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| ## The design of the little filesystem | ||||
|  | ||||
| The littlefs is a little fail-safe filesystem designed for embedded systems. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|    | | |     .---._____ | ||||
|   .-----.   |          | | ||||
| --|o    |---| littlefs | | ||||
| --|     |---|          | | ||||
|   '-----'   '----------' | ||||
|    | | | | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| For a bit of backstory, the littlefs was developed with the goal of learning | ||||
| more about filesystem design by tackling the relative unsolved problem of | ||||
| managing a robust filesystem resilient to power loss on devices | ||||
| with limited RAM and ROM. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The embedded systems the littlefs is targeting are usually 32bit | ||||
| microcontrollers with around 32Kbytes of RAM and 512Kbytes of ROM. These are | ||||
| often paired with SPI NOR flash chips with about 4Mbytes of flash storage. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Flash itself is a very interesting piece of technology with quite a bit of | ||||
| nuance. Unlike most other forms of storage, writing to flash requires two | ||||
| operations: erasing and programming. The programming operation is relatively | ||||
| cheap, and can be very granular. For NOR flash specifically, byte-level | ||||
| programs are quite common. Erasing, however, requires an expensive operation | ||||
| that forces the state of large blocks of memory to reset in a destructive | ||||
| reaction that gives flash its name. The [Wikipedia entry](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_memory) | ||||
| has more information if you are interesting in how this works. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This leaves us with an interesting set of limitations that can be simplified | ||||
| to three strong requirements: | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. **Fail-safe** - This is actually the main goal of the littlefs and the focus | ||||
|    of this project. Embedded systems are usually designed without a shutdown | ||||
|    routine and a notable lack of user interface for recovery, so filesystems | ||||
|    targeting embedded systems should be prepared to lose power an any given | ||||
|    time. | ||||
|  | ||||
|    Despite this state of things, there are very few embedded filesystems that | ||||
|    handle power loss in a reasonable manner, and can become corrupted if the | ||||
|    user is unlucky enough. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 2. **Wear awareness** - Due to the destructive nature of flash, most flash | ||||
|    chips have a limited number of erase cycles, usually in the order of around | ||||
|    100,000 erases per block for NOR flash. Filesystems that don't take wear | ||||
|    into account can easily burn through blocks used to store frequently updated | ||||
|    metadata. | ||||
|  | ||||
|    Consider the [FAT filesystem](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Design_of_the_FAT_file_system), | ||||
|    which stores a file allocation table (FAT) at a specific offset from the | ||||
|    beginning of disk. Every block allocation will update this table, and after | ||||
|    100,000 updates, the block will likely go bad, rendering the filesystem | ||||
|    unusable even if there are many more erase cycles available on the storage. | ||||
|  | ||||
| 3. **Bounded RAM/ROM** - Even with the design difficulties presented by the | ||||
|    previous two limitations, we have already seen several flash filesystems | ||||
|    developed on PCs that handle power loss just fine, such as the | ||||
|    logging filesystems. However, these filesystems take advantage of the | ||||
|    relatively cheap access to RAM, and use some rather... opportunistic... | ||||
|    techniques, such as reconstructing the entire directory structure in RAM. | ||||
|    These operations make perfect sense when the filesystem's only concern is | ||||
|    erase cycles, but the idea is a bit silly on embedded systems. | ||||
|  | ||||
|    To cater to embedded systems, the littlefs has the simple limitation of | ||||
|    using only a bounded amount of RAM and ROM. That is, no matter what is | ||||
|    written to the filesystem, and no matter how large the underlying storage | ||||
|    is, the littlefs will always use the same amount of RAM and ROM. This | ||||
|    presents a very unique challenge, and makes presumably simple operations, | ||||
|    such as iterating through the directory tree, surprisingly difficult. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Existing designs? | ||||
|  | ||||
| There are of course, many different existing filesystem. Heres a very rough | ||||
| summary of the general ideas behind some of them. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Most of the existing filesystems fall into the one big category of filesystem | ||||
| designed in the early days of spinny magnet disks. While there is a vast amount | ||||
| of interesting technology and ideas in this area, the nature of spinny magnet | ||||
| disks encourage properties such as grouping writes near each other, that don't | ||||
| make as much sense on recent storage types. For instance, on flash, write | ||||
| locality is not as important and can actually increase wear destructively. | ||||
|  | ||||
| One of the most popular designs for flash filesystems is called the | ||||
| [logging filesystem](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Log-structured_file_system). | ||||
| The flash filesystems [jffs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/JFFS) | ||||
| and [yaffs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/YAFFS) are good examples. In | ||||
| logging filesystem, data is not store in a data structure on disk, but instead | ||||
| the changes to the files are stored on disk. This has several neat advantages, | ||||
| such as the fact that the data is written in a cyclic log format naturally | ||||
| wear levels as a side effect. And, with a bit of error detection, the entire | ||||
| filesystem can easily be designed to be resilient to power loss. The | ||||
| journalling component of most modern day filesystems is actually a reduced | ||||
| form of a logging filesystem. However, logging filesystems have a difficulty | ||||
| scaling as the size of storage increases. And most filesystems compensate by | ||||
| caching large parts of the filesystem in RAM, a strategy that is unavailable | ||||
| for embedded systems. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Another interesting filesystem design technique that the littlefs borrows the | ||||
| most from, is the [copy-on-write (COW)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write). | ||||
| A good example of this is the [btrfs](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Btrfs) | ||||
| filesystem. COW filesystems can easily recover from corrupted blocks and have | ||||
| natural protection against power loss. However, if they are not designed with | ||||
| wear in mind, a COW filesystem could unintentionally wear down the root block | ||||
| where the COW data structures are synchronized. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Metadata pairs | ||||
|  | ||||
| The core piece of technology that provides the backbone for the littlefs is | ||||
| the concept of metadata pairs. The key idea here, is that any metadata that | ||||
