]> git.proxmox.com Git - mirror_ubuntu-zesty-kernel.git/blame - Documentation/filesystems/f2fs.txt
clocksource/drivers/arm_arch_timer: Avoid infinite recursion when ftrace is enabled
[mirror_ubuntu-zesty-kernel.git] / Documentation / filesystems / f2fs.txt
CommitLineData
98e4da8c
JK
1================================================================================
2WHAT IS Flash-Friendly File System (F2FS)?
3================================================================================
4
5NAND flash memory-based storage devices, such as SSD, eMMC, and SD cards, have
6been equipped on a variety systems ranging from mobile to server systems. Since
7they are known to have different characteristics from the conventional rotating
8disks, a file system, an upper layer to the storage device, should adapt to the
9changes from the sketch in the design level.
10
11F2FS is a file system exploiting NAND flash memory-based storage devices, which
12is based on Log-structured File System (LFS). The design has been focused on
13addressing the fundamental issues in LFS, which are snowball effect of wandering
14tree and high cleaning overhead.
15
16Since a NAND flash memory-based storage device shows different characteristic
17according to its internal geometry or flash memory management scheme, namely FTL,
18F2FS and its tools support various parameters not only for configuring on-disk
19layout, but also for selecting allocation and cleaning algorithms.
20
d51a7fba
CL
21The following git tree provides the file system formatting tool (mkfs.f2fs),
22a consistency checking tool (fsck.f2fs), and a debugging tool (dump.f2fs).
5bb446a2
JK
23>> git://git.kernel.org/pub/scm/linux/kernel/git/jaegeuk/f2fs-tools.git
24
25For reporting bugs and sending patches, please use the following mailing list:
26>> linux-f2fs-devel@lists.sourceforge.net
98e4da8c
JK
27
28================================================================================
29BACKGROUND AND DESIGN ISSUES
30================================================================================
31
32Log-structured File System (LFS)
33--------------------------------
34"A log-structured file system writes all modifications to disk sequentially in
35a log-like structure, thereby speeding up both file writing and crash recovery.
36The log is the only structure on disk; it contains indexing information so that
37files can be read back from the log efficiently. In order to maintain large free
38areas on disk for fast writing, we divide the log into segments and use a
39segment cleaner to compress the live information from heavily fragmented
40segments." from Rosenblum, M. and Ousterhout, J. K., 1992, "The design and
41implementation of a log-structured file system", ACM Trans. Computer Systems
4210, 1, 26–52.
43
44Wandering Tree Problem
45----------------------
46In LFS, when a file data is updated and written to the end of log, its direct
47pointer block is updated due to the changed location. Then the indirect pointer
48block is also updated due to the direct pointer block update. In this manner,
49the upper index structures such as inode, inode map, and checkpoint block are
50also updated recursively. This problem is called as wandering tree problem [1],
51and in order to enhance the performance, it should eliminate or relax the update
52propagation as much as possible.
53
54[1] Bityutskiy, A. 2005. JFFS3 design issues. http://www.linux-mtd.infradead.org/
55
56Cleaning Overhead
57-----------------
58Since LFS is based on out-of-place writes, it produces so many obsolete blocks
59scattered across the whole storage. In order to serve new empty log space, it
60needs to reclaim these obsolete blocks seamlessly to users. This job is called
61as a cleaning process.
62
63The process consists of three operations as follows.
641. A victim segment is selected through referencing segment usage table.
652. It loads parent index structures of all the data in the victim identified by
66 segment summary blocks.
673. It checks the cross-reference between the data and its parent index structure.
684. It moves valid data selectively.
69
70This cleaning job may cause unexpected long delays, so the most important goal
71is to hide the latencies to users. And also definitely, it should reduce the
72amount of valid data to be moved, and move them quickly as well.
73
74================================================================================
75KEY FEATURES
76================================================================================
77
78Flash Awareness
79---------------
80- Enlarge the random write area for better performance, but provide the high
81 spatial locality
82- Align FS data structures to the operational units in FTL as best efforts
83
84Wandering Tree Problem
85----------------------
86- Use a term, “node”, that represents inodes as well as various pointer blocks
87- Introduce Node Address Table (NAT) containing the locations of all the “node”
88 blocks; this will cut off the update propagation.
