Commit Graph

32 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
imp
7e6cabd06e Renumber copyright clause 4
Renumber cluase 4 to 3, per what everybody else did when BSD granted
them permission to remove clause 3. My insistance on keeping the same
numbering for legal reasons is too pedantic, so give up on that point.

Submitted by:	Jan Schaumann <jschauma@stevens.edu>
Pull Request:	https://github.com/freebsd/freebsd/pull/96
2017-02-28 23:42:47 +00:00
mckusick
be2f56b8d7 The purpose of this change to the FFS layout policy is to reduce the
running time for a full fsck. It also reduces the random access time
for large files and speeds the traversal time for directory tree walks.

The key idea is to reserve a small area in each cylinder group
immediately following the inode blocks for the use of metadata,
specifically indirect blocks and directory contents. The new policy
is to preferentially place metadata in the metadata area and
everything else in the blocks that follow the metadata area.

The size of this area can be set when creating a filesystem using
newfs(8) or changed in an existing filesystem using tunefs(8).
Both utilities use the `-k held-for-metadata-blocks' option to
specify the amount of space to be held for metadata blocks in each
cylinder group. By default, newfs(8) sets this area to half of
minfree (typically 4% of the data area).

This work was inspired by a paper presented at Usenix's FAST '13:
www.usenix.org/conference/fast13/ffsck-fast-file-system-checker

Details of this implementation appears in the April 2013 of ;login:
www.usenix.org/publications/login/april-2013-volume-38-number-2.
A copy of the April 2013 ;login: paper can also be downloaded
from: www.mckusick.com/publications/faster_fsck.pdf.

Reviewed by: kib
Tested by:   Peter Holm
MFC after:   4 weeks
2013-03-22 21:45:28 +00:00
trasz
ff5b37a93e Fix problem with geom_label(4) not recognizing UFS labels on filesystems
extended using growfs(8).  The problem here is that geom_label checks if
the filesystem size recorded in UFS superblock is equal to the provider
(i.e. device) size.  This check cannot be removed due to backward
compatibility.  On the other hand, in most cases growfs(8) cannot set
fs_size in the superblock to match the provider size, because, differently
from newfs(8), it cannot recompute cylinder group sizes.

To fix this problem, add another superblock field, fs_providersize, used
only for this purpose.  The geom_label(4) will attach if either fs_size
(filesystem created with newfs(8)) or fs_providersize (filesystem expanded
using growfs(8)) matches the device size.

PR:		kern/165962
Reviewed by:	mckusick
Sponsored by:	FreeBSD Foundation
2012-10-30 21:32:10 +00:00
mckusick
5960c19274 Reduce NFPI by half to keep the default number of inodes the same with
the now default 32K/4K filesystem the same as the number of inodes in
the previously default 16K/2K filesystem.

PR:          bin/16265
Reported by: Olivier Cochard-Labbe <olivier@cochard.me>
MFC:         4 weeks (9 is the only affected branch)
2011-12-21 22:49:16 +00:00
ed
5b02333e84 Add missing static keywords for global variables to tools in sbin/.
These tools declare global variables without using the static keyword,
even though their use is limited to a single C-file, or without placing
an extern declaration of them in the proper header file.
2011-11-04 13:36:02 +00:00
mckusick
9a5935957d Raise the default blocksize for UFS/FFS filesystems from
16K to 32K and the default fragment size from 2K to 4K.

The rational is that most disks are now running with 4K
sectors.  While they can (slowly) simulate 512-byte sectors
by doing a read-modify-write, it is desirable to avoid this
functionality.  By raising the minimum filesystem allocation
to 4K, the filesystem will never trigger the small sector
emulation.

Also, the growth of disk sizes has lead us to double the
default block size about every ten years.  The rise from 8K
to 16K blocks was done in 2001.  So, by the 10-year metric,
the time has come for 32K blocks.

Discussed at: May 2011 BSDCan Developer Summit
Reference: http://wiki.freebsd.org/201105DevSummit/FileSystems
2011-05-26 18:22:49 +00:00
kib
d69a17ac0a Add support for FS_TRIM to user-mode UFS utilities.
Reviewed by:	mckusick, pjd, pho
Tested by:	pho
MFC after:	1 month
2010-12-29 12:31:18 +00:00
sobomax
2bd2be1b08 o bdeficize expand_number_int() function;
o revert most of the recent changes (int -> int64_t conversion) by using
this functon for parsing all options.
2010-03-09 19:31:08 +00:00
sobomax
1b7c7ca0d5 Change secrorsize back to int, since that's the data type expected by the
ioctl(DIOCGSECTORSIZE). It creates issues on some architectures.

MFC after:	1 week
Reported by:	Jayachandran C.
2010-03-09 10:31:03 +00:00
sobomax
8d2851aaa1 Use expand_number(3) from libutil instead of home-grown function to parse
human-friendly power-of-two numbers (i.e. 2k, 5M etc).