| needs to be updated atomically is stored on a pair of blocks tagged with | ||||
| a revision count and checksum. Every update alternates between these two | ||||
| pairs, so that at any time there is always a backup containing the previous | ||||
| state of the metadata. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Consider a small example where each metadata pair has a revision count, | ||||
| a number as data, and the xor of the block as a quick checksum. If | ||||
| we update the data to a value of 9, and then to a value of 5, here is | ||||
| what the pair of blocks may look like after each update: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|   block 1   block 2        block 1   block 2        block 1   block 2 | ||||
| .---------.---------.    .---------.---------.    .---------.---------. | ||||
| | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |    | rev: 1  | rev: 2  |    | rev: 3  | rev: 2  | | ||||
| | data: 3 | data: 0 | -> | data: 3 | data: 9 | -> | data: 5 | data: 9 | | ||||
| | xor: 2  | xor: 0  |    | xor: 2  | xor: 11 |    | xor: 6  | xor: 11 | | ||||
| '---------'---------'    '---------'---------'    '---------'---------' | ||||
|                  let data = 9             let data = 5 | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| After each update, we can find the most up to date value of data by looking | ||||
| at the revision count. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Now consider what the blocks may look like if we suddenly loss power while | ||||
| changing the value of data to 5: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|   block 1   block 2        block 1   block 2        block 1   block 2 | ||||
| .---------.---------.    .---------.---------.    .---------.---------. | ||||
| | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |    | rev: 1  | rev: 2  |    | rev: 3  | rev: 2  | | ||||
| | data: 3 | data: 0 | -> | data: 3 | data: 9 | -x | data: 3 | data: 9 | | ||||
| | xor: 2  | xor: 0  |    | xor: 2  | xor: 11 |    | xor: 2  | xor: 11 | | ||||
| '---------'---------'    '---------'---------'    '---------'---------' | ||||
|                  let data = 9             let data = 5 | ||||
|                                           powerloss!!! | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| In this case, block 1 was partially written with a new revision count, but | ||||
| the littlefs hadn't made it to updating the value of data. However, if we | ||||
| check our checksum we notice that block 1 was corrupted. So we fall back to | ||||
| block 2 and use the value 9. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Using this concept, the littlefs is able to update metadata blocks atomically. | ||||
| There are a few other tweaks, such as using a 32bit crc and using sequence | ||||
| arithmetic to handle revision count overflow, but the basic concept | ||||
| is the same. These metadata pairs define the backbone of the littlefs, and the | ||||
| rest of the filesystem is built on top of these atomic updates. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Files | ||||
|  | ||||
| Now, the metadata pairs do come with some drawbacks. Most notably, each pair | ||||
| requires two blocks for each block of data. I'm sure users would be very | ||||
| unhappy if their storage was suddenly cut in half! Instead of storing | ||||
| everything in these metadata blocks, the littlefs uses a COW data structure | ||||
| for files which is in turn pointed to by a metadata block. When | ||||
| we update a file, we create a copies of any blocks that are modified until | ||||
| the metadata blocks are updated with the new copy. Once the metadata block | ||||
| points to the new copy, we deallocate the old blocks that are no longer in use. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Here is what updating a one-block file may look like: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|   block 1   block 2        block 1   block 2        block 1   block 2 | ||||
| .---------.---------.    .---------.---------.    .---------.---------. | ||||
| | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |    | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |    | rev: 1  | rev: 2  | | ||||
| | file: 4 | file: 0 | -> | file: 4 | file: 0 | -> | file: 4 | file: 5 | | ||||
| | xor: 5  | xor: 0  |    | xor: 5  | xor: 0  |    | xor: 5  | xor: 7  | | ||||
| '---------'---------'    '---------'---------'    '---------'---------' | ||||
|     |                        |                                  | | ||||
|     v                        v                                  v | ||||
|  block 4                  block 4    block 5       block 4    block 5 | ||||
| .--------.               .--------. .--------.    .--------. .--------. | ||||
| | old    |               | old    | | new    |    | old    | | new    | | ||||
| | data   |               | data   | | data   |    | data   | | data   | | ||||
| |        |               |        | |        |    |        | |        | | ||||
| '--------'               '--------' '--------'    '--------' '--------' | ||||
|             update data in file        update metadata pair | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| It doesn't matter if we lose power while writing block 5 with the new data, | ||||
| since the old data remains unmodified in block 4. This example also | ||||
| highlights how the atomic updates of the metadata blockss provide a | ||||
| synchronization barrier for the rest of the littlefs. | ||||
|  | ||||
| At this point, it may look like we are wasting an awfully large amount | ||||
| of space on the metadata. Just looking at that example, we are using | ||||
| three blocks to represent a file that fits comfortably in one! So instead | ||||
| of giving each file a metadata pair, we actually store the metadata for | ||||
| all files contained in a single directory in a single metadata block. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Now we could just leave files here, copying the entire file on write | ||||
| provides the synchronization without the duplicated memory requirements | ||||
| of the metadata blocks. However, we can do a bit better. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## CTZ linked-lists | ||||
|  | ||||
| There are many different data structures for representing the actual | ||||
| files in filesystems. Of these, the littlefs uses a rather unique [COW](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/0/0c/Cow_female_black_white.jpg) | ||||
| data structure that allows the filesystem to reuse unmodified parts of the | ||||
| file without additional metadata pairs. | ||||
|  | ||||
| First lets consider storing files in a simple linked-list. What happens when | ||||
| append a block? We have to change the last block in the linked-list to point | ||||
| to this new block, which means we have to copy out the last block, and change | ||||
| the second-to-last block, and then the third-to-last, and so on until we've | ||||
| copied out the entire file. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| Exhibit A: A linked-list | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |->| data 1 |->| data 2 |->| data 4 |->| data 5 |->| data 6 | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| To get around this, the littlefs, at its heart, stores files backwards. Each | ||||
| block points to its predecessor, with the first block containing no pointers. | ||||