89
90Cleaning Overhead
91-----------------
92- Support a background cleaning process
93- Support greedy and cost-benefit algorithms for victim selection policies
94- Support multi-head logs for static/dynamic hot and cold data separation
95- Introduce adaptive logging for efficient block allocation
96
97================================================================================
98MOUNT OPTIONS
99================================================================================
100
696c018c
NJ
101background_gc=%s Turn on/off cleaning operations, namely garbage
102 collection, triggered in background when I/O subsystem is
103 idle. If background_gc=on, it will turn on the garbage
104 collection and if background_gc=off, garbage collection
4bb9998d 105 will be turned off. If background_gc=sync, it will turn
6aefd93b 106 on synchronous garbage collection running in background.
696c018c
NJ
107 Default value for this option is on. So garbage
108 collection is on by default.
98e4da8c 109disable_roll_forward Disable the roll-forward recovery routine
2d834bf9
JK
110norecovery Disable the roll-forward recovery routine, mounted read-
111 only (i.e., -o ro,disable_roll_forward)
64058be9
CY
112discard/nodiscard Enable/disable real-time discard in f2fs, if discard is
113 enabled, f2fs will issue discard/TRIM commands when a
114 segment is cleaned.
98e4da8c
JK
115no_heap Disable heap-style segment allocation which finds free
116 segments for data from the beginning of main area, while
117 for node from the end of main area.
118nouser_xattr Disable Extended User Attributes. Note: xattr is enabled
119 by default if CONFIG_F2FS_FS_XATTR is selected.
120noacl Disable POSIX Access Control List. Note: acl is enabled
121 by default if CONFIG_F2FS_FS_POSIX_ACL is selected.
122active_logs=%u Support configuring the number of active logs. In the
123 current design, f2fs supports only 2, 4, and 6 logs.
124 Default number is 6.
125disable_ext_identify Disable the extension list configured by mkfs, so f2fs
126 does not aware of cold files such as media files.
66e960c6 127inline_xattr Enable the inline xattrs feature.
e4024e86
HL
128inline_data Enable the inline data feature: New created small(<~3.4k)
129 files can be written into inode block.
d37a868f
CY
130inline_dentry Enable the inline dir feature: data in new created
131 directory entries can be written into inode block. The
132 space of inode block which is used to store inline
133 dentries is limited to ~3.4k.
97c1794a 134noinline_dentry Diable the inline dentry feature.
6b4afdd7
JK
135flush_merge Merge concurrent cache_flush commands as much as possible
136 to eliminate redundant command issues. If the underlying
137 device handles the cache_flush command relatively slowly,
138 recommend to enable this option.
0f7b2abd
JK
139nobarrier This option can be used if underlying storage guarantees
140 its cached data should be written to the novolatile area.
141 If this option is set, no cache_flush commands are issued
142 but f2fs still guarantees the write ordering of all the
143 data writes.
d5053a34
JK
144fastboot This option is used when a system wants to reduce mount
145 time as much as possible, even though normal performance
146 can be sacrificed.
89672159
CY
147extent_cache Enable an extent cache based on rb-tree, it can cache
148 as many as extent which map between contiguous logical
149 address and physical address per inode, resulting in
7daaea25 150 increasing the cache hit ratio. Set by default.
4bb9998d 151noextent_cache Disable an extent cache based on rb-tree explicitly, see
7daaea25 152 the above extent_cache mount option.
75342797
WL
153noinline_data Disable the inline data feature, inline data feature is
154 enabled by default.
343f40f0
CY
155data_flush Enable data flushing before checkpoint in order to
156 persist data of regular and symlink.
36abef4e
JK
157mode=%s Control block allocation mode which supports "adaptive"
158 and "lfs". In "lfs" mode, there should be no random
159 writes towards main area.
98e4da8c
JK
160
161================================================================================
162DEBUGFS ENTRIES
163================================================================================
164
165/sys/kernel/debug/f2fs/ contains information about all the partitions mounted as
166f2fs. Each file shows the whole f2fs information.
167
168/sys/kernel/debug/f2fs/status includes:
169 - major file system information managed by f2fs currently
170 - average SIT information about whole segments
171 - current memory footprint consumed by f2fs.
