So, I was bored a few days ago, and I was sick of having to run xfs_db incorrectly report free space extents when the filesytem is mounted, so I decided to extend fiemap to export freespace mappings to userspace so I could get the information coherently through the mounted filesystem. Yes, this could probably be considered interface abuse but, well, it was simple to do because extent mapping is exactly what fiemap is designed to do. Hence I didn't have to write new walkers/formatters and I was using code I knew worked correctly. There are two methods of mapping - one is reporting free space in ascending extent start offset order, then other in ascending extent length order. Both a useful to have (e.g. defragmenter might want to know about the nearest free block to given offset or the largest free extent in a given region). Either way, XFS keeps indexes ordered in both ways, so they can be exported directly with minimal overhead. The only "interesting" abuse of the interface is really the use of FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST. This means that the last extent in a freespace index is being returned, rather than the last freespace extent. This is done because filesystems often have multiple free space indexes, and it may be difficult to sort/scan over multiple indexes in a single map. This means an application needs to keep track of what freespace has been returned to it and adjust it's fiemap ranges apprpritately, or be aware of the underlying filesystem structure to for requests that don't span free space indexes. I don't see this a bug problem, because any application that is digging in freespace maps needs to know how the filesystem is structured to make any sense of the infomration returned. As such, I see this interface purely for filesystem diagnostics or utilities tightly bound to the filesystem (e.g. xfs_fsr). I'll attach a patch for a small utility that uses this interace to replicate the xfs_db freespace command in a short while so people can see how it is used. that shoul dmake it easier to comment on. :) Cheers, Dave. _______________________________________________ xfs mailing list xfs@xxxxxxxxxxx http://oss.sgi.com/mailman/listinfo/xfs