Suggested by:	many
MFC after:	1 week
2010-03-03 19:25:28 +00:00
mckusick
52ba27d6b0 Ensure that newfs will never create a filesystem with more than 2^32
inodes by cutting back on the number of inodes per cylinder group if
necessary to stay under the limit. For a default (16K block) file
system, this limit begins to take effect for file systems above 32Tb.

This fix is in addition to -r203763 which corrected a problem in the
kernel that treated large inode numbers as negative rather than unsigned.
For a default (16K block) file system, this bug began to show up at a
file system size above about 16Tb.

Reported by: Scott Burns, John Kilburg, Bruce Evans
Followup by: Jeff Roberson
PR:          133980
MFC after:   2 weeks
2010-02-10 20:17:46 +00:00
luigi
25cd12c1b2 Enable operation of newfs on plain files, which is useful when you
want to prepare disk images for emulators (though 'makefs' in port
can do something similar).

This relies on:
+ minor changes to pass the consistency checks even when working on a file;

+ an additional option, '-p partition' , to specify the disk partition to
  initialize;

+ some changes on the I/O routines to deal with partition offsets.

The latter was a bit tricky to implement, see the details in newfs.h:
in newfs, I/O is done through libufs which assumes that the file
descriptor refers to the whole partition. Introducing support for
the offset in libufs would require a non-backward compatible change
in the library, to be dealt with a version bump or with symbol
versioning.

I felt both approaches to be overkill for this specific application,
especially because there might be other changes to libufs that might
become necessary in the near future.

So I used the following trick:
- read access is always done by calling bread() directly, so we just add
  the offset in the (few) places that call bread();
- write access is done through bwrite() and sbwrite(), which in turn
  calls bwrite(). To avoid rewriting sbwrite(), we supply our own version
  of bwrite() here, which takes precedence over the version in libufs.

MFC after:	4 weeks
2008-12-03 18:36:59 +00:00
phk
8869357e61 Rename the undocumented -E option to -X.
Implement -E option which will erase the filesystem sectors before
making the new filesystem.  Reserved space in front of the superblock
(bootcode) is not erased.

NB: Erasing can take as long time as writing every sector sequentially.

This is relevant for all flash based disks which use wearlevelling.
2007-12-16 19:41:31 +00:00
yar
13b1c70fac MFp4:
Add a new option to newfs(8), -r, to specify reserved space at the
end of the device.  It can be useful, e.g., when the device is to
become a member of a gmirror array later w/o losing the file system
on it.

Document the new option in the manpage.

While I'm here, improve error handling for -s option, which is
syntactically similar to -r; and document the fact that -s0 selects
the default fs size explicitly, which can be useful, e.g., in a
menu-based wrapper around newfs(8) requiring some value be entered
for the fs size.

Also fix a small typo in the help line for -s (missing space).

Idea and initial implementation by:	marck
Discussed on:				-fs
Critical review by:			bde
Tested with:				cmp(1)
2007-11-28 07:29:10 +00:00
pjd
ad87251c1a Add -J flag to both newfs(8) and tunefs(8) which allows to enable gjournal
support.
I left -j flag for UFS journal implementation which we may gain at some
point.

Sponsored by:	home.pl
2006-10-31 21:52:28 +00:00
wes
926ee6068d Add an option to suppress the creation of the .snap directory in
the new filesystem.  This is intended for memory and vnode filesystems
that will never be fsck'ed or dumped.

Obtained from:	St. Bernard Software RAPID
MFC after:	2 weeks
2005-01-21 22:20:25 +00:00
markm
90f91e7879 Remove advertising clause from University of California Regent's license,
per letter dated July 22, 1999.

Approved by: core, imp
2004-04-09 19:58:40 +00:00
rwatson
f0df387d84 Add a "-l" flag to newfs, which sets the FS_MULTILABEL flag. This
permits users of newfs to set the multilabel flag on UFS1 and UFS2
file systems from inception without using tunefs.

