diff options
author | Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com> | 2018-07-29 15:38:00 -0400 |
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committer | Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu> | 2018-07-29 15:38:00 -0400 |
commit | c09f3bac6d8c820b4b4ff0ffcff47e3a68b04e54 (patch) | |
tree | 811e969f7b4cbbaee525a0294075f06d7829ef42 /Documentation/filesystems | |
parent | b2e60723c1c14c7c9b79c82bb86d8e2a81051b5e (diff) |
ext4: import high level design chapter from wiki page
Import the chapter about high level design from the on-disk format wiki
page into the kernel documentation.
Signed-off-by: Darrick J. Wong <darrick.wong@oracle.com>
Signed-off-by: Theodore Ts'o <tytso@mit.edu>
Diffstat (limited to 'Documentation/filesystems')
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/allocators.rst | 56 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/bigalloc.rst | 22 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blockgroup.rst | 135 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blocks.rst | 142 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/checksums.rst | 73 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/eainode.rst | 18 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/index.rst | 1 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/inlinedata.rst | 37 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/overview.rst | 26 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/special_inodes.rst | 38 |
10 files changed, 548 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/allocators.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/allocators.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..7aa85152ace3 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/allocators.rst @@ -0,0 +1,56 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Block and Inode Allocation Policy +--------------------------------- + +ext4 recognizes (better than ext3, anyway) that data locality is +generally a desirably quality of a filesystem. On a spinning disk, +keeping related blocks near each other reduces the amount of movement +that the head actuator and disk must perform to access a data block, +thus speeding up disk IO. On an SSD there of course are no moving parts, +but locality can increase the size of each transfer request while +reducing the total number of requests. This locality may also have the +effect of concentrating writes on a single erase block, which can speed +up file rewrites significantly. Therefore, it is useful to reduce +fragmentation whenever possible. + +The first tool that ext4 uses to combat fragmentation is the multi-block +allocator. When a file is first created, the block allocator +speculatively allocates 8KiB of disk space to the file on the assumption +that the space will get written soon. When the file is closed, the +unused speculative allocations are of course freed, but if the +speculation is correct (typically the case for full writes of small +files) then the file data gets written out in a single multi-block +extent. A second related trick that ext4 uses is delayed allocation. +Under this scheme, when a file needs more blocks to absorb file writes, +the filesystem defers deciding the exact placement on the disk until all +the dirty buffers are being written out to disk. By not committing to a +particular placement until it's absolutely necessary (the commit timeout +is hit, or sync() is called, or the kernel runs out of memory), the hope +is that the filesystem can make better location decisions. + +The third trick that ext4 (and ext3) uses is that it tries to keep a +file's data blocks in the same block group as its inode. This cuts down +on the seek penalty when the filesystem first has to read a file's inode +to learn where the file's data blocks live and then seek over to the +file's data blocks to begin I/O operations. + +The fourth trick is that all the inodes in a directory are placed in the +same block group as the directory, when feasible. The working assumption +here is that all the files in a directory might be related, therefore it +is useful to try to keep them all together. + +The fifth trick is that the disk volume is cut up into 128MB block +groups; these mini-containers are used as outlined above to try to +maintain data locality. However, there is a deliberate quirk -- when a +directory is created in the root directory, the inode allocator scans +the block groups and puts that directory into the least heavily loaded +block group that it can find. This encourages directories to spread out +over a disk; as the top-level directory/file blobs fill up one block +group, the allocators simply move on to the next block group. Allegedly +this scheme evens out the loading on the block groups, though the author +suspects that the directories which are so unlucky as to land towards +the end of a spinning drive get a raw deal performance-wise. + +Of course if all of these mechanisms fail, one can always use e4defrag +to defragment files. diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/bigalloc.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/bigalloc.