems created with	the (default) -m crc=1
			  option set. When the option -m crc=0	is  used,  the
			  free	inode  btree  feature  is not supported	and is
			  disabled.

       -d data_section_options
	      These options specify the	location, size,	and  other  parameters
	      of  the  data  section  of  the  filesystem. The valid data_sec-
	      tion_options are:

		   agcount=value
			  This is used to specify  the	number	of  allocation
			  groups.  The	data  section  of  the	filesystem  is
			  divided into allocation groups to improve  the  per-
			  formance  of	XFS. More allocation groups imply that
			  more parallelism can	be  achieved  when  allocating
			  blocks and inodes. The minimum allocation group size
			  is 16	MiB; the maximum size is  just	under  1  TiB.
			  The  data  section of	the filesystem is divided into
			  value	allocation groups  (default  value  is	scaled
			  automatically	 based on the underlying device	size).

		   agsize=value
			  This is an alternative to using the  agcount	subop-
			  tion.	 The  value is the desired size	of the alloca-
			  tion group expressed in bytes	(usually using	the  m
			  or  g	 suffixes).   This value must be a multiple of
			  the filesystem block size,  and  must	 be  at	 least
			  16MiB,  and  no more than 1TiB, and may be automati-
			  cally	adjusted to properly  align  with  the	stripe
			  geometry.   The  agcount  and	 agsize	suboptions are
			  mutually exclusive.

		   name=value
			  This can be used to specify the name of the  special
			  file	containing  the	 filesystem. In	this case, the
			  log section must be specified	as  internal  (with  a
			  size,	 see  the -l option below) and there can be no
			  real-time section.

		   file[=value]
			  This is used to specify that the file	given  by  the
			  name	suboption  is  a  regular  file.  The value is
			  either 0 or 1, with 1	signifying that	 the  file  is
			  regular.  This  suboption  is	 used  only  to	make a
			  filesystem image. If the value is omitted then 1  is
			  assumed.

		   size=value
			  This	is  used  to specify the size of the data sec-
			  tion.	This suboption is required if -d  file[=1]  is
			  given.  Otherwise, it	is only	needed if the filesys-
			  tem should occupy less space than the	 size  of  the
			  special file.

		   sunit=value
			  This	is  used to specify the	stripe unit for	a RAID
			  device or a logical volume.  The  value  has	to  be
			  specified in 512-byte	block units. Use the su	subop-
			  tion to specify the stripe unit size in bytes.  This
			  suboption  ensures  that  data  allocations  will be
			  stripe unit aligned when the current end of file  is
			  being	 extended  and	the  file  size	is larger than
			  512KiB. Also inode allocations and the internal  log
			  will be stripe unit aligned.

		   su=value
			  This	is an alternative to using sunit.  The su sub-
			  option is used to specify the	stripe unit for	a RAID
			  device or a striped logical volume. The value	has to
			  be specified in bytes, (usually using	 the  m	 or  g
			  suffixes).  This  value  must	 be  a multiple	of the
			  filesystem block size.

		   swidth=value
			  This is used to specify the stripe width for a  RAID
			  device or a striped logical volume. The value	has to
			  be specified in 512-byte block  units.  Use  the  sw
			  suboption to specify the stripe width	size in	bytes.
			  This suboption is required  if  -d  sunit  has  been
			  specified  and  it  has  to  be a multiple of	the -d
			  sunit	suboption.

		   sw=value
			  suboption is an alternative to using swidth.	The sw
			  suboption  is	used to	specify	the stripe width for a
			  RAID device or striped logical volume. The value  is
			  expressed  as	 a multiplier of the stripe unit, usu-
			  ally the same	as the number of stripe	members	in the
			  logical  volume  configuration,  or  data disks in a
			  RAID device.

			  When a filesystem is created	on  a  logical	volume
			  device,  mkfs.xfs will automatically query the logi-
			  cal volume for appropriate sunit and swidth  values.

		   noalign
			  This	option	disables  automatic geometry detection
			  and creates the filesystem without  stripe  geometry
			  alignment even if the	underlying storage device pro-
			  vides	this information.

       -f     Force overwrite when an existing filesystem is detected  on  the
	      device.  By default, mkfs.xfs will not write to the device if it
	      suspects that there is a filesystem or partition	table  on  the
	      device already.

