> I found what's wrong.
>
> The size of an AxFS image created by mkfs.axfs is always n*4096+4 bytes large.
> So when it wants to check the magic value in the last 4 bytes, the block layer
> tries to read a whole 512-byte sector, which fails for loop-mounted images.
>
> If you test on real FLASH, additional bytes after the end of the AxFS image 
> can
> be read, hence it works.
>
> By padding the image with 508 zero bytes, I can mount it, on both PS3 (ppc64)
> and UML (ai32). I can even read images created on PS3.

Right.  We haven't tested loopback since we added the magic end value.

How is one expected to read those last 4 bytes of a loopbacked file?
Are they unreadable?  We can add the padding.   I am just wondering if
this is a bug or a known limitation in the loopback handling or if
there is a different safer way of reading block devs with truncated
last blocks.

> However, there still are weird things going on, like `find' not seeing all
> files and directories, or just aborting, and `ls -lR' showing actual file
> contents in its output.

Do you see this behavior for all builds for just the PS3?
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-embedded" in
the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED]
More majordomo info at  http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html

Reply via email to