172
b59d0bae
NJ
173================================================================================
174SYSFS ENTRIES
175================================================================================
176
177Information about mounted f2f2 file systems can be found in
178/sys/fs/f2fs. Each mounted filesystem will have a directory in
179/sys/fs/f2fs based on its device name (i.e., /sys/fs/f2fs/sda).
180The files in each per-device directory are shown in table below.
181
182Files in /sys/fs/f2fs/<devname>
183(see also Documentation/ABI/testing/sysfs-fs-f2fs)
184..............................................................................
185 File Content
186
187 gc_max_sleep_time This tuning parameter controls the maximum sleep
188 time for the garbage collection thread. Time is
189 in milliseconds.
190
191 gc_min_sleep_time This tuning parameter controls the minimum sleep
192 time for the garbage collection thread. Time is
193 in milliseconds.
194
195 gc_no_gc_sleep_time This tuning parameter controls the default sleep
196 time for the garbage collection thread. Time is
197 in milliseconds.
198
d2dc095f
NJ
199 gc_idle This parameter controls the selection of victim
200 policy for garbage collection. Setting gc_idle = 0
201 (default) will disable this option. Setting
202 gc_idle = 1 will select the Cost Benefit approach
4bb9998d 203 & setting gc_idle = 2 will select the greedy approach.
d2dc095f 204
ea91e9b0
JK
205 reclaim_segments This parameter controls the number of prefree
206 segments to be reclaimed. If the number of prefree
58c41035
JK
207 segments is larger than the number of segments
208 in the proportion to the percentage over total
209 volume size, f2fs tries to conduct checkpoint to
210 reclaim the prefree segments to free segments.
211 By default, 5% over total # of segments.
ea91e9b0 212
ba0697ec
JK
213 max_small_discards This parameter controls the number of discard
214 commands that consist small blocks less than 2MB.
215 The candidates to be discarded are cached until
216 checkpoint is triggered, and issued during the
217 checkpoint. By default, it is disabled with 0.
218
bba681cb
JK
219 trim_sections This parameter controls the number of sections
220 to be trimmed out in batch mode when FITRIM
221 conducts. 32 sections is set by default.
222
216fbd64
JK
223 ipu_policy This parameter controls the policy of in-place
224 updates in f2fs. There are five policies:
9b5f136f
JK
225 0x01: F2FS_IPU_FORCE, 0x02: F2FS_IPU_SSR,
226 0x04: F2FS_IPU_UTIL, 0x08: F2FS_IPU_SSR_UTIL,
227 0x10: F2FS_IPU_FSYNC.
216fbd64
JK
228
229 min_ipu_util This parameter controls the threshold to trigger
230 in-place-updates. The number indicates percentage
231 of the filesystem utilization, and used by
232 F2FS_IPU_UTIL and F2FS_IPU_SSR_UTIL policies.
233
c1ce1b02
JK
234 min_fsync_blocks This parameter controls the threshold to trigger
235 in-place-updates when F2FS_IPU_FSYNC mode is set.
236 The number indicates the number of dirty pages
237 when fsync needs to flush on its call path. If
238 the number is less than this value, it triggers
239 in-place-updates.
240
3bac380c
JK
241 max_victim_search This parameter controls the number of trials to
242 find a victim segment when conducting SSR and
243 cleaning operations. The default value is 4096
244 which covers 8GB block address range.
245
ab9fa662
JK
246 dir_level This parameter controls the directory level to
247 support large directory. If a directory has a
248 number of files, it can reduce the file lookup
249 latency by increasing this dir_level value.
250 Otherwise, it needs to decrease this value to
251 reduce the space overhead. The default value is 0.
252
cdfc41c1
JK
253 ram_thresh This parameter controls the memory footprint used
254 by free nids and cached nat entries. By default,
255 10 is set, which indicates 10 MB / 1 GB RAM.
256
98e4da8c
JK
257================================================================================
258USAGE
259================================================================================
260
2611. Download userland tools and compile them.
262
2632. Skip, if f2fs was compiled statically inside kernel.
264 Otherwise, insert the f2fs.ko module.
265 # insmod f2fs.ko
266
2673. Create a directory trying to mount
268 # mkdir /mnt/f2fs
269
2704. Format the block device, and then mount as f2fs
271 # mkfs.f2fs -l label /dev/block_device
272 # mount -t f2fs /dev/block_device /mnt/f2fs
273
d51a7fba
CL
274mkfs.f2fs
275---------
276The mkfs.f2fs is for the use of formatting a partition as the f2fs filesystem,
277which builds a basic on-disk layout.