       -i inode_options
	      This  option  specifies  the  inode  size	of the filesystem, and
	      other inode allocation parameters.  The  XFS  inode  contains  a
	      fixed-size  part	and  a	variable-size part.  The variable-size
	      part, whose size is affected by this option, can contain:	direc-
	      tory  data,  for	small  directories;  attribute data, for small
	      attribute	sets; symbolic link data, for  small  symbolic	links;
	      the  extent  list	for the	file, for files	with a small number of
	      extents; and the root of	a  tree	 describing  the  location  of
	      extents  for the file, for files with a large number of extents.

	      The valid	inode_options are:

		   size=value |	log=value | perblock=value
			  The inode size is specified either  as  a  value  in
			  bytes	 with  size=,  a base two logarithm value with
			  log=,	or as the number fitting in a filesystem block
			  with	perblock=.  The	minimum	(and default) value is
			  256 bytes.  The maximum value	is 2048	(2  KiB)  sub-
			  ject	to  the	restriction that the inode size	cannot
			  exceed one half of the filesystem block size.

			  XFS uses 64-bit inode	numbers	 internally;  however,
			  the number of	significant bits in an inode number is
			  affected  by	filesystem  geometry.	In   practice,
			  filesystem  size  and	inode size are the predominant
			  factors.  The	Linux kernel (on 32 bit	hardware plat-
			  forms) and most applications cannot currently	handle
			  inode	numbers	greater	than 32	significant  bits,  so
			  if  no  inode	 size  is  given  on the command line,
			  mkfs.xfs will	attempt	to choose  a  size  such  that
			  inode	 numbers  will be < 32 bits.  If an inode size
			  is specified,	or if  a  filesystem  is  sufficiently
			  large,  mkfs.xfs will	warn if	this will create inode
			  numbers > 32 significant bits.

		   maxpct=value
			  This specifies the maximum percentage	 of  space  in
			  the  filesystem that can be allocated	to inodes. The
			  default value	is 25% for filesystems under  1TB,  5%
			  for  filesystems  under  50TB	and 1% for filesystems
			  over 50TB.

			  In the default inode allocation mode,	 inode	blocks
			  are  chosen  such that inode numbers will not	exceed
			  32 bits, which restricts the	inode  blocks  to  the
			  lower	 portion  of  the  filesystem.	The data block
			  allocator will avoid these low blocks	to accommodate
			  the  specified maxpct, so a high value may result in
			  a filesystem with nothing but	inodes in  a  signifi-
			  cant	portion	of the lower blocks of the filesystem.
			  (This	restriction is not present when	the filesystem
			  is  mounted  with the	inode64	option on 64-bit plat-
			  forms).

			  Setting the value to 0 means that essentially	all of
			  the  filesystem  can become inode blocks, subject to
			  inode32 restrictions.

			  This value can be modified with xfs_growfs(8).

		   align[=value]
			  This is used to specify that inode allocation	is  or
			  is  not  aligned. The	value is either	0 or 1,	with 1
			  signifying that inodes are  allocated	 aligned.   If
			  the  value  is omitted, 1 is assumed.	The default is
			  that inodes are aligned.  Aligned  inode  access  is
			  normally   more  efficient  than  unaligned  access;
			  alignment  must  be  established  at	the  time  the
			  filesystem is	created, since inodes are allocated at
			  that time.  This option can  be  used	 to  turn  off
			  inode	 alignment  when  the  filesystem  needs to be
			  mountable by a version of IRIX that  does  not  have
			  the  inode  alignment	 feature  (any release of IRIX
			  before 6.2, and IRIX 6.2 without XFS patches).

		   attr=value
			  This is used to  specify  the	 version  of  extended
			  attribute  inline  allocation	policy to be used.  By
			  default, this	is 2, which uses  an  efficient	 algo-
			  rithm	 for managing the available inline inode space
			  between attribute and	extent data.

