Zachary Turner | 218ce83 | 2016-11-10 19:24:21 +0000 | [diff] [blame] | 1 | =====================================
|
| 2 | The MSF File Format
|
| 3 | =====================================
|
| 4 |
|
| 5 | .. contents::
|
| 6 | :local:
|
| 7 |
|
| 8 | .. _msf_superblock:
|
| 9 |
|
| 10 | The Superblock
|
| 11 | ==============
|
| 12 | At file offset 0 in an MSF file is the MSF *SuperBlock*, which is laid out as
|
| 13 | follows:
|
| 14 |
|
| 15 | .. code-block:: c++
|
| 16 |
|
| 17 | struct SuperBlock {
|
| 18 | char FileMagic[sizeof(Magic)];
|
| 19 | ulittle32_t BlockSize;
|
| 20 | ulittle32_t FreeBlockMapBlock;
|
| 21 | ulittle32_t NumBlocks;
|
| 22 | ulittle32_t NumDirectoryBytes;
|
| 23 | ulittle32_t Unknown;
|
| 24 | ulittle32_t BlockMapAddr;
|
| 25 | };
|
| 26 |
|
| 27 | - **FileMagic** - Must be equal to ``"Microsoft C / C++ MSF 7.00\\r\\n"``
|
| 28 | followed by the bytes ``1A 44 53 00 00 00``.
|
| 29 | - **BlockSize** - The block size of the internal file system. Valid values are
|
| 30 | 512, 1024, 2048, and 4096 bytes. Certain aspects of the MSF file layout vary
|
| 31 | depending on the block sizes. For the purposes of LLVM, we handle only block
|
| 32 | sizes of 4KiB, and all further discussion assumes a block size of 4KiB.
|
| 33 | - **FreeBlockMapBlock** - The index of a block within the file, at which begins
|
| 34 | a bitfield representing the set of all blocks within the file which are "free"
|
| 35 | (i.e. the data within that block is not used). This bitfield is spread across
|
| 36 | the MSF file at ``BlockSize`` intervals.
|
| 37 | **Important**: ``FreeBlockMapBlock`` can only be ``1`` or ``2``! This field
|
| 38 | is designed to support incremental and atomic updates of the underlying MSF
|
| 39 | file. While writing to an MSF file, if the value of this field is `1`, you
|
| 40 | can write your new modified bitfield to page 2, and vice versa. Only when
|
| 41 | you commit the file to disk do you need to swap the value in the SuperBlock
|
| 42 | to point to the new ``FreeBlockMapBlock``.
|
| 43 | - **NumBlocks** - The total number of blocks in the file. ``NumBlocks * BlockSize``
|
| 44 | should equal the size of the file on disk.
|
| 45 | - **NumDirectoryBytes** - The size of the stream directory, in bytes. The stream
|
| 46 | directory contains information about each stream's size and the set of blocks
|
| 47 | that it occupies. It will be described in more detail later.
|
| 48 | - **BlockMapAddr** - The index of a block within the MSF file. At this block is
|
| 49 | an array of ``ulittle32_t``'s listing the blocks that the stream directory
|
| 50 | resides on. For large MSF files, the stream directory (which describes the
|
| 51 | block layout of each stream) may not fit entirely on a single block. As a
|
| 52 | result, this extra layer of indirection is introduced, whereby this block
|
| 53 | contains the list of blocks that the stream directory occupies, and the stream
|
| 54 | directory itself can be stitched together accordingly. The number of
|
| 55 | ``ulittle32_t``'s in this array is given by ``ceil(NumDirectoryBytes / BlockSize)``.
|
| 56 |
|
| 57 | The Stream Directory
|
| 58 | ====================
|
| 59 | The Stream Directory is the root of all access to the other streams in an MSF
|
| 60 | file. Beginning at byte 0 of the stream directory is the following structure:
|
| 61 |
|
| 62 | .. code-block:: c++
|
| 63 |
|
| 64 | struct StreamDirectory {
|
| 65 | ulittle32_t NumStreams;
|
| 66 | ulittle32_t StreamSizes[NumStreams];
|
| 67 | ulittle32_t StreamBlocks[NumStreams][];
|
| 68 | };
|
| 69 |
|
| 70 | And this structure occupies exactly ``SuperBlock->NumDirectoryBytes`` bytes.
|
| 71 | Note that each of the last two arrays is of variable length, and in particular
|
| 72 | that the second array is jagged.
|
| 73 |
|
| 74 | **Example:** Suppose a hypothetical PDB file with a 4KiB block size, and 4
|
| 75 | streams of lengths {1000 bytes, 8000 bytes, 16000 bytes, 9000 bytes}.
|
| 76 |
|
| 77 | Stream 0: ceil(1000 / 4096) = 1 block
|
| 78 |
|
| 79 | Stream 1: ceil(8000 / 4096) = 2 blocks
|
| 80 |
|
| 81 | Stream 2: ceil(16000 / 4096) = 4 blocks
|
| 82 |
|
| 83 | Stream 3: ceil(9000 / 4096) = 3 blocks
|
| 84 |
|
| 85 | In total, 10 blocks are used. Let's see what the stream directory might look
|
| 86 | like:
|
| 87 |
|
| 88 | .. code-block:: c++
|
| 89 |
|
| 90 | struct StreamDirectory {
|
| 91 | ulittle32_t NumStreams = 4;
|
| 92 | ulittle32_t StreamSizes[] = {1000, 8000, 16000, 9000};
|
| 93 | ulittle32_t StreamBlocks[][] = {
|
| 94 | {4},
|
| 95 | {5, 6},
|
| 96 | {11, 9, 7, 8},
|
| 97 | {10, 15, 12}
|
| 98 | };
|
| 99 | };
|
| 100 |
|
| 101 | In total, this occupies ``15 * 4 = 60`` bytes, so ``SuperBlock->NumDirectoryBytes``
|
| 102 | would equal ``60``, and ``SuperBlock->BlockMapAddr`` would be an array of one
|
| 103 | ``ulittle32_t``, since ``60 <= SuperBlock->BlockSize``.
|
| 104 |
|
| 105 | Note also that the streams are discontiguous, and that part of stream 3 is in the
|
| 106 | middle of part of stream 2. You cannot assume anything about the layout of the
|
| 107 | blocks!
|
| 108 |
|
| 109 | Alignment and Block Boundaries
|
| 110 | ==============================
|
| 111 | As may be clear by now, it is possible for a single field (whether it be a high
|
| 112 | level record, a long string field, or even a single ``uint16``) to begin and
|
| 113 | end in separate blocks. For example, if the block size is 4096 bytes, and a
|
| 114 | ``uint16`` field begins at the last byte of the current block, then it would
|
| 115 | need to end on the first byte of the next block. Since blocks are not
|
| 116 | necessarily contiguously laid out in the file, this means that both the consumer
|
| 117 | and the producer of an MSF file must be prepared to split data apart
|
| 118 | accordingly. In the aforementioned example, the high byte of the ``uint16``
|
| 119 | would be written to the last byte of block N, and the low byte would be written
|
| 120 | to the first byte of block N+1, which could be tens of thousands of bytes later
|
| 121 | (or even earlier!) in the file, depending on what the stream directory says.
|