278
279The options consist of:
1571f84a 280-l [label] : Give a volume label, up to 512 unicode name.
98e4da8c
JK
281-a [0 or 1] : Split start location of each area for heap-based allocation.
282 1 is set by default, which performs this.
283-o [int] : Set overprovision ratio in percent over volume size.
284 5 is set by default.
285-s [int] : Set the number of segments per section.
286 1 is set by default.
287-z [int] : Set the number of sections per zone.
288 1 is set by default.
289-e [str] : Set basic extension list. e.g. "mp3,gif,mov"
1571f84a
CL
290-t [0 or 1] : Disable discard command or not.
291 1 is set by default, which conducts discard.
98e4da8c 292
d51a7fba
CL
293fsck.f2fs
294---------
295The fsck.f2fs is a tool to check the consistency of an f2fs-formatted
296partition, which examines whether the filesystem metadata and user-made data
297are cross-referenced correctly or not.
298Note that, initial version of the tool does not fix any inconsistency.
299
300The options consist of:
301 -d debug level [default:0]
302
303dump.f2fs
304---------
305The dump.f2fs shows the information of specific inode and dumps SSA and SIT to
306file. Each file is dump_ssa and dump_sit.
307
308The dump.f2fs is used to debug on-disk data structures of the f2fs filesystem.
4bb9998d 309It shows on-disk inode information recognized by a given inode number, and is
d51a7fba
CL
310able to dump all the SSA and SIT entries into predefined files, ./dump_ssa and
311./dump_sit respectively.
312
313The options consist of:
314 -d debug level [default:0]
315 -i inode no (hex)
316 -s [SIT dump segno from #1~#2 (decimal), for all 0~-1]
317 -a [SSA dump segno from #1~#2 (decimal), for all 0~-1]
318
319Examples:
320# dump.f2fs -i [ino] /dev/sdx
321# dump.f2fs -s 0~-1 /dev/sdx (SIT dump)
322# dump.f2fs -a 0~-1 /dev/sdx (SSA dump)
323
98e4da8c
JK
324================================================================================
325DESIGN
326================================================================================
327
328On-disk Layout
329--------------
330
331F2FS divides the whole volume into a number of segments, each of which is fixed
332to 2MB in size. A section is composed of consecutive segments, and a zone
333consists of a set of sections. By default, section and zone sizes are set to one
334segment size identically, but users can easily modify the sizes by mkfs.
335
336F2FS splits the entire volume into six areas, and all the areas except superblock
337consists of multiple segments as described below.
338
339 align with the zone size <-|
340 |-> align with the segment size
341 _________________________________________________________________________
9268cc35
HL
342 | | | Segment | Node | Segment | |
343 | Superblock | Checkpoint | Info. | Address | Summary | Main |
344 | (SB) | (CP) | Table (SIT) | Table (NAT) | Area (SSA) | |
98e4da8c
JK
345 |____________|_____2______|______N______|______N______|______N_____|__N___|
346 . .
347 . .
348 . .
349 ._________________________________________.
350 |_Segment_|_..._|_Segment_|_..._|_Segment_|
351 . .
352 ._________._________
353 |_section_|__...__|_
354 . .
355 .________.
356 |__zone__|
357
358- Superblock (SB)
359 : It is located at the beginning of the partition, and there exist two copies
360 to avoid file system crash. It contains basic partition information and some
361 default parameters of f2fs.
362
363- Checkpoint (CP)
364 : It contains file system information, bitmaps for valid NAT/SIT sets, orphan
365 inode lists, and summary entries of current active segments.
366
98e4da8c
JK
367- Segment Information Table (SIT)
368 : It contains segment information such as valid block count and bitmap for the
369 validity of all the blocks.
370
9268cc35
HL
371- Node Address Table (NAT)
372 : It is composed of a block address table for all the node blocks stored in
373 Main area.
374
98e4da8c
JK
375- Segment Summary Area (SSA)
376 : It contains summary entries which contains the owner information of all the
377 data and node blocks stored in Main area.
