diff options
author | Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com> | 2008-02-16 15:42:52 +0200 |
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committer | Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com> | 2008-04-17 11:31:58 +0300 |
commit | 92a74f1c1c9ca4d8009bfdea1c5febb7c0674f15 (patch) | |
tree | 513e647abdbad5137146ab7c765a3345ca18765c /drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h | |
parent | a4f0fcdfb2397e81d22446bb364dc190bf16b25a (diff) |
UBI: make ubi-header.h local
The new trend in linux is not to store headers which define
on-media format in the include/ directory, but instead, store
them locally. This is because these headers "do not define any
kernel<->userspace interface".
Do so for UBI as well.
Signed-off-by: Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h | 372 |
1 files changed, 372 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h b/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h new file mode 100644 index 000000000000..c3185d9fd048 --- /dev/null +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h @@ -0,0 +1,372 @@ +/* + * Copyright (c) International Business Machines Corp., 2006 + * + * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify + * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by + * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or + * (at your option) any later version. + * + * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful, + * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of + * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See + * the GNU General Public License for more details. + * + * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License + * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software + * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA + * + * Authors: Artem Bityutskiy (Битюцкий Артём) + * Thomas Gleixner + * Frank Haverkamp + * Oliver Lohmann + * Andreas Arnez + */ + +/* + * This file defines the layout of UBI headers and all the other UBI on-flash + * data structures. + */ + +#ifndef __UBI_MEDIA_H__ +#define __UBI_MEDIA_H__ + +#include <asm/byteorder.h> + +/* The version of UBI images supported by this implementation */ +#define UBI_VERSION 1 + +/* The highest erase counter value supported by this implementation */ +#define UBI_MAX_ERASECOUNTER 0x7FFFFFFF + +/* The initial CRC32 value used when calculating CRC checksums */ +#define UBI_CRC32_INIT 0xFFFFFFFFU + +/* Erase counter header magic number (ASCII "UBI#") */ +#define UBI_EC_HDR_MAGIC 0x55424923 +/* Volume identifier header magic number (ASCII "UBI!") */ +#define UBI_VID_HDR_MAGIC 0x55424921 + +/* + * Volume type constants used in the volume identifier header. + * + * @UBI_VID_DYNAMIC: dynamic volume + * @UBI_VID_STATIC: static volume + */ +enum { + UBI_VID_DYNAMIC = 1, + UBI_VID_STATIC = 2 +}; + +/* + * Volume flags used in the volume table record. + * + * @UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG: auto-resize this volume + * + * %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG flag can be set only for one volume in the volume + * table. UBI automatically re-sizes the volume which has this flag and makes + * the volume to be of largest possible size. This means that if after the + * initialization UBI finds out that there are available physical eraseblocks + * present on the device, it automatically appends all of them to the volume + * (the physical eraseblocks reserved for bad eraseblocks handling and other + * reserved physical eraseblocks are not taken). So, if there is a volume with + * the %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG flag set, the amount of available logical + * eraseblocks will be zero after UBI is loaded, because all of them will be + * reserved for this volume. Note, the %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG bit is cleared + * after the volume had been initialized. + * + * The auto-resize feature is useful for device production purposes. For + * example, different NAND flash chips may have different amount of initial bad + * eraseblocks, depending of particular chip instance. Manufacturers of NAND + * chips usually guarantee that the amount of initial bad eraseblocks does not + * exceed certain percent, e.g. 2%. When one creates an UBI image which will be + * flashed to the end devices in production, he does not know the exact amount + * of good physical eraseblocks the NAND chip on the device will have, but this + * number is required to calculate the volume sized and put them