Commit ff3345fd authored by Hirofumi Ogawa's avatar Hirofumi Ogawa Committed by Arnaldo Carvalho de Melo

[PATCH] Remove Documentation/filesystems/fat_cvf.txt (3/5)

This removes the obsolete Documentation/filesystems/fat_cvf.txt.
parent e7ddc6ac
This is the main documentation for the CVF-FAT filesystem extension. 18Nov1998
Table of Contents:
1. The idea of CVF-FAT
2. Restrictions
3. Mount options
4. Description of the CVF-FAT interface
5. CVF Modules
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
1. The idea of CVF-FAT
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
CVF-FAT is a FAT filesystem extension that provides a generic interface for
Compressed Volume Files in FAT partitions. Popular CVF software, for
example, are Microsoft's Doublespace/Drivespace and Stac's Stacker.
Using the CVF-FAT interface, it is possible to load a module that handles
all the low-level disk access that has to do with on-the-fly compression
and decompression. Any other part of FAT filesystem access is still handled
by the FAT, MSDOS or VFAT or even UMSDOS driver.
CVF access works by redirecting certain low-level routines from the FAT
driver to a loadable, CVF-format specific module. This module must fake
a normal FAT filesystem to the FAT driver while doing all the extra stuff
like compression and decompression silently.
2. Restrictions
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- BMAP problems
CVF filesystems cannot do bmap. It's impossible in principle. Thus
all actions that require bmap do not work (swapping, writable mmapping).
Read-only mmapping works because the FAT driver has a hack for this
situation :) Well, writable mmapping should now work using the readpage
interface function which has been hacked into the FAT driver just for
CVF-FAT :)
- attention, DOSEmu users
You may have to unmount all CVF partitions before running DOSEmu depending
on your configuration. If DOSEmu is configured to use wholedisk or
partition access (this is often the case to let DOSEmu access
compressed partitions) there's a risk of destroying your compressed
partitions or crashing your system because of confused drivers.
Note that it is always safe to redirect the compressed partitions with
lredir or emufs.sys. Refer to the DOSEmu documentation for details.
3. Mount options
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
The CVF-FAT extension currently adds the following options to the FAT
driver's standard options:
cvf_format=xxx
Forces the driver to use the CVF module "xxx" instead of auto-detection.
Without this option, the CVF-FAT interface asks all currently loaded
CVF modules whether they recognize the CVF. Therefore, this option is
only necessary if the CVF format is not recognized correctly
because of bugs or incompatibilities in the CVF modules. (It skips
the detect_cvf call.) "xxx" may be the text "none" (without the quotes)
to inhibit using any of the loaded CVF modules, just in case a CVF
module insists on mounting plain FAT filesystems by misunderstanding.
"xxx" may also be the text "autoload", which has a special meaning for
a module loader, but does not skip auto-detection.
If the kernel supports kmod, the cvf_format=xxx option also controls
on-demand CVF module loading. Without this option, nothing is loaded
on demand. With cvf_format=xxx, a module "xxx" is requested automatically
before mounting the compressed filesystem (unless "xxx" is "none"). In
case there is a difference between the CVF format name and the module
name, setup aliases in your modules configuration. If the string "xxx"
is "autoload", a non-existent module "cvf_autoload" is requested which
can be used together with a special modules configuration (alias and
pre-install statements) in order to load more than one CVF module, let
them detect automatically which kind of CVF is to be mounted, and only
keep the "right" module in memory. For examples please refer to the
dmsdos documentation (ftp and http addresses see below).
cvf_options=yyy
Option string passed to the CVF module. I.e. only the "yyy" is passed
(without the quotes). The documentation for each CVF module should
explain it since it is interpreted only by the CVF module. Note that
the string must not contain a comma (",") - this would lead to
misinterpretation by the FAT driver, which would recognize the text
after a comma as a FAT driver option and might get confused or print
strange error messages. The documentation for the CVF module should
offer a different separation symbol, for example the dot "." or the
plus sign "+", which is only valid inside the string "yyy".
4. Description of the CVF-FAT interface
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Assuming you want to write your own CVF module, you need to write a lot of
interface functions. Most of them are covered in the kernel documentation
you can find on the net, and thus won't be described here. They have been
marked with "[...]" :-) Take a look at include/linux/fat_cvf.h.
struct cvf_format
{ int cvf_version;
char* cvf_version_text;
unsigned long int flags;
int (*detect_cvf) (struct super_block*sb);
int (*mount_cvf) (struct super_block*sb,char*options);
int (*unmount_cvf) (struct super_block*sb);
[...]
void (*zero_out_cluster) (struct inode*, int clusternr);
}
This structure defines the capabilities of a CVF module. It must be filled
out completely by a CVF module. Consider it as a kind of form that is used
to introduce the module to the FAT/CVF-FAT driver.
