Its purpose was to translate the values for msdosfs inode numbers, which is calculated from the msdosfs structures describing the file, into the range representable by 32bit ino_t. The translation acted for filesystems larger than 128Gb, it reserved the range 0xf0000000 (FILENO_FIRST_DYN) to UINT32_MAX and remembered some arbitrary translation of ino >= FILENO_FIRST_DYN into this range. It consumed memory that could be only freed by unmount, and the translation was not stable across remounts. With ino_t type extended to 64 bit, there is no such issue and values can be returned without compaction to 32bit. That is, for the native environments, the translation layer is not necessary and adds significant undeserved code complexity. For compat ABIs which use 32bit ino_t, the vfs.ino64_trunc_error sysctl provides some measures to soften the failure mode when inode numbers truncation is not safe. Discussed with: bde Sponsored by: The FreeBSD Foundation
FreeBSD Source:
This is the top level of the FreeBSD source directory. This file
was last revised on:
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For copyright information, please see the file COPYRIGHT in this directory (additional copyright information also exists for some sources in this tree - please see the specific source directories for more information).
The Makefile in this directory supports a number of targets for building components (or all) of the FreeBSD source tree. See build(7) and http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/makeworld.html for more information, including setting make(1) variables.
The buildkernel
and installkernel
targets build and install
the kernel and the modules (see below). Please see the top of
the Makefile in this directory for more information on the
standard build targets and compile-time flags.
Building a kernel is a somewhat more involved process. See build(7), config(8), and http://www.freebsd.org/doc/en_US.ISO8859-1/books/handbook/kernelconfig.html for more information.
Note: If you want to build and install the kernel with the
buildkernel
and installkernel
targets, you might need to build
world before. More information is available in the handbook.
The kernel configuration files reside in the sys/<arch>/conf
sub-directory. GENERIC is the default configuration used in release builds.
NOTES contains entries and documentation for all possible
devices, not just those commonly used.
Source Roadmap:
bin System/user commands.
cddl Various commands and libraries under the Common Development
and Distribution License.
contrib Packages contributed by 3rd parties.
crypto Cryptography stuff (see crypto/README).
etc Template files for /etc.
gnu Various commands and libraries under the GNU Public License.
Please see gnu/COPYING* for more information.
include System include files.
kerberos5 Kerberos5 (Heimdal) package.
lib System libraries.
libexec System daemons.
release Release building Makefile & associated tools.
rescue Build system for statically linked /rescue utilities.
sbin System commands.
secure Cryptographic libraries and commands.
share Shared resources.
sys Kernel sources.
tests Regression tests which can be run by Kyua. See tests/README
for additional information.
tools Utilities for regression testing and miscellaneous tasks.
usr.bin User commands.
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