Obtained from:	TrustedBSD Project
Sponsored by:	DARPA, McAfee Research
2004-02-26 01:14:27 +00:00
wes
a79f1dd547 Add the -E command line option to force error conditions for testing.
Sponsord by:	St. Bernard Software
2003-11-16 07:17:30 +00:00
mckusick
e6a38537d0 Correct lines incorrectly added to the copyright message. Add missing period.
Submitted by:	Bruce Evans <bde@zeta.org.au>
Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2003-02-14 21:08:14 +00:00
jmallett
0f7ddd6268 Convert newfs to libufs (really). Solves one real issue with previous
version of such.  Differences in filesystems generated were found to be
from 1) sbwrite with the "all" parameter 2) removal of writecache.  The
sbwrite call was made to perform as the original version, and otherwise
this was checked against a version of newfs with the write cache removed.
2003-02-11 03:06:45 +00:00
gordon
f340c1ac9e Bring in support for volume labels to the filesystem utilities.
Reviewed by:	mckusick
2003-02-01 04:17:10 +00:00
jmallett
dfe5702c03 Back out conversion to libufs, for now. It seems to cause problems.
Reported by: phk
2003-01-29 22:52:27 +00:00
jmallett
273be50650 Convert newfs to use libufs. I've tested this on md filesystems, as has
keramida, and all seems well.
2003-01-27 07:24:32 +00:00
trhodes
136be46680 s/filesystem/file system/g as discussed on -developers 2002-08-21 18:11:48 +00:00
mckusick
88d85c15ef This commit adds basic support for the UFS2 filesystem. The UFS2
filesystem expands the inode to 256 bytes to make space for 64-bit
block pointers. It also adds a file-creation time field, an ability
to use jumbo blocks per inode to allow extent like pointer density,
and space for extended attributes (up to twice the filesystem block
size worth of attributes, e.g., on a 16K filesystem, there is space
for 32K of attributes). UFS2 fully supports and runs existing UFS1
filesystems. New filesystems built using newfs can be built in either
UFS1 or UFS2 format using the -O option. In this commit UFS1 is
the default format, so if you want to build UFS2 format filesystems,
you must specify -O 2. This default will be changed to UFS2 when
UFS2 proves itself to be stable. In this commit the boot code for
reading UFS2 filesystems is not compiled (see /sys/boot/common/ufsread.c)
as there is insufficient space in the boot block. Once the size of the
boot block is increased, this code can be defined.

Things to note: the definition of SBSIZE has changed to SBLOCKSIZE.
The header file <ufs/ufs/dinode.h> must be included before
<ufs/ffs/fs.h> so as to get the definitions of ufs2_daddr_t and
ufs_lbn_t.

Still TODO:
Verify that the first level bootstraps work for all the architectures.
Convert the utility ffsinfo to understand UFS2 and test growfs.
Add support for the extended attribute storage. Update soft updates
to ensure integrity of extended attribute storage. Switch the
current extended attribute interfaces to use the extended attribute
storage. Add the extent like functionality (framework is there,
but is currently never used).

Sponsored by: DARPA & NAI Labs.
Reviewed by:	Poul-Henning Kamp <phk@freebsd.org>
2002-06-21 06:18:05 +00:00
trhodes
896f3841bf more file system > filesystem 2002-05-16 04:10:46 +00:00
phk
0f040bcefc Continue the cleanup preparations for UFS2 (& GEOM):
Use only one filedescriptor.  Open in R/O or R/W based in the '-N' option.
Make the filedescriptor a global variable instead of passing it around
as semi-global variable(s).

Remove the undocumented ability to specify type without '-T' option.

Replace fatal() with straight err(3)/errx(3).  Save calls to strerror()
where applicable.  Loose the progname variable.

Get the sense of the cpgflag test correct so we only issue warnings if
people specify cpg and can't get that.  It can be argued that this
should be an error.

Remove the check to see if the disk is mounted:  Open for writing
would fail if it were mounted.

Attempt to get the sectorsize and mediasize with the generic disk
ioctls, fall back to disklabel and /etc/disktab as we can.

Notice that on-disk labels still take precedence over /etc/disktab,
this is probably wrong, but not as wrong as the entire concept of
/etc/disktab is.

Sponsored by:   DARPA & NAI Labs.
2002-04-24 11:44:02 +00:00
phk
385d4388dc bbsize and sbsize cannot ever be trusted from the disklabel, in
particular as there may not be one.  Remove #if 0'ed code which might
mislead people to think otherwise.

unifdef -ULOSTDIR, fsck can make lost+found on the fly.

Sponsored by:	DARPA & NAI Labs
2002-04-07 14:57:57 +00:00
phk
91ca22f3a3 Swing the axe and remove some archaic features from newfs which modern
diskdrives do neither need nor want:

	-O create a 4.3BSD format filesystem
	-d rotational delay between contiguous blocks
	-k sector 0 skew, per track
	-l hardware sector interleave
	-n number of distinguished rotational positions
	-p spare sectors per track
	-r revolutions/minute
	-t tracks/cylinder
	-x spare sectors per cylinder

No change in the produced filesystem image unless one or more of
these options were used.

Approved by:	mckusick
2002-03-20 07:16:15 +00:00
phk
ca2e5c188e Add the undocumented -R option to disable randomness for regression-testing.
Add a couple of simple regression tests accessible with "make test", they
depend on the md(4) driver.

FYI I have also tried running the test against a week old newfs and it
passed.
2002-03-19 21:05:29 +00:00
phk
5d439a2c26 Further cleanups. 2002-03-19 20:01:38 +00:00