378
379- Main Area
380 : It contains file and directory data including their indices.
381
382In order to avoid misalignment between file system and flash-based storage, F2FS
383aligns the start block address of CP with the segment size. Also, it aligns the
384start block address of Main area with the zone size by reserving some segments
385in SSA area.
386
387Reference the following survey for additional technical details.
388https://wiki.linaro.org/WorkingGroups/Kernel/Projects/FlashCardSurvey
389
390File System Metadata Structure
391------------------------------
392
393F2FS adopts the checkpointing scheme to maintain file system consistency. At
394mount time, F2FS first tries to find the last valid checkpoint data by scanning
395CP area. In order to reduce the scanning time, F2FS uses only two copies of CP.
396One of them always indicates the last valid data, which is called as shadow copy
397mechanism. In addition to CP, NAT and SIT also adopt the shadow copy mechanism.
398
399For file system consistency, each CP points to which NAT and SIT copies are
400valid, as shown as below.
401
402 +--------+----------+---------+
9268cc35 403 | CP | SIT | NAT |
98e4da8c
JK
404 +--------+----------+---------+
405 . . . .
406 . . . .
407 . . . .
408 +-------+-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
9268cc35 409 | CP #0 | CP #1 | SIT #0 | SIT #1 | NAT #0 | NAT #1 |
98e4da8c
JK
410 +-------+-------+--------+--------+--------+--------+
411 | ^ ^
412 | | |
413 `----------------------------------------'
414
415Index Structure
416---------------
417
418The key data structure to manage the data locations is a "node". Similar to
419traditional file structures, F2FS has three types of node: inode, direct node,
d08ab08d 420indirect node. F2FS assigns 4KB to an inode block which contains 923 data block
98e4da8c
JK
421indices, two direct node pointers, two indirect node pointers, and one double
422indirect node pointer as described below. One direct node block contains 1018
423data blocks, and one indirect node block contains also 1018 node blocks. Thus,
424one inode block (i.e., a file) covers:
425
426 4KB * (923 + 2 * 1018 + 2 * 1018 * 1018 + 1018 * 1018 * 1018) := 3.94TB.
427
428 Inode block (4KB)
429 |- data (923)
430 |- direct node (2)
431 | `- data (1018)
432 |- indirect node (2)
433 | `- direct node (1018)
434 | `- data (1018)
435 `- double indirect node (1)
436 `- indirect node (1018)
437 `- direct node (1018)
438 `- data (1018)
439
440Note that, all the node blocks are mapped by NAT which means the location of
441each node is translated by the NAT table. In the consideration of the wandering
442tree problem, F2FS is able to cut off the propagation of node updates caused by
443leaf data writes.
444
445Directory Structure
446-------------------
447
448A directory entry occupies 11 bytes, which consists of the following attributes.
449
450- hash hash value of the file name
451- ino inode number
452- len the length of file name
453- type file type such as directory, symlink, etc
454
455A dentry block consists of 214 dentry slots and file names. Therein a bitmap is
456used to represent whether each dentry is valid or not. A dentry block occupies
4574KB with the following composition.
458
459 Dentry Block(4 K) = bitmap (27 bytes) + reserved (3 bytes) +
460 dentries(11 * 214 bytes) + file name (8 * 214 bytes)
461
462 [Bucket]
463 +--------------------------------+
464 |dentry block 1 | dentry block 2 |
465 +--------------------------------+
466 . .
467 . .
468 . [Dentry Block Structure: 4KB] .
469 +--------+----------+----------+------------+
470 | bitmap | reserved | dentries | file names |
471 +--------+----------+----------+------------+
472 [Dentry Block: 4KB] . .
473 . .
474 . .
475 +------+------+-----+------+
476 | hash | ino | len | type |
477 +------+------+-----+------+
478 [Dentry Structure: 11 bytes]
479
480F2FS implements multi-level hash tables for directory structure. Each level has
481a hash table with dedicated number of hash buckets as shown below. Note that
482"A(2B)" means a bucket includes 2 data blocks.
483
484----------------------
485A : bucket
486B : block
487N : MAX_DIR_HASH_DEPTH
488----------------------
489
490level #0 | A(2B)
491 |
492level #1 | A(2B) - A(2B)
493 |
494level #2 | A(2B) - A(2B) - A(2B) - A(2B)
495 . | . . . .
