On Fri, Mar 28, 2008 at 09:19:40PM +0100, Pavel Machek wrote: > On Wed 2008-03-26 20:45:54, Bob Copeland wrote: > > OMFS is a proprietary filesystem created for the ReplayTV and > > also used by the Rio Karma. It uses hash tables with unordered, > > unbounded lists in each bucket for directories, extents for > > Why did they create such beast? Heh, I wish I knew. Good old NIH. There were so many "interesting" decisions here, like requiring seeks all over the place for dir traversal, picking a hash function that has collisions in almost every bucket even when the table is half empty, wasting large amounts of space by not even using 3/4s of certain blocks -- it's hard to pick a favorite. Oh, on ReplayTV 4/5xxx they also byte-swapped the block layer such that every 4 bytes were written backwards (even data). So a be64 would be written out as 'le32_high le32_low'. This patch doesn't support that brain damage, but I did cook up a bswap dm target to test with one of those disk images. > > +struct omfs_header { > > + __be64 h_self; > > + __be32 h_body_size; > > + __be16 h_crc; > > + char h_fill1[2]; > > + u8 h_version; > > + char h_type; > > + u8 h_magic; > > + u8 h_check_xor; > > + __be32 h_fill2; > > +}; > > attribute packed or something? Some strange machine (alpha?) may > decide to align u8s at 32bit boundaries... Thanks, I guess this applies for all the on disk structs. -- Bob Copeland %% www.bobcopeland.com -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-fsdevel" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html