to the volume + * table of the UBI image. In this case, one of the volumes (e.g., the one + * which will store the root file system) is marked as "auto-resizable", and + * UBI will adjust its size on the first boot if needed. + * + * Note, first UBI reserves some amount of physical eraseblocks for bad + * eraseblock handling, and then re-sizes the volume, not vice-versa. This + * means that the pool of reserved physical eraseblocks will always be present. + */ +enum { + UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG = 0x01, +}; + +/* + * Compatibility constants used by internal volumes. + * + * @UBI_COMPAT_DELETE: delete this internal volume before anything is written + * to the flash + * @UBI_COMPAT_RO: attach this device in read-only mode + * @UBI_COMPAT_PRESERVE: preserve this internal volume - do not touch its + * physical eraseblocks, don't allow the wear-leveling unit to move them + * @UBI_COMPAT_REJECT: reject this UBI image + */ +enum { + UBI_COMPAT_DELETE = 1, + UBI_COMPAT_RO = 2, + UBI_COMPAT_PRESERVE = 4, + UBI_COMPAT_REJECT = 5 +}; + +/* Sizes of UBI headers */ +#define UBI_EC_HDR_SIZE sizeof(struct ubi_ec_hdr) +#define UBI_VID_HDR_SIZE sizeof(struct ubi_vid_hdr) + +/* Sizes of UBI headers without the ending CRC */ +#define UBI_EC_HDR_SIZE_CRC (UBI_EC_HDR_SIZE - sizeof(__be32)) +#define UBI_VID_HDR_SIZE_CRC (UBI_VID_HDR_SIZE - sizeof(__be32)) + +/** + * struct ubi_ec_hdr - UBI erase counter header. + * @magic: erase counter header magic number (%UBI_EC_HDR_MAGIC) + * @version: version of UBI implementation which is supposed to accept this + * UBI image + * @padding1: reserved for future, zeroes + * @ec: the erase counter + * @vid_hdr_offset: where the VID header starts + * @data_offset: where the user data start + * @padding2: reserved for future, zeroes + * @hdr_crc: erase counter header CRC checksum + * + * The erase counter header takes 64 bytes and has a plenty of unused space for + * future usage. The unused fields are zeroed. The @version field is used to + * indicate the version of UBI implementation which is supposed to be able to + * work with this UBI image. If @version is greater then the current UBI + * version, the image is rejected. This may be useful in future if something + * is changed radically. This field is duplicated in the volume identifier + * header. + * + * The @vid_hdr_offset and @data_offset fields contain the offset of the the + * volume identifier header and user data, relative to the beginning of the + * physical eraseblock. These values have to be the same for all physical + * eraseblocks. + */ +struct ubi_ec_hdr { + __be32 magic; + __u8 version; + __u8 padding1[3]; + __be64 ec; /* Warning: the current limit is 31-bit anyway! */ + __be32 vid_hdr_offset; + __be32 data_offset; + __u8 padding2[36]; + __be32 hdr_crc; +} __attribute__ ((packed)); + +/** + * struct ubi_vid_hdr - on-flash UBI volume identifier header. + * @magic: volume identifier header magic number (%UBI_VID_HDR_MAGIC) + * @version: UBI implementation version which is supposed to accept this UBI + * image (%UBI_VERSION) + * @vol_type: volume type (%UBI_VID_DYNAMIC or %UBI_VID_STATIC) + * @copy_flag: if this logical eraseblock was copied from another physical + * eraseblock (for wear-leveling reasons) + * @compat: compatibility of this volume (%0, %UBI_COMPAT_DELETE, + * %UBI_COMPAT_IGNORE, %UBI_COMPAT_PRESERVE, or %UBI_COMPAT_REJECT) + * @vol_id: ID of this volume + * @lnum: logical eraseblock number + * @leb_ver: version of this logical eraseblock (IMPORTANT: obsolete, to be + * removed, kept only for not breaking older UBI users) + * @data_size: how many bytes of data this logical eraseblock contains + * @used_ebs: total number of used logical eraseblocks in this volume + * @data_pad: how many bytes at the end of this physical eraseblock are not + * used + * @data_crc: CRC checksum of the data stored in this logical eraseblock + * @padding1: reserved for future, zeroes + * @sqnum: sequence number + * @padding2: reserved for future, zeroes + * @hdr_crc: volume identifier header CRC checksum + * + * The @sqnum is the value of the global sequence counter at the time when this + * VID header was created. The global sequence counter is incremented each time + * UBI writes a new VID header to the flash, i.e. when it maps a logical + * eraseblock to a new physical eraseblock. The global sequence counter is an + * unsigned 64-bit integer and we assume it never overflows. The @sqnum + * (sequence number) is used to distinguish between older and newer versions of + * logical eraseblocks. + * + * There are 2 situations when there may be more then one physical eraseblock + * corresponding to the same logical eraseblock, i.e., having the same @vol_id + * and @lnum values in the volume identifier header. Suppose we have a logical + * eraseblock L and it is mapped to the physical eraseblock P. + * + * 1. Because UBI may erase physical eraseblocks asynchronously, the following + * situation is possible: L is asynchronously erased, so P is scheduled for + * erasure, then L is written to,i.e. mapped to another physical eraseblock P1, + * so P1 is written to, then an unclean reboot happens. Result - there are 2 + * physical eraseblocks P and P1 corresponding to the same logical eraseblock + * L. But P1 has greater sequence number, so UBI picks P1 when it attaches the + * flash. + * + * 2. From time to time UBI moves logical eraseblocks to other physical + * eraseblocks for wear-leveling reasons. If, for example, UBI moves L from P + * to P1, and an unclean reboot happens before P is physically erased, there + * are two physical eraseblocks P and P1 corresponding to L and UBI has to + * select one of them when the flash is attached. The @sqnum field says which + * PEB is the original (obviously P will have lower @sqnum) and the copy. But + * it is not enough to select the physical eraseblock with the higher sequence + * number, because the unclean reboot could have happen in the middle of the + * copying process, so the data in P is corrupted. It is also not enough to + * just select the physical eraseblock with lower sequence number, because the + * data there may be old (consider a case if more data was added to P1 after + * the copying). Moreover, the unclean reboot may happen when the erasure of P + * was just started, so it result in unstable P, which is "mostly" OK, but + * still has unstable bits. + * + * UBI uses the @copy_flag field to indicate that this logical eraseblock is a + * copy. UBI also calculates data CRC when the data is moved and stores it at + * the @data_crc field of the copy (P1). So when UBI needs to pick one physical + * eraseblock of two (P or P1), the @copy_flag of the newer one (P1) is + * examined. If it is cleared, the situation* is simple and the newer one is + * picked. If it is set, the data CRC of the copy (P1) is examined. If the CRC + * checksum is correct, this physical eraseblock is selected (P1). Otherwise + * the older one (P) is selected. + * + * Note, there is an obsolete @leb_ver field which was used instead of @sqnum + * in the past. But it is not used anymore and we keep it in order to be able + * to deal with old UBI images. It will be removed at some point. + * + * There are 2 sorts of volumes in UBI: user volumes and internal volumes. + * Internal volumes are not seen from outside and are used for various internal + * UBI purposes. In this implementation there is only one internal volume - the + * layout volume. Internal volumes are the main mechanism of UBI extensions. + * For example, in future one may introduce a journal internal volume. Internal + * volumes have their own reserved range of IDs. + * + * The @compat field is only used for internal volumes and contains the "degree + * of their compatibility". It is always zero for user volumes. This field + * provides a mechanism to introduce UBI extensions and to be still compatible + * with older UBI binaries. For example, if someone introduced a journal in + * future, he would probably use %UBI_COMPAT_DELETE compatibility for the + * journal volume. And in this case, older UBI binaries, which know nothing + * about the journal volume, would just delete this volume and work perfectly + * fine. This is similar to what Ext2fs does when it is fed by an Ext3fs image + * - it just ignores the Ext3fs journal. + * + * The @data_crc field contains the CRC checksum of the contents of the logical + * eraseblock if this is a static volume. In case of dynamic volumes, it does + * not contain the CRC checksum as a rule. The only exception is when the + * data of the physical eraseblock was moved by the wear-leveling unit, then + * the wear-leveling unit calculates the data CRC and stores it in the + * @data_crc field. And of course, the @copy_flag is %in this case. + * + * The @data_size field is used only for static volumes because UBI has to know + * how many bytes of data are stored in this eraseblock. For dynamic volumes, + * this field usually contains zero. The only exception is when the data of the + * physical eraseblock was moved to another