| If you think about this, it makes a bit of sense. Appending blocks just point | ||||
| to their predecessor and no other blocks need to be updated. If we update | ||||
| a block in the middle, we will need to copy out the blocks that follow, | ||||
| but can reuse the blocks before the modified block. Since most file operations | ||||
| either reset the file each write or append to files, this design avoids | ||||
| copying the file in the most common cases. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| Exhibit B: A backwards linked-list | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |<-| data 1 |<-| data 2 |<-| data 4 |<-| data 5 |<-| data 6 | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| However, a backwards linked-list does come with a rather glaring problem. | ||||
| Iterating over a file _in order_ has a runtime of O(n^2). Gah! A quadratic | ||||
| runtime to just _read_ a file? That's awful. Keep in mind reading files are | ||||
| usually the most common filesystem operation. | ||||
|  | ||||
| To avoid this problem, the littlefs uses a multilayered linked-list. For | ||||
| every block that is divisible by a power of two, the block contains an | ||||
| additional pointer that points back by that power of two. Another way of | ||||
| thinking about this design is that there are actually many linked-lists | ||||
| threaded together, with each linked-lists skipping an increasing number | ||||
| of blocks. If you're familiar with data-structures, you may have also | ||||
| recognized that this is a deterministic skip-list. | ||||
|  | ||||
| To find the power of two factors efficiently, we can use the instruction | ||||
| [count trailing zeros (CTZ)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Count_trailing_zeros), | ||||
| which is where this linked-list's name comes from. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| Exhibit C: A backwards CTZ linked-list | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |<-| data 1 |<-| data 2 |<-| data 3 |<-| data 4 |<-| data 5 | | ||||
| |        |<-|        |--|        |<-|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |<-|        |--|        |--|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Taking exhibit C for example, here is the path from data block 5 to data | ||||
| block 1. You can see how data block 3 was completely skipped: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |  | data 1 |<-| data 2 |  | data 3 |  | data 4 |<-| data 5 | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |<-|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| The path to data block 0 is even more quick, requiring only two jumps: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |  | data 1 |  | data 2 |  | data 3 |  | data 4 |<-| data 5 | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |<-|        |--|        |--|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| The CTZ linked-list has quite a few interesting properties. All of the pointers | ||||
| in the block can be found by just knowing the index in the list of the current | ||||
| block, and, with a bit of math, the amortized overhead for the linked-list is | ||||
| only two pointers per block.  Most importantly, the CTZ linked-list has a | ||||
| worst case lookup runtime of O(logn), which brings the runtime of reading a | ||||
| file down to O(n logn). Given that the constant runtime is divided by the | ||||
| amount of data we can store in a block, this is pretty reasonable. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Here is what it might look like to update a file stored with a CTZ linked-list: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|                                       block 1   block 2 | ||||
|                                     .---------.---------. | ||||
|                                     | rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
|                                     | file: 6 | file: 0 | | ||||
|                                     | size: 4 | xor: 0  | | ||||
|                                     | xor: 3  | xor: 0  | | ||||
|                                     '---------'---------' | ||||
|                                         | | ||||
|                                         v | ||||
|   block 3     block 4     block 5     block 6 | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |<-| data 1 |<-| data 2 |<-| data 3 | | ||||
| |        |<-|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update data in file | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|                                       block 1   block 2 | ||||
|                                     .---------.---------. | ||||
|                                     | rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
|                                     | file: 6 | file: 0 | | ||||
|                                     | size: 4 | size: 0 | | ||||
|                                     | xor: 3  | xor: 0  | | ||||
|                                     '---------'---------' | ||||
|                                         | | ||||
|                                         v | ||||
|   block 3     block 4     block 5     block 6 | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | data 0 |<-| data 1 |<-| old    |<-| old    | | ||||
| |        |<-|        |--| data 2 |  | data 3 | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
|      ^ ^           ^ | ||||
|      | |           |      block 7     block 8     block 9    block 10 | ||||
|      | |           |    .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
|      | |           '----| new    |<-| new    |<-| new    |<-| new    | | ||||
|      | '----------------| data 2 |<-| data 3 |--| data 4 |  | data 5 | | ||||
|      '------------------|        |--|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
|                         '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update metadata pair | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|                                                    block 1   block 2 | ||||
|                                                  .---------.---------. | ||||
|                                                  | rev: 1  | rev: 2  | | ||||
|                                                  | file: 6 | file: 10| | ||||
|                                                  | size: 4 | size: 6 | | ||||
|                                                  | xor: 3  | xor: 14 | | ||||
|                                                  '---------'---------' | ||||
|                                                                 | | ||||
|                                                                 | | ||||
|   block 3     block 4     block 5     block 6                   | | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.                  | | ||||
| | data 0 |<-| data 1 |<-| old    |<-| old    |                  | | ||||
| |        |<-|        |--| data 2 |  | data 3 |                  | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |                  | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'                  | | ||||
|      ^ ^           ^                                            v | ||||
|      | |           |      block 7     block 8     block 9    block 10 | ||||
|      | |           |    .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
|      | |           '----| new    |<-| new    |<-| new    |<-| new    | | ||||
|      | '----------------| data 2 |<-| data 3 |--| data 4 |  | data 5 | | ||||