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..c6d88557553c --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/bigalloc.rst @@ -0,0 +1,22 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Bigalloc +-------- + +At the moment, the default size of a block is 4KiB, which is a commonly +supported page size on most MMU-capable hardware. This is fortunate, as +ext4 code is not prepared to handle the case where the block size +exceeds the page size. However, for a filesystem of mostly huge files, +it is desirable to be able to allocate disk blocks in units of multiple +blocks to reduce both fragmentation and metadata overhead. The +`bigalloc <Bigalloc>`__ feature provides exactly this ability. The +administrator can set a block cluster size at mkfs time (which is stored +in the s\_log\_cluster\_size field in the superblock); from then on, the +block bitmaps track clusters, not individual blocks. This means that +block groups can be several gigabytes in size (instead of just 128MiB); +however, the minimum allocation unit becomes a cluster, not a block, +even for directories. TaoBao had a patchset to extend the “use units of +clusters instead of blocks” to the extent tree, though it is not clear +where those patches went-- they eventually morphed into “extent tree v2” +but that code has not landed as of May 2015. + diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blockgroup.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blockgroup.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..baf888e4c06a --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blockgroup.rst @@ -0,0 +1,135 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Layout +------ + +The layout of a standard block group is approximately as follows (each +of these fields is discussed in a separate section below): + +.. list-table:: + :widths: 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 1 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Group 0 Padding + - ext4 Super Block + - Group Descriptors + - Reserved GDT Blocks + - Data Block Bitmap + - inode Bitmap + - inode Table + - Data Blocks + * - 1024 bytes + - 1 block + - many blocks + - many blocks + - 1 block + - 1 block + - many blocks + - many more blocks + +For the special case of block group 0, the first 1024 bytes are unused, +to allow for the installation of x86 boot sectors and other oddities. +The superblock will start at offset 1024 bytes, whichever block that +happens to be (usually 0). However, if for some reason the block size = +1024, then block 0 is marked in use and the superblock goes in block 1. +For all other block groups, there is no padding. + +The ext4 driver primarily works with the superblock and the group +descriptors that are found in block group 0. Redundant copies of the +superblock and group descriptors are written to some of the block groups +across the disk in case the beginning of the disk gets trashed, though +not all block groups necessarily host a redundant copy (see following +paragraph for more details). If the group does not have a redundant +copy, the block group begins with the data block bitmap. Note also that +when the filesystem is freshly formatted, mkfs will allocate “reserve +GDT block” space after the block group descriptors and before the start +of the block bitmaps to allow for future expansion of the filesystem. By +default, a filesystem is allowed to increase in size by a factor of +1024x over the original filesystem size. + +The location of the inode table is given by ``grp.bg_inode_table_*``. It +is continuous range of blocks large enough to contain +``sb.s_inodes_per_group * sb.s_inode_size`` bytes. + +As for the ordering of items in a block group, it is generally +established that the super block and the group descriptor table, if +present, will be at the beginning of the block group. The bitmaps and +the inode table can be anywhere, and it is quite possible for the +bitmaps to come after the inode table, or for both to be in different +groups (flex\_bg). Leftover space is used for file data blocks, indirect +block maps, extent tree blocks, and extended attributes. + +Flexible Block Groups +--------------------- + +Starting in ext4, there is a new feature called flexible block groups +(flex\_bg). In a flex\_bg, several block groups are tied together as one +logical block group; the bitmap spaces and the inode table space in the +first block group of the flex\_bg are expanded to include the bitmaps +and inode tables of all other block groups in the flex\_bg. For example, +if the flex\_bg size is 4, then group 0 will contain (in order) the +superblock, group descriptors, data block bitmaps for groups 0-3, inode +bitmaps for groups 0-3, inode tables for groups 0-3, and the remaining +space in group 0 is for file data. The effect of this is to group the +block metadata close together for faster loading, and to enable large +files to be continuous on disk. Backup copies of the superblock and +group descriptors are always at the beginning of block groups, even if +flex\_bg is enabled. The number of block groups that make up a flex\_bg +is given by 2 ^ ``sb.s_log_groups_per_flex``. + +Meta Block Groups +----------------- + +Without the