summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/Documentation/filesystems/ubifs.txt
blob: 7d17e5b91ff4c84236ed282a61486e359ddbd206 (plain)
1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
Introduction
=============

UBIFS file-system stands for UBI File System. UBI stands for "Unsorted
Block Images". UBIFS is a flash file system, which means it is designed
to work with flash devices. It is important to understand, that UBIFS
is completely different to any traditional file-system in Linux, like
Ext2, XFS, JFS, etc. UBIFS represents a separate class of file-systems
which work with MTD devices, not block devices. The other Linux
file-system of this class is JFFS2.

To make it more clear, here is a small comparison of MTD devices and
block devices.

1 MTD devices represent flash devices and they consist of eraseblocks of
  rather large size, typically about 128KiB. Block devices consist of
  small blocks, typically 512 bytes.
2 MTD devices support 3 main operations - read from some offset within an
  eraseblock, write to some offset within an eraseblock, and erase a whole
  eraseblock. Block  devices support 2 main operations - read a whole
  block and write a whole block.
3 The whole eraseblock has to be erased before it becomes possible to
  re-write its contents. Blocks may be just re-written.
4 Eraseblocks become worn out after some number of erase cycles -
  typically 100K-1G for SLC NAND and NOR flashes, and 1K-10K for MLC
  NAND flashes. Blocks do not have the wear-out property.
5 Eraseblocks may become bad (only on NAND flashes) and software should
  deal with this. Blocks on hard drives typically do not become bad,
  because hardware has mechanisms to substitute bad blocks, at least in
  modern LBA disks.

It should be quite obvious why UBIFS is very different to traditional
file-systems.

UBIFS works on top of UBI. UBI is a separate software layer which may be
found in drivers/mtd/ubi. UBI is basically a volume management and
wear-leveling layer. It provides so called UBI volumes which is a higher
level abstraction than a MTD device. The programming model of UBI devices
is very similar to MTD devices - they still consist of large eraseblocks,
they have read/write/erase operations, but UBI devices are devoid of
limitations like wear and bad blocks (items 4 and 5 in the above list).

In a sense, UBIFS is a next generation of JFFS2 file-system, but it is
very different and incompatible to JFFS2. The following are the main
differences.

* JFFS2 works on top of MTD devices, UBIFS depends on UBI and works on
  top of UBI volumes.
* JFFS2 does not have on-media index and has to build it while mounting,
  which requires full media scan. UBIFS maintains the FS indexing
  information on the flash media and does not require full media scan,
  so it mounts many times faster than JFFS2.
* JFFS2 is a write-through file-system, while UBIFS supports write-back,
  which makes UBIFS much faster on writes.

Similarly to JFFS2, UBIFS supports on-the-flight compression which makes
it possible to fit quite a lot of data to the flash.

Similarly to JFFS2, UBIFS is tolerant of unclean reboots and power-cuts.
It does not need stuff like fsck.ext2. UBIFS automatically replays its
journal and recovers from crashes, ensuring that the on-flash data
structures are consistent.

UBIFS scales logarithmically (most of the data structures it uses are
trees), so the mount time and memory consumption do not linearly depend
on the flash size, like in case of JFFS2. This is because UBIFS
maintains the FS index on the flash media. However, UBIFS depends on
UBI, which scales linearly. So overall UBI/UBIFS stack scales linearly.
Nevertheless, UBI/UBIFS scales considerably better than JFFS2.

The authors of UBIFS believe, that it is possible to develop UBI2 which
would scale logarithmically as well. UBI2 would support the same API as UBI,
but it would be binary incompatible to UBI. So UBIFS would not need to be
changed to use UBI2


Mount options
=============

(*) == default.

bulk_read		read more in one go to take advantage of flash
			media that read faster sequentially
no_bulk_read (*)	do not bulk-read
no_chk_data_crc (*)	skip checking of CRCs on data nodes in order to
			improve read performance. Use this option only
			if the flash media is highly reliable. The effect
			of this option is that corruption of the contents
			of a file can go unnoticed.
chk_data_crc		do not skip checking CRCs on data nodes
compr=none              override default compressor and set it to "none"
compr=lzo               override default compressor and set it to "lzo"
compr=zlib              override default compressor and set it to "zlib"


Quick usage instructions
========================

The UBI volume to mount is specified using "ubiX_Y" or "ubiX:NAME" syntax,
where "X" is UBI device number, "Y" is UBI volume number, and "NAME" is
UBI volume name.

Mount volume 0 on UBI device 0 to /mnt/ubifs:
$ mount -t ubifs ubi0_0 /mnt/ubifs

Mount "rootfs" volume of UBI device 0 to /mnt/ubifs ("rootfs" is volume
name):
$ mount -t ubifs ubi0:rootfs /mnt/ubifs

The following is an example of the kernel boot arguments to attach mtd0
to UBI and mount volume "rootfs":
ubi.mtd=0 root=ubi0:rootfs rootfstype=ubifs


Module Parameters for Debugging
===============================

When UBIFS has been compiled with debugging enabled, there are 3 module
parameters that are available to control aspects of testing and debugging.
The parameters are unsigned integers where each bit controls an option.
The parameters are:

debug_msgs	Selects which debug messages to display, as follows:

		Message Type				Flag value

		General messages			1
		Journal messages			2
		Mount messages				4
		Commit messages				8
		LEB search messages			16
		Budgeting messages			32
		Garbage collection messages		64
		Tree Node Cache (TNC) messages		128
		LEB properties (lprops) messages	256
		Input/output messages			512
		Log messages				1024
		Scan messages				2048
		Recovery messages			4096

debug_chks	Selects extra checks that UBIFS can do while running:

		Check					Flag value

		General checks				1
		Check Tree Node Cache (TNC)		2
		Check indexing tree size		4
		Check orphan area			8
		Check old indexing tree			16
		Check LEB properties (lprops)		32
		Check leaf nodes and inodes		64

debug_tsts	Selects a mode of testing, as follows:

		Test mode				Flag value

		Failure mode for recovery testing	4

For example, set debug_msgs to 5 to display General messages and Mount
messages.


References
==========

UBIFS documentation and FAQ/HOWTO at the MTD web site:
http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/doc/ubifs.html
http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/faq/ubifs.html