496level #N/2 | A(2B) - A(2B) - A(2B) - A(2B) - A(2B) - ... - A(2B)
497 . | . . . .
498level #N | A(4B) - A(4B) - A(4B) - A(4B) - A(4B) - ... - A(4B)
499
500The number of blocks and buckets are determined by,
501
502 ,- 2, if n < MAX_DIR_HASH_DEPTH / 2,
503 # of blocks in level #n = |
504 `- 4, Otherwise
505
bfec07d0
CY
506 ,- 2^(n + dir_level),
507 | if n + dir_level < MAX_DIR_HASH_DEPTH / 2,
98e4da8c 508 # of buckets in level #n = |
bfec07d0
CY
509 `- 2^((MAX_DIR_HASH_DEPTH / 2) - 1),
510 Otherwise
98e4da8c
JK
511
512When F2FS finds a file name in a directory, at first a hash value of the file
513name is calculated. Then, F2FS scans the hash table in level #0 to find the
514dentry consisting of the file name and its inode number. If not found, F2FS
515scans the next hash table in level #1. In this way, F2FS scans hash tables in
516each levels incrementally from 1 to N. In each levels F2FS needs to scan only
517one bucket determined by the following equation, which shows O(log(# of files))
518complexity.
519
520 bucket number to scan in level #n = (hash value) % (# of buckets in level #n)
521
522In the case of file creation, F2FS finds empty consecutive slots that cover the
523file name. F2FS searches the empty slots in the hash tables of whole levels from
5241 to N in the same way as the lookup operation.
525
526The following figure shows an example of two cases holding children.
527 --------------> Dir <--------------
528 | |
529 child child
530
531 child - child [hole] - child
532
533 child - child - child [hole] - [hole] - child
534
535 Case 1: Case 2:
536 Number of children = 6, Number of children = 3,
537 File size = 7 File size = 7
538
539Default Block Allocation
540------------------------
541
542At runtime, F2FS manages six active logs inside "Main" area: Hot/Warm/Cold node
543and Hot/Warm/Cold data.
544
545- Hot node contains direct node blocks of directories.
546- Warm node contains direct node blocks except hot node blocks.
547- Cold node contains indirect node blocks
548- Hot data contains dentry blocks
549- Warm data contains data blocks except hot and cold data blocks
550- Cold data contains multimedia data or migrated data blocks
551
552LFS has two schemes for free space management: threaded log and copy-and-compac-
553tion. The copy-and-compaction scheme which is known as cleaning, is well-suited
554for devices showing very good sequential write performance, since free segments
555are served all the time for writing new data. However, it suffers from cleaning
556overhead under high utilization. Contrarily, the threaded log scheme suffers
557from random writes, but no cleaning process is needed. F2FS adopts a hybrid
558scheme where the copy-and-compaction scheme is adopted by default, but the
559policy is dynamically changed to the threaded log scheme according to the file
560system status.
561
562In order to align F2FS with underlying flash-based storage, F2FS allocates a
563segment in a unit of section. F2FS expects that the section size would be the
564same as the unit size of garbage collection in FTL. Furthermore, with respect
565to the mapping granularity in FTL, F2FS allocates each section of the active
566logs from different zones as much as possible, since FTL can write the data in
567the active logs into one allocation unit according to its mapping granularity.
568
569Cleaning process
570----------------
571
572F2FS does cleaning both on demand and in the background. On-demand cleaning is
573triggered when there are not enough free segments to serve VFS calls. Background
574cleaner is operated by a kernel thread, and triggers the cleaning job when the
575system is idle.
576
577F2FS supports two victim selection policies: greedy and cost-benefit algorithms.
578In the greedy algorithm, F2FS selects a victim segment having the smallest number
579of valid blocks. In the cost-benefit algorithm, F2FS selects a victim segment
580according to the segment age and the number of valid blocks in order to address
581log block thrashing problem in the greedy algorithm. F2FS adopts the greedy
582algorithm for on-demand cleaner, while background cleaner adopts cost-benefit
583algorithm.
584
585In order to identify whether the data in the victim segment are valid or not,
586F2FS manages a bitmap. Each bit represents the validity of a block, and the
587bitmap is composed of a bit stream covering whole blocks in main area.