Public bug reported:

This command should non-interactively obliterate whatever partition
table is on /dev/sde, and create a new table with a linux partition that
spans the whole disk:

  $ sfdisk --label gpt /dev/sde <<< 'start=2048, type='"$(sfdisk --label
gpt -T | awk '{IGNORECASE = 1;} /linux filesystem/{print $1}')"

Sometimes it works correctly; sometimes not.  It seems to work correctly
as long as the pre-existing partition table does not already contain a
linux partition.  E.g. if the existing table just contains an exFAT
partition, there's no issue.  But if there is a linux partition, it
gives this output:

-----
Old situation:

Device     Start        End    Sectors   Size Type
/dev/sde1   2048 1953525134 1953523087 931.5G Linux root (x86-64)

>>> Created a new GPT disklabel (GUID: <redacted>).
/dev/sde1: Sector 2048 already used.
Failed to add #1 partition: Numerical result out of range
Leaving.
-----

sfdisk should *always* overwrite the target disk unconditionally.  This
is what the dump of the target drive looks like in the failure case:

$ sfdisk -d /dev/sdd
label: gpt
label-id: <redacted>
device: /dev/sdd
unit: sectors
first-lba: 34
last-lba: 1953525134
grain: 33553920
sector-size: 512

/dev/sdd1 : start=        2048, size=  1953523087,
type=4F68BCE3-E8CD-4DB1-96E7-FBCAF984B709, uuid=<redacted>, name="Linux
x86-64 root (/)"

$ sfdisk -v
sfdisk from util-linux 2.36.1

Even the workaround is broken.  That is, running the following:

$ wipefs -a /dev/sde

should put the disk in a state that can be overwritten.  But whatever
residual metadata it leaves behind still triggers the sfdisk bug:

$ sfdisk --label gpt /dev/sde <<< 'start=2048, type='"$(sfdisk --label gpt -T | 
awk '{IGNORECASE = 1;} /linux filesystem/{print $1}')"
Checking that no-one is using this disk right now ... OK

Disk /dev/sde: 931.51 GiB, 1000204886016 bytes, 1953525168 sectors
Disk model: Disk
Units: sectors of 1 * 512 = 512 bytes
Sector size (logical/physical): 512 bytes / 512 bytes
I/O size (minimum/optimal): 4096 bytes / 33553920 bytes

>>> Created a new GPT disklabel (GUID: <redacted>).
/dev/sde1: Sector 2048 already used.
Failed to add #1 partition: Numerical result out of range
Leaving.

Workaround 2 (also fails):

$ dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/sde bs=1M count=512

$ sfdisk -d /dev/sde
sfdisk: /dev/sde: does not contain a recognized partition table

^ the nuclear option did the right thing, but sfdisk still fails to
partition the drive (same error).

The *only* workaround that works is an interactive partitioning with
gdisk.

** Affects: util-linux (Ubuntu)
     Importance: Undecided
         Status: New

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https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/1940691

Title:
  sfdisk fails to overwrite disks that contain a pre-existing linux
  partition

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