|      '------------------|        |--|        |--|        |  |        | | ||||
|                         '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Block allocation | ||||
|  | ||||
| So those two ideas provide the grounds for the filesystem. The metadata pairs | ||||
| give us directories, and the CTZ linked-lists give us files. But this leaves | ||||
| one big [elephant](https://upload.wikimedia.org/wikipedia/commons/3/37/African_Bush_Elephant.jpg) | ||||
| of a question. How do we get those blocks in the first place? | ||||
|  | ||||
| One common strategy is to store unallocated blocks in a big free list, and | ||||
| initially the littlefs was designed with this in mind. By storing a reference | ||||
| to the free list in every single metadata pair, additions to the free list | ||||
| could be updated atomically at the same time the replacement blocks were | ||||
| stored in the metadata pair. During boot, every metadata pair had to be | ||||
| scanned to find the most recent free list, but once the list was found the | ||||
| state of all free blocks becomes known. | ||||
|  | ||||
| However, this approach had several issues: | ||||
| - There was a lot of nuanced logic for adding blocks to the free list without | ||||
|   modifying the blocks, since the blocks remain active until the metadata is | ||||
|   updated. | ||||
| - The free list had to support both additions and removals in fifo order while | ||||
|   minimizing block erases. | ||||
| - The free list had to handle the case where the file system completely ran | ||||
|   out of blocks and may no longer be able to add blocks to the free list. | ||||
| - If we used a revision count to track the most recently updated free list, | ||||
|   metadata blocks that were left unmodified were ticking time bombs that would | ||||
|   cause the system to go haywire if the revision count overflowed | ||||
| - Every single metadata block wasted space to store these free list references. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Actually, to simplify, this approach had one massive glaring issue: complexity. | ||||
|  | ||||
| > Complexity leads to fallibility.   | ||||
| > Fallibility leads to unmaintainability.   | ||||
| > Unmaintainability leads to suffering.   | ||||
|  | ||||
| Or at least, complexity leads to increased code size, which is a problem | ||||
| for embedded systems. | ||||
|  | ||||
| In the end, the littlefs adopted more of a "drop it on the floor" strategy. | ||||
| That is, the littlefs doesn't actually store information about which blocks | ||||
| are free on the storage. The littlefs already stores which files _are_ in | ||||
| use, so to find a free block, the littlefs just takes all of the blocks that | ||||
| exist and subtract the blocks that are in use. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Of course, it's not quite that simple. Most filesystems that adopt this "drop | ||||
| it on the floor" strategy either rely on some properties inherent to the | ||||
| filesystem, such as the cyclic-buffer structure of logging filesystems, | ||||
| or use a bitmap or table stored in RAM to track free blocks, which scales | ||||
| with the size of storage and is problematic when you have limited RAM. You | ||||
| could iterate through every single block in storage and check it against | ||||
| every single block in the filesystem on every single allocation, but that | ||||
| would have an abhorrent runtime. | ||||
|  | ||||
| So the littlefs compromises. It doesn't store a bitmap the size of the storage, | ||||
| but it does store a little bit-vector that contains a fixed set lookahead | ||||
| for block allocations. During a block allocation, the lookahead vector is | ||||
| checked for any free blocks, if there are none, the lookahead region jumps | ||||
| forward and the entire filesystem is scanned for free blocks. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Here's what it might look like to allocate 4 blocks on a decently busy | ||||
| filesystem with a 32bit lookahead and a total of | ||||
| 128 blocks (512Kbytes of storage if blocks are 4Kbyte): | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| boot...         lookahead: | ||||
|                 fs blocks: fffff9fffffffffeffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| scanning...     lookahead: fffff9ff | ||||
|                 fs blocks: fffff9fffffffffeffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| alloc = 21      lookahead: fffffdff | ||||
|                 fs blocks: fffffdfffffffffeffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| alloc = 22      lookahead: ffffffff | ||||
|                 fs blocks: fffffffffffffffeffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| scanning...     lookahead:         fffffffe | ||||
|                 fs blocks: fffffffffffffffeffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| alloc = 63      lookahead:         ffffffff | ||||
|                 fs blocks: ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| scanning...     lookahead:         ffffffff | ||||
|                 fs blocks: ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| scanning...     lookahead:                 ffffffff | ||||
|                 fs blocks: ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| scanning...     lookahead:                         ffff0000 | ||||
|                 fs blocks: ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff0000 | ||||
| alloc = 112     lookahead:                         ffff8000 | ||||
|                 fs blocks: ffffffffffffffffffffffffffff8000 | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| While this lookahead approach still has an asymptotic runtime of O(n^2) to | ||||
| scan all of storage, the lookahead reduces the practical runtime to a | ||||
| reasonable amount. Bit-vectors are surprisingly compact, given only 16 bytes, | ||||
| the lookahead could track 128 blocks. For a 4Mbyte flash chip with 4Kbyte | ||||
| blocks, the littlefs would only need 8 passes to scan the entire storage. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The real benefit of this approach is just how much it simplified the design | ||||
| of the littlefs. Deallocating blocks is as simple as simply forgetting they | ||||
| exist, and there is absolutely no concern of bugs in the deallocation code | ||||
| causing difficult to detect memory leaks. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Directories | ||||
|  | ||||
| Now we just need directories to store our files. Since we already have | ||||
| metadata blocks that store information about files, lets just use these | ||||
| metadata blocks as the directories. Maybe turn the directories into linked | ||||
| lists of metadata blocks so it isn't limited by the number of files that fit | ||||
| in a single block. Add entries that represent other nested directories. | ||||
| Drop "." and ".." entries, cause who needs them. Dust off our hands and | ||||
| we now have a directory tree. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|             .--------. | ||||
|             |root dir| | ||||
|             | pair 0 | | ||||
|             |        | | ||||
|             '--------' | ||||
|             .-'    '-------------------------. | ||||
|            v                                  v | ||||
|       .--------.        .--------.        .--------. | ||||
|       | dir A  |------->| dir A  |        | dir B  | | ||||