			  The previous version 1, which	has fixed regions  for
			  attribute  and  extent  data,	 is kept for backwards
			  compatibility	 with  kernels	older	than   version
			  2.6.16.

		   projid32bit[=value]
			  This	is  used to enable 32bit quota project identi-
			  fiers. The value is either 0 or 1, with 1 signifying
			  that	32bit  projid are to be	enabled.  If the value
			  is omitted, 1	is assumed.  (This default changed  in
			  release version 3.2.0.)

       -l log_section_options
	      These  options  specify the location, size, and other parameters
	      of the  log  section  of	the  filesystem.  The  valid  log_sec-
	      tion_options are:

		   internal[=value]
			  This	is  used  to specify that the log section is a
			  piece	of the data section instead of	being  another
			  device  or  logical volume. The value	is either 0 or
			  1, with 1 signifying that the	log  is	 internal.  If
			  the value is omitted,	1 is assumed.

		   logdev=device
			  This	is used	to specify that	the log	section	should
			  reside on the	device separate	from the data section.
			  The  internal=1  and	logdev	options	 are  mutually
			  exclusive.

		   size=value
			  This is used to specify the size of the log section.

			  If  the log is contained within the data section and
			  size isn't specified,	mkfs.xfs will try to select  a
			  suitable  log	 size  depending  on  the  size	of the
			  filesystem.	The  actual  logsize  depends  on  the
			  filesystem  block size and the directory block size.

			  Otherwise, the size suboption	is only	needed if  the
			  log  section	of  the	 filesystem should occupy less
			  space	than the size of the special file.  The	 value
			  is  specified	 in  bytes  or blocks, with a b	suffix
			  meaning multiplication by the	filesystem block size,
			  as described above. The overriding minimum value for
			  size is  512	blocks.	  With	some  combinations  of
			  filesystem  block  size,  inode  size, and directory
			  block	size, the minimum log size is larger than  512
			  blocks.

		   version=value
			  This	specifies  the version of the log. The current
			  default is 2,	which allows  for  larger  log	buffer
			  sizes,  as  well  as	supporting  stripe-aligned log
			  writes (see the sunit	and su options,	below).

			  The previous version 1, which	is limited to 32k  log
			  buffers  and does not	support	stripe-aligned writes,
			  is kept for backwards	compatibility  with  very  old
			  2.4 kernels.

		   sunit=value
			  This	specifies  the	alignment  to  be used for log
			  writes. The value has	to be  specified  in  512-byte
			  block	units. Use the su suboption to specify the log
			  stripe unit size  in	bytes.	 Log  writes  will  be
			  aligned  on  this  boundary,	and rounded up to this
			  boundary.  This gives	major improvements in  perfor-
			  mance	 on some configurations	such as	software RAID5
			  when the sunit is specified as the filesystem	 block
			  size.	  The equivalent byte value must be a multiple
			  of the filesystem block size.	 Version  2  logs  are
			  automatically	selected if the	log sunit suboption is
			  specified.

			  The su suboption is an alternative to	using sunit.

		   su=value
			  This is used to specify the log  stripe.  The	 value
			  has  to  be specified	in bytes, (usually using the s
			  or b suffixes). This value must be a multiple	of the
			  filesystem block size.  Version 2 logs are automati-
			  cally	selected if the	log su suboption is specified.

		   lazy-count=value
			  This	changes	 the method of logging various persis-
			  tent counters	in  the	 superblock.   Under  metadata
			  intensive  workloads,	these counters are updated and
			  logged frequently enough that	the superblock updates
			  become  a serialization point	in the filesystem. The
			  value	can be either 0	or 1.

			  With lazy-count=1, the superblock is not modified or
			  logged  on  every change of the persistent counters.
			  Instead, enough information is kept in  other	 parts
			  of the filesystem to be able to maintain the persis-
			  tent counter values without needed to	keep  them  in
			  the superblock.  This	gives significant improvements
			  in performance on some configurations.  The  default
			  value	 is 1 (on) so you must specify lazy-count=0 if
			  you want to disable this feature for	older  kernels
			  which	don't support it.