option META\_BG, for safety concerns, all block group +descriptors copies are kept in the first block group. Given the default +128MiB(2^27 bytes) block group size and 64-byte group descriptors, ext4 +can have at most 2^27/64 = 2^21 block groups. This limits the entire +filesystem size to 2^21 ∗ 2^27 = 2^48bytes or 256TiB. + +The solution to this problem is to use the metablock group feature +(META\_BG), which is already in ext3 for all 2.6 releases. With the +META\_BG feature, ext4 filesystems are partitioned into many metablock +groups. Each metablock group is a cluster of block groups whose group +descriptor structures can be stored in a single disk block. For ext4 +filesystems with 4 KB block size, a single metablock group partition +includes 64 block groups, or 8 GiB of disk space. The metablock group +feature moves the location of the group descriptors from the congested +first block group of the whole filesystem into the first group of each +metablock group itself. The backups are in the second and last group of +each metablock group. This increases the 2^21 maximum block groups limit +to the hard limit 2^32, allowing support for a 512PiB filesystem. + +The change in the filesystem format replaces the current scheme where +the superblock is followed by a variable-length set of block group +descriptors. Instead, the superblock and a single block group descriptor +block is placed at the beginning of the first, second, and last block +groups in a meta-block group. A meta-block group is a collection of +block groups which can be described by a single block group descriptor +block. Since the size of the block group descriptor structure is 32 +bytes, a meta-block group contains 32 block groups for filesystems with +a 1KB block size, and 128 block groups for filesystems with a 4KB +blocksize. Filesystems can either be created using this new block group +descriptor layout, or existing filesystems can be resized on-line, and +the field s\_first\_meta\_bg in the superblock will indicate the first +block group using this new layout. + +Please see an important note about ``BLOCK_UNINIT`` in the section about +block and inode bitmaps. + +Lazy Block Group Initialization +------------------------------- + +A new feature for ext4 are three block group descriptor flags that +enable mkfs to skip initializing other parts of the block group +metadata. Specifically, the INODE\_UNINIT and BLOCK\_UNINIT flags mean +that the inode and block bitmaps for that group can be calculated and +therefore the on-disk bitmap blocks are not initialized. This is +generally the case for an empty block group or a block group containing +only fixed-location block group metadata. The INODE\_ZEROED flag means +that the inode table has been initialized; mkfs will unset this flag and +rely on the kernel to initialize the inode tables in the background. + +By not writing zeroes to the bitmaps and inode table, mkfs time is +reduced considerably. Note the feature flag is RO\_COMPAT\_GDT\_CSUM, +but the dumpe2fs output prints this as “uninit\_bg”. They are the same +thing. diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blocks.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blocks.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..73d4dc0f7bda --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/blocks.rst @@ -0,0 +1,142 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Blocks +------ + +ext4 allocates storage space in units of “blocks”. A block is a group of +sectors between 1KiB and 64KiB, and the number of sectors must be an +integral power of 2. Blocks are in turn grouped into larger units called +block groups. Block size is specified at mkfs time and typically is +4KiB. You may experience mounting problems if block size is greater than +page size (i.e. 64KiB blocks on a i386 which only has 4KiB memory +pages). By default a filesystem can contain 2^32 blocks; if the '64bit' +feature is enabled, then a filesystem can have 2^64 blocks. + +For 32-bit filesystems, limits are as follows: + +.. list-table:: + :widths: 1 1 1 1 1 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Item + - 1KiB + - 2KiB + - 4KiB + - 64KiB + * - Blocks + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + * - Inodes + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + * - File System Size + - 4TiB + - 8TiB + - 16TiB + - 256PiB + * - Blocks Per Block Group + - 8,192 + - 16,384 + - 32,768 + - 524,288 + * - Inodes Per Block Group + - 8,192 + - 16,384 + - 32,768 + - 524,288 + * - Block Group Size + - 8MiB + - 32MiB + - 128MiB + - 32GiB + * - Blocks Per File, Extents + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + * - Blocks Per File, Block Maps + - 16,843,020 + - 134,480,396 + - 1,074,791,436 + - 4,398,314,962,956 (really 2^32 due to field size limitations) + * - File Size, Extents + - 4TiB + - 8TiB + - 16TiB + - 256TiB + * - File Size, Block Maps + - 16GiB + - 256GiB + - 4TiB + - 256TiB + +For 64-bit filesystems, limits are as follows: + +.. list-table:: + :widths: 1 1 1 1 1 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Item + - 1KiB + - 2KiB + - 4KiB + - 64KiB + * - Blocks + - 2^64 + - 2^64 + - 2^64 + - 2^64 + * - Inodes + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + * - File System Size + - 16ZiB + - 32ZiB + - 64ZiB + - 1YiB + * - Blocks Per Block Group + - 8,192 + - 16,384 + - 32,768 + - 524,288 + * - Inodes Per Block Group + - 8,192 + - 16,384 + - 32,768 + - 524,288 + * - Block Group Size + - 8MiB + - 32MiB + - 128MiB + - 32GiB + * - Blocks Per File, Extents + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + - 2^32 + * - Blocks Per File, Block Maps + - 16,843,020 + - 134,480,396 + - 1,074,791,436 + - 4,398,314,962,956 (really 2^32 due to field size limitations) + * - File Size, Extents + - 4TiB + - 8TiB + - 16TiB + - 256TiB + * - File Size, Block Maps + - 16GiB + - 256GiB + - 4TiB + - 256TiB + +Note: Files not using extents (i.e. files using block maps) must be +placed within the first 2^32 blocks of a filesystem. Files with extents +must be placed within the first 2^48 blocks of a filesystem. It's not +clear what happens with larger filesystems. diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/checksums.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/checksums.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..9d6a793b2e03 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/checksums.rst @@ -0,0 +1,73 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Checksums +--------- + +Starting in early 2012, metadata checksums were added to all major ext4 +and jbd2 data structures. The associated feature flag is metadata\_csum. +The desired checksum algorithm is indicated in the superblock, though as +of October 2012 the only supported algorithm is crc32c. Some data +structures did not have space to fit a full 32-bit checksum, so only the +lower 16 bits are stored. Enabling the 64bit feature increases the data +structure size so that full 32-bit checksums can be stored for many data +structures. However, existing 32-bit filesystems cannot be extended to +enable 64bit mode, at least not without the experimental resize2fs +patches to do so. + +Existing filesystems can have checksumming added by running +``tune2fs -O metadata_csum`` against the underlying device. If tune2fs +encounters directory blocks that lack sufficient empty space to add a +checksum, it will request that you run ``e2fsck -D`` to have the +directories rebuilt with checksums. This has the added benefit of +removing slack space from the directory files and rebalancing the htree +indexes. If you \_ignore\_ this step, your directories will not be +protected by a checksum! + +The following table describes the data elements that go into each type +of checksum. The checksum function is whatever the superblock describes +(crc32c as of October 2013) unless noted otherwise. + +.. list-table:: + :widths: 1 1 4 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - Metadata + - Length + - Ingredients + * - Superblock + - \_\_le32 + - The entire superblock up to the checksum field. The UUID lives inside + the superblock. + * - MMP + - \_\_le32 + - UUID + the entire MMP block up to the checksum field. + * - Extended Attributes + - \_\_le32 + - UUID + the entire extended attribute block. The checksum field is set to + zero. + * - Directory Entries + - \_\_le32 + - UUID + inode number + inode generation + the directory block up to the + fake entry enclosing the checksum field. + * - HTREE Nodes + - \_\_le32 + - UUID + inode number + inode generation + all valid extents + HTREE tail. + The checksum field is set to zero. + * - Extents + - \_\_le32 + - UUID + inode number + inode generation + the entire extent block up to + the checksum field. + * - Bitmaps + - \_\_le32 or \_\_le16 + - UUID + the entire bitmap. Checksums are stored in the group descriptor, + and truncated if the group descriptor size is 32 bytes (i.e. ^64bit) + * - Inodes + - \_\_le32 + - UUID + inode number + inode generation + the entire inode. The checksum + field is set to zero. Each inode has its own checksum. + * - Group Descriptors + - \_\_le16 + - If metadata\_csum, then UUID + group number + the entire descriptor; + else if gdt\_csum, then crc16(UUID + group number + the entire + descriptor). In all cases, only the lower 16 bits are stored. + diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/eainode.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/eainode.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..ecc0d01a0a72 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/eainode.rst @@ -0,0 +1,18 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Large Extended Attribute Values +------------------------------- + +To enable ext4 to store extended attribute values that do not fit in the +inode or in the single extended attribute block attached to an inode, +the EA\_INODE feature allows us to store the value in the data blocks of +a regular file inode. This “EA inode” is linked only from the extended +attribute name index and must not appear in a directory entry. The +inode's i\_atime field is used to store a checksum of the xattr value; +and i\_ctime/i\_version store a 64-bit reference count, which enables +sharing of large xattr values between multiple owning inodes. For +backward compatibility with older versions of this feature, the +i\_mtime/i\_generation *may* store a back-reference to the inode number +and i\_generation of the **one** owning inode (in cases where the EA +inode is not referenced by multiple inodes) to verify that the EA inode +is the correct one being accessed. diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/index.