|       | pair 0 |        | pair 1 |        | pair 0 | | ||||
|       |        |        |        |        |        | | ||||
|       '--------'        '--------'        '--------' | ||||
|       .-'    '-.            |             .-'    '-. | ||||
|      v          v           v            v          v | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | file C |  | file D |  | file E |  | file F |  | file G | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Unfortunately it turns out it's not that simple. See, iterating over a | ||||
| directory tree isn't actually all that easy, especially when you're trying | ||||
| to fit in a bounded amount of RAM, which rules out any recursive solution. | ||||
| And since our block allocator involves iterating over the entire filesystem | ||||
| tree, possibly multiple times in a single allocation, iteration needs to be | ||||
| efficient. | ||||
|  | ||||
| So, as a solution, the littlefs adopted a sort of threaded tree. Each | ||||
| directory not only contains pointers to all of its children, but also a | ||||
| pointer to the next directory. These pointers create a linked-list that | ||||
| is threaded through all of the directories in the filesystem. Since we | ||||
| only use this linked list to check for existance, the order doesn't actually | ||||
| matter. As an added plus, we can repurpose the pointer for the individual | ||||
| directory linked-lists and avoid using any additional space. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|             .--------. | ||||
|             |root dir|-. | ||||
|             | pair 0 | | | ||||
|    .--------|        |-' | ||||
|    |        '--------' | ||||
|    |        .-'    '-------------------------. | ||||
|    |       v                                  v | ||||
|    |  .--------.        .--------.        .--------. | ||||
|    '->| dir A  |------->| dir B  |------->| dir B  | | ||||
|       | pair 0 |        | pair 1 |        | pair 0 | | ||||
|       |        |        |        |        |        | | ||||
|       '--------'        '--------'        '--------' | ||||
|       .-'    '-.            |             .-'    '-. | ||||
|      v          v           v            v          v | ||||
| .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| | file C |  | file D |  | file E |  | file F |  | file G | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| |        |  |        |  |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
| '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| This threaded tree approach does come with a few tradeoffs. Now, anytime we | ||||
| want to manipulate the directory tree, we find ourselves having to update two | ||||
| pointers instead of one. For anyone familiar with creating atomic data | ||||
| structures this should set off a whole bunch of red flags. | ||||
|  | ||||
| But unlike the data structure guys, we can update a whole block atomically! So | ||||
| as long as we're really careful (and cheat a little bit), we can still | ||||
| manipulate the directory tree in a way that is resilient to power loss. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Consider how we might add a new directory. Since both pointers that reference | ||||
| it can come from the same directory, we only need a single atomic update to | ||||
| finagle the directory into the filesystem: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|    .--------. | ||||
|    |root dir|-. | ||||
|    | pair 0 | | | ||||
| .--|        |-' | ||||
| |  '--------' | ||||
| |      | | ||||
| |      v | ||||
| |  .--------. | ||||
| '->| dir A  | | ||||
|    | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        | | ||||
|    '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  create the new directory block | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|                .--------. | ||||
|                |root dir|-. | ||||
|                | pair 0 | | | ||||
|             .--|        |-' | ||||
|             |  '--------' | ||||
|             |      | | ||||
|             |      v | ||||
|             |  .--------. | ||||
| .--------.  '->| dir A  | | ||||
| | dir B  |---->| pair 0 | | ||||
| | pair 0 |     |        | | ||||
| |        |     '--------' | ||||
| '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update root to point to directory B | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|          .--------. | ||||
|          |root dir|-. | ||||
|          | pair 0 | | | ||||
| .--------|        |-' | ||||
| |        '--------' | ||||
| |        .-'    '-. | ||||
| |       v          v | ||||
| |  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| '->| dir B  |->| dir A  | | ||||
|    | pair 0 |  | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        |  |        | | ||||
|    '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Note that even though directory B was added after directory A, we insert | ||||
| directory B before directory A in the linked-list because it is convenient. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Now how about removal: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|          .--------.        .--------. | ||||
|          |root dir|------->|root dir|-. | ||||
|          | pair 0 |        | pair 1 | | | ||||
| .--------|        |--------|        |-' | ||||
| |        '--------'        '--------' | ||||
| |        .-'    '-.            | | ||||
| |       v          v           v | ||||
| |  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| '->| dir A  |->| dir B  |->| dir C  | | ||||
|    | pair 0 |  | pair 0 |  | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
|    '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update root to no longer contain directory B | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|    .--------.              .--------. | ||||
|    |root dir|------------->|root dir|-. | ||||
|    | pair 0 |              | pair 1 | | | ||||
| .--|        |--------------|        |-' | ||||
| |  '--------'              '--------' | ||||
| |      |                       | | ||||
| |      v                       v | ||||
| |  .--------.  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| '->| dir A  |->| dir B  |->| dir C  | | ||||
|    | pair 0 |  | pair 0 |  | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        |  |        |  |        | | ||||
|    '--------'  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  remove directory B from the linked-list | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|    .--------.  .--------. | ||||
|    |root dir|->|root dir|-. | ||||
|    | pair 0 |  | pair 1 | | | ||||
| .--|        |--|        |-' | ||||
| |  '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| |      |           | | ||||
| |      v           v | ||||
| |  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| '->| dir A  |->| dir C  | | ||||
|    | pair 0 |  | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        |  |        | | ||||
|    '--------'  '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Wait, wait, wait, wait, wait, that's not atomic at all! If power is lost after | ||||
| removing directory B from the root, directory B is still in the linked-list. | ||||
| We've just created a memory leak! | ||||
|  | ||||
| And to be honest, I don't have a clever solution for this case. As a | ||||
| side-effect of using multiple pointers in the threaded tree, the littlefs | ||||
| can end up with orphan blocks that have no parents and should have been | ||||
