| Notes on Filesystem Layout |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| These notes describe what mkcramfs generates. Kernel requirements are |
| a bit looser, e.g. it doesn't care if the <file_data> items are |
| swapped around (though it does care that directory entries (inodes) in |
| a given directory are contiguous, as this is used by readdir). |
| |
| All data is currently in host-endian format; neither mkcramfs nor the |
| kernel ever do swabbing. (See section `Block Size' below.) |
| |
| <filesystem>: |
| <superblock> |
| <directory_structure> |
| <data> |
| |
| <superblock>: struct cramfs_super (see cramfs_fs.h). |
| |
| <directory_structure>: |
| For each file: |
| struct cramfs_inode (see cramfs_fs.h). |
| Filename. Not generally null-terminated, but it is |
| null-padded to a multiple of 4 bytes. |
| |
| The order of inode traversal is described as "width-first" (not to be |
| confused with breadth-first); i.e. like depth-first but listing all of |
| a directory's entries before recursing down its subdirectories: the |
| same order as `ls -AUR' (but without the /^\..*:$/ directory header |
| lines); put another way, the same order as `find -type d -exec |
| ls -AU1 {} \;'. |
| |
| Beginning in 2.4.7, directory entries are sorted. This optimization |
| allows cramfs_lookup to return more quickly when a filename does not |
| exist, speeds up user-space directory sorts, etc. |
| |
| <data>: |
| One <file_data> for each file that's either a symlink or a |
| regular file of non-zero st_size. |
| |
| <file_data>: |
| nblocks * <block_pointer> |
| (where nblocks = (st_size - 1) / blksize + 1) |
| nblocks * <block> |
| padding to multiple of 4 bytes |
| |
| The i'th <block_pointer> for a file stores the byte offset of the |
| *end* of the i'th <block> (i.e. one past the last byte, which is the |
| same as the start of the (i+1)'th <block> if there is one). The first |
| <block> immediately follows the last <block_pointer> for the file. |
| <block_pointer>s are each 32 bits long. |
| |
| When the CRAMFS_FLAG_EXT_BLOCK_POINTERS capability bit is set, each |
| <block_pointer>'s top bits may contain special flags as follows: |
| |
| CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_UNCOMPRESSED (bit 31): |
| The block data is not compressed and should be copied verbatim. |
| |
| CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_DIRECT_PTR (bit 30): |
| The <block_pointer> stores the actual block start offset and not |
| its end, shifted right by 2 bits. The block must therefore be |
| aligned to a 4-byte boundary. The block size is either blksize |
| if CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_UNCOMPRESSED is also specified, otherwise |
| the compressed data length is included in the first 2 bytes of |
| the block data. This is used to allow discontiguous data layout |
| and specific data block alignments e.g. for XIP applications. |
| |
| |
| The order of <file_data>'s is a depth-first descent of the directory |
| tree, i.e. the same order as `find -size +0 \( -type f -o -type l \) |
| -print'. |
| |
| |
| <block>: The i'th <block> is the output of zlib's compress function |
| applied to the i'th blksize-sized chunk of the input data if the |
| corresponding CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_UNCOMPRESSED <block_ptr> bit is not set, |
| otherwise it is the input data directly. |
| (For the last <block> of the file, the input may of course be smaller.) |
| Each <block> may be a different size. (See <block_pointer> above.) |
| |
| <block>s are merely byte-aligned, not generally u32-aligned. |
| |
| When CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_DIRECT_PTR is specified then the corresponding |
| <block> may be located anywhere and not necessarily contiguous with |
| the previous/next blocks. In that case it is minimally u32-aligned. |
| If CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_UNCOMPRESSED is also specified then the size is always |
| blksize except for the last block which is limited by the file length. |
| If CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_DIRECT_PTR is set and CRAMFS_BLK_FLAG_UNCOMPRESSED |
| is not set then the first 2 bytes of the block contains the size of the |
| remaining block data as this cannot be determined from the placement of |
| logically adjacent blocks. |
| |
| |
| Holes |
| ----- |
| |
| This kernel supports cramfs holes (i.e. [efficient representation of] |
| blocks in uncompressed data consisting entirely of NUL bytes), but by |
| default mkcramfs doesn't test for & create holes, since cramfs in |
| kernels up to at least 2.3.39 didn't support holes. Run mkcramfs |
| with -z if you want it to create files that can have holes in them. |
| |
| |
| Tools |
| ----- |
| |
| The cramfs user-space tools, including mkcramfs and cramfsck, are |
| located at <https://github.com/npitre/cramfs-tools>. |