Linus Torvalds | 1da177e | 2005-04-16 15:20:36 -0700 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | Notes on Filesystem Layout |
| 2 | -------------------------- |
| 3 | |
| 4 | These notes describe what mkcramfs generates. Kernel requirements are |
| 5 | a bit looser, e.g. it doesn't care if the <file_data> items are |
| 6 | swapped around (though it does care that directory entries (inodes) in |
| 7 | a given directory are contiguous, as this is used by readdir). |
| 8 | |
| 9 | All data is currently in host-endian format; neither mkcramfs nor the |
| 10 | kernel ever do swabbing. (See section `Block Size' below.) |
| 11 | |
| 12 | <filesystem>: |
| 13 | <superblock> |
| 14 | <directory_structure> |
| 15 | <data> |
| 16 | |
| 17 | <superblock>: struct cramfs_super (see cramfs_fs.h). |
| 18 | |
| 19 | <directory_structure>: |
| 20 | For each file: |
| 21 | struct cramfs_inode (see cramfs_fs.h). |
| 22 | Filename. Not generally null-terminated, but it is |
| 23 | null-padded to a multiple of 4 bytes. |
| 24 | |
| 25 | The order of inode traversal is described as "width-first" (not to be |
| 26 | confused with breadth-first); i.e. like depth-first but listing all of |
| 27 | a directory's entries before recursing down its subdirectories: the |
| 28 | same order as `ls -AUR' (but without the /^\..*:$/ directory header |
| 29 | lines); put another way, the same order as `find -type d -exec |
| 30 | ls -AU1 {} \;'. |
| 31 | |
| 32 | Beginning in 2.4.7, directory entries are sorted. This optimization |
| 33 | allows cramfs_lookup to return more quickly when a filename does not |
| 34 | exist, speeds up user-space directory sorts, etc. |
| 35 | |
| 36 | <data>: |
| 37 | One <file_data> for each file that's either a symlink or a |
| 38 | regular file of non-zero st_size. |
| 39 | |
| 40 | <file_data>: |
| 41 | nblocks * <block_pointer> |
| 42 | (where nblocks = (st_size - 1) / blksize + 1) |
| 43 | nblocks * <block> |
| 44 | padding to multiple of 4 bytes |
| 45 | |
| 46 | The i'th <block_pointer> for a file stores the byte offset of the |
| 47 | *end* of the i'th <block> (i.e. one past the last byte, which is the |
| 48 | same as the start of the (i+1)'th <block> if there is one). The first |
| 49 | <block> immediately follows the last <block_pointer> for the file. |
| 50 | <block_pointer>s are each 32 bits long. |
| 51 | |
| 52 | The order of <file_data>'s is a depth-first descent of the directory |
| 53 | tree, i.e. the same order as `find -size +0 \( -type f -o -type l \) |
| 54 | -print'. |
| 55 | |
| 56 | |
| 57 | <block>: The i'th <block> is the output of zlib's compress function |
| 58 | applied to the i'th blksize-sized chunk of the input data. |
| 59 | (For the last <block> of the file, the input may of course be smaller.) |
| 60 | Each <block> may be a different size. (See <block_pointer> above.) |
| 61 | <block>s are merely byte-aligned, not generally u32-aligned. |
| 62 | |
| 63 | |
| 64 | Holes |
| 65 | ----- |
| 66 | |
| 67 | This kernel supports cramfs holes (i.e. [efficient representation of] |
| 68 | blocks in uncompressed data consisting entirely of NUL bytes), but by |
| 69 | default mkcramfs doesn't test for & create holes, since cramfs in |
| 70 | kernels up to at least 2.3.39 didn't support holes. Run mkcramfs |
| 71 | with -z if you want it to create files that can have holes in them. |
| 72 | |
| 73 | |
| 74 | Tools |
| 75 | ----- |
| 76 | |
| 77 | The cramfs user-space tools, including mkcramfs and cramfsck, are |
| 78 | located at <http://sourceforge.net/projects/cramfs/>. |
| 79 | |
| 80 | |
| 81 | Future Development |
| 82 | ================== |
| 83 | |
| 84 | Block Size |
| 85 | ---------- |
| 86 | |
| 87 | (Block size in cramfs refers to the size of input data that is |
| 88 | compressed at a time. It's intended to be somewhere around |
| 89 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE for cramfs_readpage's convenience.) |
| 90 | |
| 91 | The superblock ought to indicate the block size that the fs was |
| 92 | written for, since comments in <linux/pagemap.h> indicate that |
