Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
Geert Uytterhoeven wrote: Hi Phillip, On Fri, 17 Oct 2008, Phillip Lougher wrote: This is a second attempt at mainlining Squashfs. The first attempt was way This is great news! I ran a quick test of squashfs 4.0 (the CVS version) on UML/ia32 and ppc64, and it seems to work fine! Great job! Let's hope we'll see it in mainline soon... Thanks! I hope it gets into mainline soon too :) BTW, one minor gripe is that the current mksquashfs doesn't want to run on big endian yet, as there's no byteswapping support. Yeah, I know about that. There's still some work needing to be done on the squashfs-tools. I figured it was important to get the kernel stuff submitted and discussed ASAP. Phillip -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
On Wed, 2008-10-22 at 00:42 +0100, Phillip Lougher wrote: Yeah, Git is much better than CVS, however, I've got nowhere to host a public Git repository. If someone were to offer hosting I'd be only too happy to move over to Git. Mail me a SSH public key (use a passphrase on it), and I'll give you an account on git.infradead.org. -- David WoodhouseOpen Source Technology Centre [EMAIL PROTECTED] Intel Corporation -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
Phillip Lougher wrote: Yeah, Git is much better than CVS, however, I've got nowhere to host a public Git repository. If someone were to offer hosting I'd be only too happy to move over to Git. I can offer you hosting on mirror.celinuxforum.org. If you are interested, let me know and I'll set up an account immediately. I haven't hosted a public git tree there, so there may be some additional setup required. -- Tim = Tim Bird Architecture Group Chair, CE Linux Forum Senior Staff Engineer, Sony Corporation of America = -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
Hi Phillip, On Fri, 17 Oct 2008, Phillip Lougher wrote: This is a second attempt at mainlining Squashfs. The first attempt was way This is great news! I ran a quick test of squashfs 4.0 (the CVS version) on UML/ia32 and ppc64, and it seems to work fine! Great job! Let's hope we'll see it in mainline soon... BTW, one minor gripe is that the current mksquashfs doesn't want to run on big endian yet, as there's no byteswapping support. With kind regards, Geert Uytterhoeven Software Architect Sony Techsoft Centre Europe The Corporate Village · Da Vincilaan 7-D1 · B-1935 Zaventem · Belgium Phone:+32 (0)2 700 8453 Fax: +32 (0)2 700 8622 E-mail: [EMAIL PROTECTED] Internet: http://www.sony-europe.com/ A division of Sony Europe (Belgium) N.V. VAT BE 0413.825.160 · RPR Brussels Fortis · BIC GEBABEBB · IBAN BE41293037680010
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
On Tue, 2008-10-21 at 02:12 +0100, Phillip Lougher wrote: David P. Quigley wrote: Looking through the code I see two references to xattrs, one is the index of the xattr table in the superblock and there seems to be struct member in one of the inode structures that is an index into this table. Looking through the code I don't see either of these used at all. Do you intend to add xattr support at some point? I saw reference to the desire to add xattr support in an email from 2004 but you said that the code has been rewritten since then. If you are going to add xattr support you probably want to add it to more than just regular files. In SELinux and other LSMs symlinks and directories are also labeled so they will need xattr entries. Yes and yes. I am intending to add xattr support, something that's been on my to-do list for a long time (since 2004 as you said), but it's been something which I've never got the time to do. Once (if) Squashfs is mainlined, it will be the next thing. The xattr references in the layout is my attempt at forward planning to avoid making an incompatible layout change when I finally get around to implementing it. My plan is to put xattrs in a table (referenced by the superblock), and then put indexes in extended inodes which index into the table (as you noticed). The general idea in Squashfs is that inodes get optimised for normally occurring cases, and less common cases (that would need a bigger inode) get to use an extended inode. Squashfs currently has an extended regular file inode, which is where the xattr index will sit, and so this has had an xattr index added. The other inodes don't currently have extended inodes, these will be defined when I implement xattrs (which is why they're missing). Having said that, I've fscked up and forgotten to add an xattr field to the extended directory inode which is currently defined :) Thanks for spotting this. Just to clarify: When using a labeled MAC solution like SELinux or SMACK, every file (of every type, including device nodes, symlinks, fifos, etc) will have a security attribute on it. In the case of ext3, we have benefited from inlining of small attributes into the inode. -- Stephen Smalley National Security Agency -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
