In the open call, the LFS_O_TRUNC flag was correctly zeroing the file, but
it wasn't actually writing the change out to disk. This went unnoticed because
in the cases where the truncate was followed by a file write, the
updated contents would be written out correctly.
Marking the file as dirty if the file isn't already truncated fixes the
problem with the least impact. Also added better test cases around
truncating files.
Originally had two seperate positions for reading/writing,
but this is inconsistent with the the posix standard, which
has a single position for reading and writing.
Also added proper handling of when the file is dirty, just
added an internal flag for this state.
Also moved the entry out of the file struct, and rearranged
some members to clean things up.
Before, the lfs had multiple paths to determine config options:
- lfs_config struct passed during initialization
- lfs_bd_info struct passed during block device initialization
- compile time options
This allowed different developers to provide their own needs
to the filesystem, such as the block device capabilities and
the higher level user's own tweaks.
However, this comes with additional complexity and action required
when the configurations are incompatible.
For now, this has been reduced to all information (including block
device function pointers) being passed through the lfs_config struct.
We just defer more complicated handling of configuration options to
the top level user.
This simplifies configuration handling and gives the top level user
the responsibility to handle configuration, which they probably would
have wanted to do anyways.