====== Device Naming Conventions ====== ===== Block Devices ===== FreeBSD creates block device names based on type, similar to the way Linux does. A device name is a 2-3 letter indicator of device type, followed by an integer showing its hierarchy in the initial search. **Note:** The device number can change if a new device of the same type is added, so use labels in fstab. FreeBSD creates block device names based on type, similar to the way Linux does. ^ Identifer ^ Description ^ | ada | SATA and IDE Hard Drives | | da | SCSI hard drives and USB storage | | cd or scd | SATA and IDE CD-ROM Drives | | cd | SCSI CD-ROM Drives | | fd | Floppy Drives | Devices are then broken down into slices ("partitions" in the Linux and Windows worlds), designated by the letter "s" followed by a number (max of 4). Thus, //da0s1// would be the first slice on a USB or SCSI hard drive. Each slice can have a partition (no relationship to Linux and Windows partitions) which is designated by a single letter. //da0s1a// would be the first partition in the first slice on a USB or SCSI hard drive By convention, partition "a" is a root file system, partition "b" is swap space, partition "c" is a special partition used by the file system management. All other partitions are available for other things (ie, /var, etc...) Partitions can hold file systems. NOTE: by "partition" I mean a partition of a slice (ie, BSD terms, not Windows/Linux) See https://www.freebsd.org/doc/handbook/disk-organization.html Disks can be managed by either fdisk (old school appearantly) or gpart. ===== Ethernet Devices ===== Ethernet devices are named based on the drive needed to access it and the order in which it was discovered. So, for example, a NIC which uses the ndis drive would be called ndis0. If a second card was found with the same driver, it would be named ndis1. You can see the ethernet cards recognized by the system with the command: grep 'Ethernet address:' /var/run/dmesg.boot Note that this will **not** find cards which do not have a driver loaded, although the most common ones are built into the GENERIC kernel. ===== RAMDisk ===== RAMDisks are handled a little differently in FreeBSD in that you will want to manually create a directory (say, /mnt/ramdisk) and then execute the appropriate //mdfs// command. Once that is done, you can use RAMDisks as you like. The fstab entry is different from the one used in Linux, obviously. # fstab entry creating a RAMDISK mount for /tmp of 16M size. md /tmp mfs rw,-s16M,nosuid,noatime,noexec 0 0