| removed. | ||||
|  | ||||
| To keep these orphan blocks from becoming a problem, the littlefs has a | ||||
| deorphan step that simply iterates through every directory in the linked-list | ||||
| and checks it against every directory entry in the filesystem to see if it | ||||
| has a parent. The deorphan step occurs on the first block allocation after | ||||
| boot, so orphans should never cause the littlefs to run out of storage | ||||
| prematurely. | ||||
|  | ||||
| And for my final trick, moving a directory: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|          .--------. | ||||
|          |root dir|-. | ||||
|          | pair 0 | | | ||||
| .--------|        |-' | ||||
| |        '--------' | ||||
| |        .-'    '-. | ||||
| |       v          v | ||||
| |  .--------.  .--------. | ||||
| '->| dir A  |->| dir B  | | ||||
|    | pair 0 |  | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        |  |        | | ||||
|    '--------'  '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update directory B to point to directory A | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|          .--------. | ||||
|          |root dir|-. | ||||
|          | pair 0 | | | ||||
| .--------|        |-' | ||||
| |        '--------' | ||||
| |    .-----'    '-. | ||||
| |    |             v | ||||
| |    |           .--------. | ||||
| |    |        .->| dir B  | | ||||
| |    |        |  | pair 0 | | ||||
| |    |        |  |        | | ||||
| |    |        |  '--------' | ||||
| |    |     .-------' | ||||
| |    v    v   | | ||||
| |  .--------. | | ||||
| '->| dir A  |-' | ||||
|    | pair 0 | | ||||
|    |        | | ||||
|    '--------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update root to no longer contain directory A | ||||
| v | ||||
|      .--------. | ||||
|      |root dir|-. | ||||
|      | pair 0 | | | ||||
| .----|        |-' | ||||
| |    '--------' | ||||
| |        | | ||||
| |        v | ||||
| |    .--------. | ||||
| | .->| dir B  | | ||||
| | |  | pair 0 | | ||||
| | '--|        |-. | ||||
| |    '--------' | | ||||
| |        |      | | ||||
| |        v      | | ||||
| |    .--------. | | ||||
| '--->| dir A  |-' | ||||
|      | pair 0 | | ||||
|      |        | | ||||
|      '--------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Note that once again we don't care about the ordering of directories in the | ||||
| linked-list, so we can simply leave directories in their old positions. This | ||||
| does make the diagrams a bit hard to draw, but the littlefs doesn't really | ||||
| care. | ||||
|  | ||||
| It's also worth noting that once again we have an operation that isn't actually | ||||
| atomic. After we add directory A to directory B, we could lose power, leaving | ||||
| directory A as a part of both the root directory and directory B. However, | ||||
| there isn't anything inherent to the littlefs that prevents a directory from | ||||
| having multiple parents, so in this case, we just allow that to happen. Extra | ||||
| care is taken to only remove a directory from the linked-list if there are | ||||
| no parents left in the filesystem. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Wear awareness | ||||
|  | ||||
| So now that we have all of the pieces of a filesystem, we can look at a more | ||||
| subtle attribute of embedded storage: The wear down of flash blocks. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The first concern for the littlefs, is that prefectly valid blocks can suddenly | ||||
| become unusable. As a nice side-effect of using a COW data-structure for files, | ||||
| we can simply move on to a different block when a file write fails. All | ||||
| modifications to files are performed in copies, so we will only replace the | ||||
| old file when we are sure none of the new file has errors. Directories, on | ||||
| the other hand, need a different strategy. | ||||
|  | ||||
| The solution to directory corruption in the littlefs relies on the redundant | ||||
| nature of the metadata pairs. If an error is detected during a write to one | ||||
| of the metadata pairs, we seek out a new block to take its place. Once we find | ||||
| a block without errors, we iterate through the directory tree, updating any | ||||
| references to the corrupted metadata pair to point to the new metadata block. | ||||
| Just like when we remove directories, we can lose power during this operation | ||||
| and end up with a desynchronized metadata pair in our filesystem. And just like | ||||
| when we remove directories, we leave the possibility of a desynchronized | ||||
| metadata pair up to the deorphan step to clean up. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Here's what encountering a directory error may look like with all of | ||||
| the directories and directory pointers fully expanded: | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|          root dir | ||||
|          block 1   block 2 | ||||
|        .---------.---------. | ||||
|        | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |--. | ||||
|        |         |         |-.| | ||||
| .------|         |         |-|' | ||||
| |.-----|         |         |-' | ||||
| ||     '---------'---------' | ||||
| ||       |||||'--------------------------------------------------. | ||||
| ||       ||||'-----------------------------------------.         | | ||||
| ||       |||'-----------------------------.            |         | | ||||
| ||       ||'--------------------.         |            |         | | ||||
| ||       |'-------.             |         |            |         | | ||||
| ||       v         v            v         v            v         v | ||||
| ||    dir A                  dir B                  dir C | ||||
| ||    block 3   block 4      block 5   block 6      block 7   block 8 | ||||
| ||  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------. | ||||
| |'->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
| '-->|         |         |->|         |         |->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         |         |  | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         |         |  |         |         | | ||||
|     '---------'---------'  '---------'---------'  '---------'---------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update directory B | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|          root dir | ||||
|          block 1   block 2 | ||||
|        .---------.---------. | ||||
|        | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |--. | ||||
|        |         |         |-.| | ||||
| .------|         |         |-|' | ||||
| |.-----|         |         |-' | ||||
| ||     '---------'---------' | ||||
| ||       |||||'--------------------------------------------------. | ||||
| ||       ||||'-----------------------------------------.         | | ||||
| ||       |||'-----------------------------.            |         | | ||||
| ||       ||'--------------------.         |            |         | | ||||
| ||       |'-------.             |         |            |         | | ||||
| ||       v         v            v         v            v         v | ||||
| ||    dir A                  dir B                  dir C | ||||
| ||    block 3   block 4      block 5   block 6      block 7   block 8 | ||||
| ||  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------. | ||||