physical eraseblock for + * wear-leveling reasons. In this case, UBI calculates CRC checksum of the + * contents and uses both @data_crc and @data_size fields. In this case, the + * @data_size field contains data size. + * + * The @used_ebs field is used only for static volumes and indicates how many + * eraseblocks the data of the volume takes. For dynamic volumes this field is + * not used and always contains zero. + * + * The @data_pad is calculated when volumes are created using the alignment + * parameter. So, effectively, the @data_pad field reduces the size of logical + * eraseblocks of this volume. This is very handy when one uses block-oriented + * software (say, cramfs) on top of the UBI volume. + */ +struct ubi_vid_hdr { + __be32 magic; + __u8 version; + __u8 vol_type; + __u8 copy_flag; + __u8 compat; + __be32 vol_id; + __be32 lnum; + __be32 leb_ver; /* obsolete, to be removed, don't use */ + __be32 data_size; + __be32 used_ebs; + __be32 data_pad; + __be32 data_crc; + __u8 padding1[4]; + __be64 sqnum; + __u8 padding2[12]; + __be32 hdr_crc; +} __attribute__ ((packed)); + +/* Internal UBI volumes count */ +#define UBI_INT_VOL_COUNT 1 + +/* + * Starting ID of internal volumes. There is reserved room for 4096 internal + * volumes. + */ +#define UBI_INTERNAL_VOL_START (0x7FFFFFFF - 4096) + +/* The layout volume contains the volume table */ + +#define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ID UBI_INTERNAL_VOL_START +#define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_TYPE UBI_VID_DYNAMIC +#define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ALIGN 1 +#define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_EBS 2 +#define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_NAME "layout volume" +#define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_COMPAT UBI_COMPAT_REJECT + +/* The maximum number of volumes per one UBI device */ +#define UBI_MAX_VOLUMES 128 + +/* The maximum volume name length */ +#define UBI_VOL_NAME_MAX 127 + +/* Size of the volume table record */ +#define UBI_VTBL_RECORD_SIZE sizeof(struct ubi_vtbl_record) + +/* Size of the volume table record without the ending CRC */ +#define UBI_VTBL_RECORD_SIZE_CRC (UBI_VTBL_RECORD_SIZE - sizeof(__be32)) + +/** + * struct ubi_vtbl_record - a record in the volume table. + * @reserved_pebs: how many physical eraseblocks are reserved for this volume + * @alignment: volume alignment + * @data_pad: how many bytes are unused at the end of the each physical + * eraseblock to satisfy the requested alignment + * @vol_type: volume type (%UBI_DYNAMIC_VOLUME or %UBI_STATIC_VOLUME) + * @upd_marker: if volume update was started but not finished + * @name_len: volume name length + * @name: the volume name + * @flags: volume flags (%UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG) + * @padding: reserved, zeroes + * @crc: a CRC32 checksum of the record + * + * The volume table records are stored in the volume table, which is stored in + * the layout volume. The layout volume consists of 2 logical eraseblock, each + * of which contains a copy of the volume table (i.e., the volume table is + * duplicated). The volume table is an array of &struct ubi_vtbl_record + * objects indexed by the volume ID. + * + * If the size of the logical eraseblock is large enough to fit + * %UBI_MAX_VOLUMES records, the volume table contains %UBI_MAX_VOLUMES + * records. Otherwise, it contains as many records as it can fit (i.e., size of + * logical eraseblock divided by sizeof(struct ubi_vtbl_record)). + * + * The @upd_marker flag is used to implement volume update. It is set to %1 + * before update and set to %0 after the update. So if the update operation was + * interrupted, UBI knows that the volume is corrupted. + * + * The @alignment field is specified when the volume is created and cannot be + * later changed. It may be useful, for example, when a block-oriented file + * system works on top of UBI. The @data_pad field is calculated using the + * logical eraseblock size and @alignment. The alignment must be multiple to the + * minimal flash I/O unit. If @alignment is 1, all the available space of + * the physical eraseblocks is used. + * + * Empty records contain all zeroes and the CRC checksum of those zeroes. + */ +struct ubi_vtbl_record { + __be32 reserved_pebs; + __be32 alignment; + __be32 data_pad; + __u8 vol_type; + __u8 upd_marker; + __be16 name_len; + __u8 name[UBI_VOL_NAME_MAX+1]; + __u8 flags; + __u8 padding[23]; + __be32 crc; +} __attribute__ ((packed)); + +#endif /* !__UBI_MEDIA_H__ */ |