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/index.rst index 98cde12ee8cb..282ba197b6b2 100644 --- a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/index.rst +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/index.rst @@ -4,3 +4,4 @@ Data Structures and Algorithms ============================== .. include:: about.rst +.. include:: overview.rst diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/inlinedata.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/inlinedata.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..d1075178ce0b --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/inlinedata.rst @@ -0,0 +1,37 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Inline Data +----------- + +The inline data feature was designed to handle the case that a file's +data is so tiny that it readily fits inside the inode, which +(theoretically) reduces disk block consumption and reduces seeks. If the +file is smaller than 60 bytes, then the data are stored inline in +``inode.i_block``. If the rest of the file would fit inside the extended +attribute space, then it might be found as an extended attribute +“system.data” within the inode body (“ibody EA”). This of course +constrains the amount of extended attributes one can attach to an inode. +If the data size increases beyond i\_block + ibody EA, a regular block +is allocated and the contents moved to that block. + +Pending a change to compact the extended attribute key used to store +inline data, one ought to be able to store 160 bytes of data in a +256-byte inode (as of June 2015, when i\_extra\_isize is 28). Prior to +that, the limit was 156 bytes due to inefficient use of inode space. + +The inline data feature requires the presence of an extended attribute +for “system.data”, even if the attribute value is zero length. + +Inline Directories +~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ + +The first four bytes of i\_block are the inode number of the parent +directory. Following that is a 56-byte space for an array of directory +entries; see ``struct ext4_dir_entry``. If there is a “system.data” +attribute in the inode body, the EA value is an array of +``struct ext4_dir_entry`` as well. Note that for inline directories, the +i\_block and EA space are treated as separate dirent blocks; directory +entries cannot span the two. + +Inline directory entries are not checksummed, as the inode checksum +should protect all inline data contents. diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/overview.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/overview.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..cbab18baba12 --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/overview.rst @@ -0,0 +1,26 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +High Level Design +================= + +An ext4 file system is split into a series of block groups. To reduce +performance difficulties due to fragmentation, the block allocator tries +very hard to keep each file's blocks within the same group, thereby +reducing seek times. The size of a block group is specified in +``sb.s_blocks_per_group`` blocks, though it can also calculated as 8 \* +``block_size_in_bytes``. With the default block size of 4KiB, each group +will contain 32,768 blocks, for a length of 128MiB. The number of block +groups is the size of the device divided by the size of a block group. + +All fields in ext4 are written to disk in little-endian order. HOWEVER, +all fields in jbd2 (the journal) are written to disk in big-endian +order. + +.. include:: blocks.rst +.. include:: blockgroup.rst +.. include:: special_inodes.rst +.. include:: allocators.rst +.. include:: checksums.rst +.. include:: bigalloc.rst +.. include:: inlinedata.rst +.. include:: eainode.rst diff --git a/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/special_inodes.rst b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/special_inodes.rst new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..a82f70c9baeb --- /dev/null +++ b/Documentation/filesystems/ext4/ondisk/special_inodes.rst @@ -0,0 +1,38 @@ +.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 + +Special inodes +-------------- + +ext4 reserves some inode for special features, as follows: + +.. list-table:: + :widths: 1 79 + :header-rows: 1 + + * - inode Number + - Purpose + * - 0 + - Doesn't exist; there is no inode 0. + * - 1 + - List of defective blocks. + * - 2 + - Root directory. + * - 3 + - User quota. + * - 4 + - Group quota. + * - 5 + - Boot loader. + * - 6 + - Undelete directory. + * - 7 + - Reserved group descriptors inode. (“resize inode”) + * - 8 + - Journal inode. + * - 9 + - The “exclude” inode, for snapshots(?) + * - 10 + - Replica inode, used for some non-upstream feature? + * - 11 + - Traditional first non-reserved inode. Usually this is the lost+found directory. See s\_first\_ino in the superblock. + |