On Wed, 2008-10-22 at 00:42 +0100, Phillip Lougher wrote: David P. Quigley wrote: Looking through the code I noticed that you give certain object types the same inode number for all instances of it (devices, fifo/sockets). How is this done internally? Do these types of objects occupy the same position on the inode table? If so how do you differentiate between a device and a socket? No, devices and fifo/sockets get their own unique inode numbers: [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/mnt# mount -t squashfs test.sqsh /mnt2 -o loop [EMAIL PROTECTED]:/mnt# ls -li /mnt2 total 0 2 crw-r--r-- 1 root root 1, 1 2008-10-22 00:31 device 4 prw-r--r-- 1 root root0 2008-10-22 00:31 fifo 3 srwxr-xr-x 1 root root0 2008-10-17 16:25 socket [Snip] My mistake I misread your statement in email 0. You said that squashfs has real inode numbers and that cramfs didn't. Good luck with your mainlining attempt. Once you get xattr support this would definitely make life better for people who want to make SELinux enabled LiveCDs and other small devices. Dave -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
David P. Quigley wrote: Looking through the code I see two references to xattrs, one is the index of the xattr table in the superblock and there seems to be struct member in one of the inode structures that is an index into this table. Looking through the code I don't see either of these used at all. Do you intend to add xattr support at some point? I saw reference to the desire to add xattr support in an email from 2004 but you said that the code has been rewritten since then. If you are going to add xattr support you probably want to add it to more than just regular files. In SELinux and other LSMs symlinks and directories are also labeled so they will need xattr entries. Yes and yes. I am intending to add xattr support, something that's been on my to-do list for a long time (since 2004 as you said), but it's been something which I've never got the time to do. Once (if) Squashfs is mainlined, it will be the next thing. The xattr references in the layout is my attempt at forward planning to avoid making an incompatible layout change when I finally get around to implementing it. My plan is to put xattrs in a table (referenced by the superblock), and then put indexes in extended inodes which index into the table (as you noticed). The general idea in Squashfs is that inodes get optimised for normally occurring cases, and less common cases (that would need a bigger inode) get to use an extended inode. Squashfs currently has an extended regular file inode, which is where the xattr index will sit, and so this has had an xattr index added. The other inodes don't currently have extended inodes, these will be defined when I implement xattrs (which is why they're missing). Having said that, I've fscked up and forgotten to add an xattr field to the extended directory inode which is currently defined :) Thanks for spotting this. Phillip Dave -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
David P. Quigley wrote: In SELinux and other LSMs symlinks and directories are also labeled so they will need xattr entries. BTW you don't mention device, fifo and socket inodes... Do they ever get labelled? It's something I was going to look into closer to an implementation, but it would be interesting to know. Phillip Dave -- 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
Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
This is a second attempt at mainlining Squashfs. The first attempt was way way back in early 2005 :-) Since then the filesystem layout has undergone two major revisions, and the kernel code has almost been completely rewritten. Both of these were to address the criticisms made at the original attempt. Summary of changes: 1. Filesystem layout is now 64-bit, in theory filesystems and files can be 2^64 in size. 2. Filesystem is now fixed little-endian. 3. . and .. are now returned by readdir. 4. Sparse files are now supported. 5. Filesystem is now exportable (NFS etc.). 6. Datablocks up to 1 Mbyte are now supported. Codewise all of the packed bit-fields and the swap macros have been removed in favour of aligned structures and in-line swapping using leXX_to_cpu(). The code has also been extensively restructured, reformatted to kernel coding standards and commented. Previously there was resistance to the inclusion of another compressed filesystem when Linux already had cramfs. There was pressure for a strong case to be made for the inclusion of Squashfs. Hopefully the case for the inclusion of other compressed filesystems has now already been answered over the last couple of years, however, it is worth listing the features of Squashfs over cramfs, which is still the only read-only compressed filesystem in mainline. Max filesystem size: cramfs 16 Mbytes, Squashfs 64-bit filesystem Max filesize: cramfs 16 Mbytes, Squashfs 64-bit filesystem Block size: cramfs 4K, Squashfs default 128K, max 1Mbyte Tail-end packing: cramfs no, Squashfs yes Directory indexes: cramfs no, Squashfs yes Compressed metadata: cramfs no, Squashfs yes Hard link support: cramfs no, Squashfs yes Support for . and .. in readdir: cramfs no, Squashfs yes Real inode numbers: cramfs no, Squashfs yes. Cramfs gives device inodes, fifo and empty directories the same inode of 1! Exportable filesystem (NFS, etc.): cramfs no, Squashfs yes Active maintenance: cramfs no (it is listed as orphaned, probably no active work for years), Squashfs yes Sorry for the list formatting, but many email readers are very unforgiving displaying tabbed lists and so I avoided them. For those that want hard performance statistics http://tree.celinuxforum.org/CelfPubWiki/SquashFsComparisons gives a full comparison of the performance of Squashfs against cramfs, zisofs, cloop and ext3. I made these tests a number of years ago using Squashfs 2.1, but they are still valid. In fact the performance should now be better. Cramfs is a limited filesystem, it's good for some embedded users but not now much else, its layout and features hasn't changed in the eight years+ since its release. Squashfs, despite never being in mainline, has been actively developed for over six years, and in that time has gone through four layout revisions, each revision improving compression and performance where limitations were found. For an often dismissed filesystem, Squashfs has advanced features such as metadata compression and tail-end packing for greater compression, and directory indexes for faster dentry operations. Despite not being in mainline, it is widely used. It is packaged by all major distributions (Ubuntu, Fedora, Debian, SUSE, Gentoo), it is used on most LiveCDs, it is extensively used in embedded systems (STBs, routers, mobile phones), and notably is used in such things as Splashtop and the Amazon Kindle. Anyway that's my case for inclusion. If any readers want Squashfs mainlined it's probably now a good time to offer support! There are 16 patches in the patch set, and the patches are against the latest linux-next tree (linux 2.6.27-next-20081016). Finally, I would like to acknowledge the financial support of the Consumer Embedded Linux Forum (CELF). They've made it possible for me to spend the last four months working full time on this mainlining attempt. Phillip -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
On Fri, 17 October 2008 16:42:50 +0100, Phillip Lougher wrote: Codewise all of the packed bit-fields and the swap macros have been removed in favour of aligned structures and in-line swapping using leXX_to_cpu(). The code has also been extensively restructured, reformatted to kernel coding standards and commented. Excellent! The data structures look good and I don't see a reason for another format change. Which means the main reason against merging the code has gone. Your style differs from other kernel code and in a number of cases it would be nice to be more consistent with existing conventions. It would certainly help others when reading the code. And of course, one way to do so it to just merge and wait for some janitors to notice squashfs and send patches. :) I have to admit I am scared of this function: +int squashfs_read_metadata(struct super_block *s, void *buffer, + long long block, unsigned int offset, + int length, long long *next_block, + unsigned int *next_offset) It takes seven parameters, five of which look deceptively similar to me. Almost every time I see a call to this function, my mind goes blank. There must be some way to make this function a bit more agreeable. One option is to fuse the block and offset parameters into a struct and just pass two sets of this struct. Another would be to combine the two sets of addresses into a single one. A quick look at some of the callers shows seems to favor that approach. squashfs_read_metadata(..., block, offset, ..., block, offset) Could become squashfs_read_metadata(..., block, offset, ...) But again, such a change is no showstopper for mainline inclusion. Anyway that's my case for inclusion. If any readers want Squashfs mainlined it's probably now a good time to offer support! Please no. A large amount of popular support would only bring you into the reiser4 league. Bad arguments don't improve when repeated. Support in the form of patches would be a different matter, though. Jörn -- Mac is for working, Linux is for Networking, Windows is for Solitaire! -- stolen from dc -- 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
Re: Subject: [PATCH 00/16] Squashfs: compressed read-only filesystem
Looking through the code I see two references to xattrs, one is the index of the xattr table in the superblock and there seems to be struct member in one of the inode structures that is an index into this table. Looking through the code I don't see either of these used at all. Do you intend to add xattr support at some point? I saw reference to the desire to add xattr support in an email from 2004 but you said that the code has been rewritten since then. If you are going to add xattr support you probably want to add it to more than just regular files. In SELinux and other LSMs symlinks and directories are also labeled so they will need xattr entries. Dave -- 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