| |'->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 2  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
| '-->|         |         |->|         | corrupt!|->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         | corrupt!|  |         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         | corrupt!|  |         |         | | ||||
|     '---------'---------'  '---------'---------'  '---------'---------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  oh no! corruption detected | ||||
| v  allocate a replacement block | ||||
|  | ||||
|          root dir | ||||
|          block 1   block 2 | ||||
|        .---------.---------. | ||||
|        | rev: 1  | rev: 0  |--. | ||||
|        |         |         |-.| | ||||
| .------|         |         |-|' | ||||
| |.-----|         |         |-' | ||||
| ||     '---------'---------' | ||||
| ||       |||||'----------------------------------------------------. | ||||
| ||       ||||'-------------------------------------------.         | | ||||
| ||       |||'-----------------------------.              |         | | ||||
| ||       ||'--------------------.         |              |         | | ||||
| ||       |'-------.             |         |              |         | | ||||
| ||       v         v            v         v              v         v | ||||
| ||    dir A                  dir B                    dir C | ||||
| ||    block 3   block 4      block 5   block 6        block 7   block 8 | ||||
| ||  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------.    .---------.---------. | ||||
| |'->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 2  |--->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
| '-->|         |         |->|         | corrupt!|--->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         | corrupt!| .->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         | corrupt!| |  |         |         | | ||||
|     '---------'---------'  '---------'---------' |  '---------'---------' | ||||
|                                        block 9   | | ||||
|                                      .---------. | | ||||
|                                      | rev: 2  |-' | ||||
|                                      |         | | ||||
|                                      |         | | ||||
|                                      |         | | ||||
|                                      '---------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  update root directory to contain block 9 | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|         root dir | ||||
|         block 1   block 2 | ||||
|       .---------.---------. | ||||
|       | rev: 1  | rev: 2  |--. | ||||
|       |         |         |-.| | ||||
| .-----|         |         |-|' | ||||
| |.----|         |         |-' | ||||
| ||    '---------'---------' | ||||
| ||       .--------'||||'----------------------------------------------. | ||||
| ||       |         |||'-------------------------------------.         | | ||||
| ||       |         ||'-----------------------.              |         | | ||||
| ||       |         |'------------.           |              |         | | ||||
| ||       |         |             |           |              |         | | ||||
| ||       v         v             v           v              v         v | ||||
| ||    dir A                   dir B                      dir C | ||||
| ||    block 3   block 4       block 5     block 9        block 7   block 8 | ||||
| ||  .---------.---------.   .---------. .---------.    .---------.---------. | ||||
| |'->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  |-->| rev: 1  |-| rev: 2  |--->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
| '-->|         |         |-. |         | |         |--->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         | | |         | |         | .->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         | | |         | |         | |  |         |         | | ||||
|     '---------'---------' | '---------' '---------' |  '---------'---------' | ||||
|                           |               block 6   | | ||||
|                           |             .---------. | | ||||
|                           '------------>| rev: 2  |-' | ||||
|                                         | corrupt!| | ||||
|                                         | corrupt!| | ||||
|                                         | corrupt!| | ||||
|                                         '---------' | ||||
|  | ||||
| |  remove corrupted block from linked-list | ||||
| v | ||||
|  | ||||
|         root dir | ||||
|         block 1   block 2 | ||||
|       .---------.---------. | ||||
|       | rev: 1  | rev: 2  |--. | ||||
|       |         |         |-.| | ||||
| .-----|         |         |-|' | ||||
| |.----|         |         |-' | ||||
| ||    '---------'---------' | ||||
| ||       .--------'||||'-----------------------------------------. | ||||
| ||       |         |||'--------------------------------.         | | ||||
| ||       |         ||'--------------------.            |         | | ||||
| ||       |         |'-----------.         |            |         | | ||||
| ||       |         |            |         |            |         | | ||||
| ||       v         v            v         v            v         v | ||||
| ||    dir A                  dir B                  dir C | ||||
| ||    block 3   block 4      block 5   block 9      block 7   block 8 | ||||
| ||  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------.  .---------.---------. | ||||
| |'->| rev: 1  | rev: 2  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 2  |->| rev: 1  | rev: 0  | | ||||
| '-->|         |         |->|         |         |->|         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         |         |  |         |         | | ||||
|     |         |         |  |         |         |  |         |         | | ||||
|     '---------'---------'  '---------'---------'  '---------'---------' | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| Also one question I've been getting is, what about the root directory? | ||||
| It can't move so wouldn't the filesystem die as soon as the root blocks | ||||
| develop errors? And you would be correct. So instead of storing the root | ||||
| in the first few blocks of the storage, the root is actually pointed to | ||||
| by the superblock. The superblock contains a few bits of static data, but | ||||
| outside of when the filesystem is formatted, it is only updated when the root | ||||
| develops errors and needs to be moved. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Wear leveling | ||||
|  | ||||
| The second concern for the littlefs, is that blocks in the filesystem may wear | ||||
| unevenly. In this situation, a filesystem may meet an early demise where | ||||
| there are no more non-corrupted blocks that aren't in use. It may be entirely | ||||
| possible that files were written once and left unmodified, wasting the | ||||
| potential erase cycles of the blocks it sits on. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Wear leveling is a term that describes distributing block writes evenly to | ||||
| avoid the early termination of a flash part. There are typically two levels | ||||
| of wear leveling: | ||||
| 1. Dynamic wear leveling - Blocks are distributed evenly during blocks writes. | ||||
|    Note that the issue with write-once files still exists in this case. | ||||
| 2. Static wear leveling - Unmodified blocks are evicted for new block writes. | ||||