It contains...
- cvf_version:
A version id which must be unique. Choose one.
- cvf_version_text:
A human readable version string that should be one short word
describing the CVF format the module implements. This text is used
for the cvf_format option. This name must also be unique.
- flags:
Bit coded flags, currently only used for a readpage/mmap hack that
provides both mmap and readpage functionality. If CVF_USE_READPAGE
is set, mmap is set to generic_file_mmap and readpage is caught
and redirected to the cvf_readpage function. If it is not set,
readpage is set to generic_readpage and mmap is caught and redirected
to cvf_mmap. (If you want writable mmap use the readpage interface.)
- detect_cvf:
A function that is called to decide whether the filesystem is a CVF of
the type the module supports. The detect_cvf function must return 0
for "NO, I DON'T KNOW THIS GARBAGE" or anything >0 for "YES, THIS IS
THE KIND OF CVF I SUPPORT". The function must maintain the module
usage counters for safety, i.e. do MOD_INC_USE_COUNT at the beginning
and MOD_DEC_USE_COUNT at the end. The function *must not* assume that
successful recognition would lead to a call of the mount_cvf function
later.
- mount_cvf:
A function that sets up some values or initializes something additional
to what has to be done when a CVF is mounted. This is called at the
end of fat_read_super and must return 0 on success. Definitely, this
function must increment the module usage counter by MOD_INC_USE_COUNT.
This mount_cvf function is also responsible for interpreting a CVF
module specific option string (the "yyy" from the FAT mount option
"cvf_options=yyy") which cannot contain a comma (use for example the
dot "." as option separator symbol).
- unmount_cvf:
A function that is called when the filesystem is unmounted. Most likely
it only frees up some memory and calls MOD_DEC_USE_COUNT. The return
value might be ignored (it currently is ignored).
- [...]:
All other interface functions are "caught" FAT driver functions, i.e.
are executed by the FAT driver *instead* of the original FAT driver
functions. NULL means use the original FAT driver functions instead.
If you really want "no action", write a function that does nothing and
hang it in instead.
- zero_out_cluster:
The zero_out_cluster function is called when the fat driver wants to
zero out a (new) cluster. This is important for directories (mkdir).
If it is NULL, the FAT driver defaults to overwriting the whole
cluster with zeros. Note that clusternr is absolute, not relative
to the provided inode.
Notes:
1. The cvf_bmap function should be ignored. It really should never
get called from somewhere. I recommend redirecting it to a panic
or fatal error message so bugs show up immediately.
2. The cvf_writepage function is ignored. This is because the fat
driver doesn't support it. This might change in future. I recommend
setting it to NULL (i.e use default).
int register_cvf_format(struct cvf_format*cvf_format);
If you have just set up a variable containing the above structure,
call this function to introduce your CVF format to the FAT/CVF-FAT
driver. This is usually done in init_module. Be sure to check the
return value. Zero means success, everything else causes a kernel
message printed in the syslog describing the error that occurred.
Typical errors are:
- a module with the same version id is already registered or
- too many CVF formats. Hack fs/fat/cvf.c if you need more.
int unregister_cvf_format(struct cvf_format*cvf_format);
This is usually called in cleanup_module. Return value =0 means
success. An error only occurs if you try to unregister a CVF format
that has not been previously registered. The code uses the version id
to distinguish the modules, so be sure to keep it unique.
5. CVF Modules
------------------------------------------------------------------------------
Refer to the dmsdos module (the successor of the dmsdos filesystem) for a
sample implementation. It can currently be found at
ftp://fb9nt.uni-duisburg.de/pub/linux/dmsdos/dmsdos-x.y.z.tgz
ftp://sunsite.unc.edu/pub/Linux/system/Filesystems/dosfs/dmsdos-x.y.z.tgz
ftp://ftp.uni-stuttgart.de/pub/systems/linux/local/system/dmsdos-x.y.z.tgz
(where x.y.z is to be replaced with the actual version number). Full
documentation about dmsdos is included in the dmsdos package, but can also
be found at
http://fb9nt.uni-duisburg.de/mitarbeiter/gockel/software/dmsdos/index.html
http://www.yk.rim.or.jp/~takafumi/dmsdos/index.html (in Japanese).
Markdown is supported
0%
or
You are about to add 0 people to the discussion. Proceed with caution.
Finish editing this message first!
Please register or to comment