| 93 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE may grow in future (if I interpret the comment |
| 94 | correctly). |
| 95 | |
| 96 | Currently, mkcramfs #define's PAGE_CACHE_SIZE as 4096 and uses that |
| 97 | for blksize, whereas Linux-2.3.39 uses its PAGE_CACHE_SIZE, which in |
| 98 | turn is defined as PAGE_SIZE (which can be as large as 32KB on arm). |
| 99 | This discrepancy is a bug, though it's not clear which should be |
| 100 | changed. |
| 101 | |
| 102 | One option is to change mkcramfs to take its PAGE_CACHE_SIZE from |
| 103 | <asm/page.h>. Personally I don't like this option, but it does |
| 104 | require the least amount of change: just change `#define |
| 105 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE (4096)' to `#include <asm/page.h>'. The disadvantage |
| 106 | is that the generated cramfs cannot always be shared between different |
| 107 | kernels, not even necessarily kernels of the same architecture if |
| 108 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE is subject to change between kernel versions |
| 109 | (currently possible with arm and ia64). |
| 110 | |
| 111 | The remaining options try to make cramfs more sharable. |
| 112 | |
| 113 | One part of that is addressing endianness. The two options here are |
| 114 | `always use little-endian' (like ext2fs) or `writer chooses |
| 115 | endianness; kernel adapts at runtime'. Little-endian wins because of |
| 116 | code simplicity and little CPU overhead even on big-endian machines. |
| 117 | |
| 118 | The cost of swabbing is changing the code to use the le32_to_cpu |
| 119 | etc. macros as used by ext2fs. We don't need to swab the compressed |
| 120 | data, only the superblock, inodes and block pointers. |
| 121 | |
| 122 | |
| 123 | The other part of making cramfs more sharable is choosing a block |
| 124 | size. The options are: |
| 125 | |
| 126 | 1. Always 4096 bytes. |
| 127 | |
| 128 | 2. Writer chooses blocksize; kernel adapts but rejects blocksize > |
| 129 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE. |
| 130 | |
| 131 | 3. Writer chooses blocksize; kernel adapts even to blocksize > |
| 132 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE. |
| 133 | |
| 134 | It's easy enough to change the kernel to use a smaller value than |
| 135 | PAGE_CACHE_SIZE: just make cramfs_readpage read multiple blocks. |
| 136 | |
| 137 | The cost of option 1 is that kernels with a larger PAGE_CACHE_SIZE |
| 138 | value don't get as good compression as they can. |
| 139 | |
| 140 | The cost of option 2 relative to option 1 is that the code uses |
| 141 | variables instead of #define'd constants. The gain is that people |
| 142 | with kernels having larger PAGE_CACHE_SIZE can make use of that if |
| 143 | they don't mind their cramfs being inaccessible to kernels with |
| 144 | smaller PAGE_CACHE_SIZE values. |
| 145 | |
| 146 | Option 3 is easy to implement if we don't mind being CPU-inefficient: |
| 147 | e.g. get readpage to decompress to a buffer of size MAX_BLKSIZE (which |
| 148 | must be no larger than 32KB) and discard what it doesn't need. |
| 149 | Getting readpage to read into all the covered pages is harder. |
| 150 | |
| 151 | The main advantage of option 3 over 1, 2, is better compression. The |
| 152 | cost is greater complexity. Probably not worth it, but I hope someone |
| 153 | will disagree. (If it is implemented, then I'll re-use that code in |
| 154 | e2compr.) |
| 155 | |
| 156 | |
| 157 | Another cost of 2 and 3 over 1 is making mkcramfs use a different |
| 158 | block size, but that just means adding and parsing a -b option. |
| 159 | |
| 160 | |
| 161 | Inode Size |
| 162 | ---------- |
| 163 | |
| 164 | Given that cramfs will probably be used for CDs etc. as well as just |
| 165 | silicon ROMs, it might make sense to expand the inode a little from |
| 166 | its current 12 bytes. Inodes other than the root inode are followed |
| 167 | by filename, so the expansion doesn't even have to be a multiple of 4 |
| 168 | bytes. |