| Optimized MPEG Filesystem (OMFS) |
| |
| Overview |
| ======== |
| |
| OMFS is a filesystem created by SonicBlue for use in the ReplayTV DVR |
| and Rio Karma MP3 player. The filesystem is extent-based, utilizing |
| block sizes from 2k to 8k, with hash-based directories. This |
| filesystem driver may be used to read and write disks from these |
| devices. |
| |
| Note, it is not recommended that this FS be used in place of a general |
| filesystem for your own streaming media device. Native Linux filesystems |
| will likely perform better. |
| |
| More information is available at: |
| |
| http://linux-karma.sf.net/ |
| |
| Various utilities, including mkomfs and omfsck, are included with |
| omfsprogs, available at: |
| |
| http://bobcopeland.com/karma/ |
| |
| Instructions are included in its README. |
| |
| Options |
| ======= |
| |
| OMFS supports the following mount-time options: |
| |
| uid=n - make all files owned by specified user |
| gid=n - make all files owned by specified group |
| umask=xxx - set permission umask to xxx |
| fmask=xxx - set umask to xxx for files |
| dmask=xxx - set umask to xxx for directories |
| |
| Disk format |
| =========== |
| |
| OMFS discriminates between "sysblocks" and normal data blocks. The sysblock |
| group consists of super block information, file metadata, directory structures, |
| and extents. Each sysblock has a header containing CRCs of the entire |
| sysblock, and may be mirrored in successive blocks on the disk. A sysblock may |
| have a smaller size than a data block, but since they are both addressed by the |
| same 64-bit block number, any remaining space in the smaller sysblock is |
| unused. |
| |
| Sysblock header information: |
| |
| struct omfs_header { |
| __be64 h_self; /* FS block where this is located */ |
| __be32 h_body_size; /* size of useful data after header */ |
| __be16 h_crc; /* crc-ccitt of body_size bytes */ |
| char h_fill1[2]; |
| u8 h_version; /* version, always 1 */ |
| char h_type; /* OMFS_INODE_X */ |
| u8 h_magic; /* OMFS_IMAGIC */ |
| u8 h_check_xor; /* XOR of header bytes before this */ |
| __be32 h_fill2; |
| }; |
| |
| Files and directories are both represented by omfs_inode: |
| |
| struct omfs_inode { |
| struct omfs_header i_head; /* header */ |
| __be64 i_parent; /* parent containing this inode */ |
| __be64 i_sibling; /* next inode in hash bucket */ |
| __be64 i_ctime; /* ctime, in milliseconds */ |
| char i_fill1[35]; |
| char i_type; /* OMFS_[DIR,FILE] */ |
| __be32 i_fill2; |
| char i_fill3[64]; |
| char i_name[OMFS_NAMELEN]; /* filename */ |
| __be64 i_size; /* size of file, in bytes */ |
| }; |
| |
| Directories in OMFS are implemented as a large hash table. Filenames are |
| hashed then prepended into the bucket list beginning at OMFS_DIR_START. |
| Lookup requires hashing the filename, then seeking across i_sibling pointers |
| until a match is found on i_name. Empty buckets are represented by block |
| pointers with all-1s (~0). |
| |
| A file is an omfs_inode structure followed by an extent table beginning at |
| OMFS_EXTENT_START: |
| |
| struct omfs_extent_entry { |
| __be64 e_cluster; /* start location of a set of blocks */ |
| __be64 e_blocks; /* number of blocks after e_cluster */ |
| }; |
| |
| struct omfs_extent { |
| __be64 e_next; /* next extent table location */ |
| __be32 e_extent_count; /* total # extents in this table */ |
| __be32 e_fill; |
| struct omfs_extent_entry e_entry; /* start of extent entries */ |
| }; |
| |
| Each extent holds the block offset followed by number of blocks allocated to |
| the extent. The final extent in each table is a terminator with e_cluster |
| being ~0 and e_blocks being ones'-complement of the total number of blocks |
| in the table. |
| |
| If this table overflows, a continuation inode is written and pointed to by |
| e_next. These have a header but lack the rest of the inode structure. |
| |