       -n naming_options
	      These  options  specify  the version and size parameters for the
	      naming (directory)  area	of  the	 filesystem.  The  valid  nam-
	      ing_options are:

		   size=value |	log=value
			  The  block  size  is	specified either as a value in
			  bytes	with size=, or as a base two  logarithm	 value
			  with	log=.  The block size must be a	power of 2 and
			  cannot be less than the filesystem block size.   The
			  default size value for version 2 directories is 4096
			  bytes	(4 KiB), unless	the filesystem block  size  is
			  larger than 4096, in which case the default value is
			  the filesystem block size.  For version  1  directo-
			  ries	the  block  size is the	same as	the filesystem
			  block	size.

		   version=value
			  The naming (directory) version value can be either 2
			  or  'ci', defaulting to 2 if unspecified.  With ver-
			  sion 2 directories, the directory block size can  be
			  any  power  of 2 size	from the filesystem block size
			  up to	65536.

			  The version=ci option	enables	ASCII only case-insen-
			  sitive  filename  lookup  and	version	2 directories.
			  Filenames are	case-preserving, that  is,  the	 names
			  are  stored  in directories using the	case they were
			  created with.

			  Note:	Version	1 directories are not supported.

		   ftype=value
			  This feature allows the inode	type to	be  stored  in
			  the  directory  structure so that the	readdir(3) and
			  getdents(2) do not need to  look  up	the  inode  to
			  determine the	inode type.

			  The  value is	either 0 or 1, with 1 signifiying that
			  filetype information will be stored in the directory
			  structure. The default value is 0.

			  When	CRCs are enabled via -m	crc=1, the ftype func-
			  tionality is always enabled. This feature can	not be
			  turned off for such filesystem configurations.

       -p protofile
	      If  the  optional	 -p protofile argument is given, mkfs.xfs uses
	      protofile	as a prototype file and	takes its directions from that
	      file.   The  blocks  and	inodes specifiers in the protofile are
	      provided for backwards compatibility, but	are otherwise  unused.
	      The  syntax  of  the  protofile is defined by a number of	tokens
	      separated	by spaces or newlines. Note that the line numbers  are
	      not  part	of the syntax but are meant to help you	in the follow-
	      ing discussion of	the file contents.

		   1	   /stand/diskboot
		   2	   4872	110
		   3	   d--777 3 1
		   4	   usr	   d--777 3 1
		   5	   sh	   ---755 3 1 /bin/sh
		   6	   ken	   d--755 6 1
		   7		   $
		   8	   b0	   b--644 3 1 0	0
		   9	   c0	   c--644 3 1 0	0
		   10	   fifo	   p--644 3 1
		   11	   slink   l--644 3 1 /a/symbolic/link
		   12	   :  This is a	comment	line
		   13	   $
		   14	   $

	      Line 1 is	a dummy	string.	 (It was formerly  the	bootfilename.)
	      It  is  present  for backward compatibility; boot	blocks are not
	      used on SGI systems.

	      Note that	some string of characters must be present as the first
	      line  of	the proto file to cause	it to be parsed	correctly; the
	      value of this string is immaterial since it is ignored.

	      Line 2 contains two numeric  values  (formerly  the  numbers  of
	      blocks and inodes).  These are also merely for backward compati-
	      bility: two numeric values must appear at	 this  point  for  the
	      proto  file to be	correctly parsed, but their values are immate-
	      rial since they are ignored.

	      The lines	3 through 11 specify the  files	 and  directories  you
	      want  to	include	 in  this  filesystem. Line 3 defines the root
	      directory. Other directories and files  that  you	 want  in  the
	      filesystem  are  indicated  by  lines  4	through	 6 and lines 8
	      through 10. Line 11 contains symbolic link syntax.

	      Notice the dollar	sign ($) syntax	on line	7. This	syntax directs
	      the  mkfs.xfs  command to	terminate the branch of	the filesystem
	      it is currently on and then continue from	the  directory	speci-
	      fied by the next line, in	this case line 8.  It must be the last
	      character	on a line.  The	colon on line 12 introduces a comment;
	      all characters up	until the following newline are	ignored.  Note
	      that this	means you cannot have a	file in	a prototype file whose
	      name  contains  a	 colon.	  The  $  on  lines  13	and 14 end the
	      process, since no	additional specifications follow.