|    This provides the longest lifetime for a flash device. | ||||
|  | ||||
| Now, it's possible to use the revision count on metadata pairs to approximate | ||||
| the wear of a metadata block. And combined with the COW nature of files, the | ||||
| littlefs could provide a form of dynamic wear leveling. | ||||
|  | ||||
| However, the littlefs does not. This is for a few reasons. Most notably, even | ||||
| if the littlefs did implement dynamic wear leveling, this would still not | ||||
| handle the case of write-once files, and near the end of the lifetime of a | ||||
| flash device, you would likely end up with uneven wear on the blocks anyways. | ||||
|  | ||||
| As a flash device reaches the end of its life, the metadata blocks will | ||||
| naturally be the first to go since they are updated most often. In this | ||||
| situation, the littlefs is designed to simply move on to another set of | ||||
| metadata blocks. This travelling means that at the end of a flash device's | ||||
| life, the filesystem will have worn the device down as evenly as a dynamic | ||||
| wear leveling filesystem could anyways. Simply put, if the lifetime of flash | ||||
| is a serious concern, static wear leveling is the only valid solution. | ||||
|  | ||||
| This is a very important takeaway to note. If your storage stack uses highly | ||||
| sensitive storage such as NAND flash. In most cases you are going to be better | ||||
| off just using a [flash translation layer (FTL)](https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flash_translation_layer). | ||||
| NAND flash already has many limitations that make it poorly suited for an | ||||
| embedded system: low erase cycles, very large blocks, errors that can develop | ||||
| even during reads, errors that can develop during writes of neighboring blocks. | ||||
| Managing sensitive storage such as NAND flash is out of scope for the littlefs. | ||||
| The littlefs does have some properties that may be beneficial on top of a FTL, | ||||
| such as limiting the number of writes where possible. But if you have the | ||||
| storage requirements that necessitate the need of NAND flash, you should have | ||||
| the RAM to match and just use an FTL or flash filesystem. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Summary | ||||
|  | ||||
| So, to summarize: | ||||
|  | ||||
| 1. The littlefs is composed of directory blocks | ||||
| 2. Each directory is a linked-list of metadata pairs | ||||
| 3. These metadata pairs can be updated atomically by alternative which | ||||
|    metadata block is active | ||||
| 4. Directory blocks contain either references to other directories or files | ||||
| 5. Files are represented by copy-on-write CTZ linked-lists | ||||
| 6. The CTZ linked-lists support appending in O(1) and reading in O(n logn) | ||||
| 7. Blocks are allocated by scanning the filesystem for used blocks in a | ||||
|    fixed-size lookahead region is that stored in a bit-vector | ||||
| 8. To facilitate scanning the filesystem, all directories are part of a | ||||
|    linked-list that is threaded through the entire filesystem | ||||
| 9. If a block develops an error, the littlefs allocates a new block, and | ||||
|    moves the data and references of the old block to the new. | ||||
| 10. Any case where an atomic operation is not possible, it is taken care of | ||||
|    by a deorphan step that occurs on the first allocation after boot | ||||
|  | ||||
| Welp, that's the little filesystem. Thanks for reading! | ||||
|  | ||||
							
								
								
									
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							| @@ -1,23 +1,33 @@ | ||||
| ## The little filesystem | ||||
|  | ||||
| A little fail-safe filesystem designed for low ram/rom footprint. | ||||
| A little fail-safe filesystem designed for embedded systems. | ||||
|  | ||||
| **Fail-safe** - The littlefs is designed to work consistently with random power | ||||
| failures. During filesystem operations the storage on disk is always kept | ||||
| in a valid state. The filesystem also has strong copy-on-write garuntees. | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|    | | |     .---._____ | ||||
|   .-----.   |          | | ||||
| --|o    |---| littlefs | | ||||
| --|     |---|          | | ||||
|   '-----'   '----------' | ||||
|    | | | | ||||
| ``` | ||||
|  | ||||
| **Fail-safe** - The littlefs is designed to work consistently with random | ||||
| power failures. During filesystem operations the storage on disk is always | ||||
| kept in a valid state. The filesystem also has strong copy-on-write garuntees. | ||||
| When updating a file, the original file will remain unmodified until the | ||||
| file is closed, or sync is called. | ||||
|  | ||||
| **Handles bad blocks** - While the littlefs does not implement static wear | ||||
| leveling, if the underlying block device reports write errors, the littlefs | ||||
| uses a form of dynamic wear leveling to manage blocks that go bad during | ||||
| the lifetime of the filesystem. | ||||
| **Wear awareness** - While the littlefs does not implement static wear | ||||
| leveling, the littlefs takes into account write errors reported by the | ||||
| underlying block device and uses a limited form of dynamic wear leveling | ||||
| to manage blocks that go bad during the lifetime of the filesystem. | ||||
|  | ||||
| **Constrained memory** - The littlefs is designed to work in bounded memory, | ||||
| recursion is avoided, and dynamic memory is kept to a minimum. The littlefs | ||||
| allocates two fixed-size buffers for general operations, and one fixed-size | ||||
| buffer per file. If there is only ever one file in use, these buffers can be | ||||
| provided statically. | ||||
| **Bounded ram/rom** - The littlefs is designed to work in a | ||||
| limited amount of memory, recursion is avoided, and dynamic memory is kept | ||||
| to a minimum. The littlefs allocates two fixed-size buffers for general | ||||
| operations, and one fixed-size buffer per file. If there is only ever one file | ||||
| in use, all memory can be provided statically and the littlefs can be used | ||||
| in a system without dynamic memory. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Example | ||||
|  | ||||
| @@ -74,7 +84,7 @@ int main(void) { | ||||
|     // remember the storage is not updated until the file is closed successfully | ||||
|     lfs_file_close(&lfs, &file); | ||||
|  | ||||
|     // release and resources we were using | ||||
|     // release any resources we were using | ||||
|     lfs_unmount(&lfs); | ||||
| } | ||||
| ``` | ||||
| @@ -113,6 +123,14 @@ long as the machines involved share endianness and don't have really | ||||
| strange padding requirements. If the question does come up, the littlefs | ||||
| metadata should be stored on disk in little-endian format. | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Design | ||||
|  | ||||
| the littlefs was developed with the goal of learning more about filesystem | ||||
| design by tackling the relative unsolved problem of managing a robust | ||||
| filesystem resilient to power loss on devices with limited RAM and ROM. | ||||
| More detail on the solutions and tradeoffs incorporated into this filesystem | ||||
| can be found in [DESIGN.md](DESIGN.md). | ||||
|  | ||||
| ## Testing | ||||
|  | ||||
| The littlefs comes with a test suite designed to run on a pc using the | ||||
|   | ||||
		Reference in New Issue
	
	Block a user