	      File specifications provide the following:

		* file mode
		* user ID
		* group	ID
		* the file's beginning contents

	      A	6-character string defines the mode  for  a  file.  The	 first
	      character	 of  this  string defines the file type. The character
	      range for	this first character is	-bcdpl.	 A file	may be a regu-
	      lar file,	a block	special	file, a	character special file,	direc-
	      tory files, named	pipes (first-in, first out  files),  and  sym-
	      bolic links.  The	second character of the	mode string is used to
	      specify setuserID	mode, in which case it	is  u.	 If  setuserID
	      mode  is	not  specified,	 the second character is -.  The third
	      character	of the mode string is used to specify  the  setgroupID
	      mode,  in	 which case it is g.  If setgroupID mode is not	speci-
	      fied, the	third character	is -.  The remaining characters	of the
	      mode  string  are	 a three digit octal number. This octal	number
	      defines the owner, group,	and other  read,  write,  and  execute
	      permissions for the file,	respectively.  For more	information on
	      file permissions,	see the	chmod(1) command.

	      Following	the mode  character  string  are  two  decimal	number
	      tokens  that specify the user and	group IDs of the file's	owner.

	      In a regular file, the next token	specifies  the	pathname  from
	      which  the contents and size of the file are copied.  In a block
	      or character special file, the next token	are two	 decimal  num-
	      bers  that  specify  the major and minor device numbers.	When a
	      file is a	symbolic link, the next	token specifies	 the  contents
	      of the link.

	      When  the	 file is a directory, the mkfs.xfs command creates the
	      entries dot (.) and dot-dot (..) and  then  reads	 the  list  of
	      names  and  file specifications in a recursive manner for	all of
	      the entries in the directory. A scan of the protofile is	always
	      terminated with the dollar ( $ ) token.

       -q     Quiet  option.  Normally	mkfs.xfs  prints the parameters	of the
	      filesystem to be constructed; the	-q flag	suppresses this.

       -r realtime_section_options
	      These options specify the	location, size,	and  other  parameters
	      of  the  real-time  section  of  the filesystem. The valid real-
	      time_section_options are:

		   rtdev=device
			  This is used to specify the device which should con-
			  tain	the  real-time section of the filesystem.  The
			  suboption value is the name of a block device.

		   extsize=value
			  This is used to specify the size of  the  blocks  in
			  the  real-time section of the	filesystem. This value
			  must be a multiple of	the filesystem block size. The
			  minimum allowed size is the filesystem block size or
			  4 KiB	(whichever is larger); the default size	is the
			  stripe  width	for striped volumes or 64 KiB for non-
			  striped volumes; the maximum allowed size is 1  GiB.
			  The real-time	extent size should be carefully	chosen
			  to match the parameters of the physical media	 used.

		   size=value
			  This	is  used  to specify the size of the real-time
			  section.  This suboption is only needed if the real-
			  time	section	 of  the filesystem should occupy less
			  space	than the size of the partition or logical vol-
			  ume containing the section.

		   noalign
			  This	option disables	stripe size detection, enforc-
			  ing a	realtime device	with no	stripe geometry.

       -s sector_size
	      This  option  specifies  the  fundamental	 sector	 size  of  the
	      filesystem.   The	 sector_size is	specified either as a value in
	      bytes with size=value or as a  base  two	logarithm  value  with
	      log=value.   The	default	 sector_size is	512 bytes. The minimum
	      value for	sector size is 512; the	maximum	is 32768 (32 KiB). The
	      sector_size  must	be a power of 2	size and cannot	be made	larger
	      than the filesystem block	size.

       -L label
	      Set the filesystem label.	 XFS filesystem	labels can be at  most
	      12  characters  long;  if	 label	is  longer than	12 characters,
	      mkfs.xfs will not	proceed	with creating the  filesystem.	 Refer
	      to  the  mount(8)	and xfs_admin(8) manual	entries	for additional
	      information.

       -N     Causes the file system parameters	 to  be	 printed  out  without
	      really creating the file system.

       -K     Do not attempt to	discard	blocks at mkfs time.

       -V     Prints the version number	and exits.

SEE ALSO
       xfs(5), mkfs(8),	mount(8), xfs_info(8), xfs_admin(8).

BUGS
       With a prototype	file, it is not	possible to specify hard links.

								   mkfs.xfs(8)

NAME | SYNOPSIS | DESCRIPTION | OPTIONS | SEE ALSO | BUGS

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