1<!DOCTYPE Article PUBLIC "-//Davenport//DTD DocBook V3.0//EN"> 2 3<Article> 4 5<ArtHeader> 6 7<Title>EXT2ED - The Extended-2 filesystem editor - Design and implementation</Title> 8<AUTHOR 9> 10<FirstName>Programmed by Gadi Oxman, with the guide of Avner Lottem</FirstName> 11</AUTHOR 12> 13<PubDate>v0.1, August 3 1995</PubDate> 14 15</ArtHeader> 16 17<Sect1> 18<Title>About EXT2ED documentation</Title> 19 20<Para> 21The EXT2ED documentation consists of three parts: 22 23<ItemizedList> 24<ListItem> 25 26<Para> 27 The ext2 filesystem overview. 28</Para> 29</ListItem> 30<ListItem> 31 32<Para> 33 The EXT2ED user's guide. 34</Para> 35</ListItem> 36<ListItem> 37 38<Para> 39 The EXT2ED design and implementation. 40</Para> 41</ListItem> 42 43</ItemizedList> 44 45</Para> 46 47<Para> 48This document is not the user's guide. If you just intend to use EXT2ED, you 49may not want to read it. 50</Para> 51 52<Para> 53However, if you intend to browse and modify the source code, this document is 54for you. 55</Para> 56 57<Para> 58In any case, If you intend to read this article, I strongly suggest that you 59will be familiar with the material presented in the other two articles as well. 60</Para> 61 62</Sect1> 63 64<Sect1> 65<Title>Preface</Title> 66 67<Para> 68In this document I will try to explain how EXT2ED is constructed. 69At this time of writing, the initial version is finished and ready 70for distribution; It is fully functional. However, this was not always the 71case. 72</Para> 73 74<Para> 75At first, I didn't know much about Unix, much less about Unix filesystems, 76and even less about Linux and the extended-2 filesystem. While working 77on this project, I gradually acquired knowledge about all of the above 78subjects. I can think of two ways in which I could have made my project: 79 80<OrderedList> 81<ListItem> 82 83<Para> 84 The "Engineer" way 85 86Learn the subject thoroughly before I get to the programming itself. 87Then, I could easily see the entire picture and select the best 88course of action, taking all the factors into account. 89</Para> 90</ListItem> 91<ListItem> 92 93<Para> 94 The "Explorer - Progressive" way. 95 96Jump immediately into the cold water - Start programming and 97learning the material in parallel. 98</Para> 99</ListItem> 100 101</OrderedList> 102 103</Para> 104 105<Para> 106I guess that the above dilemma is typical and appears all through science and 107technology. 108</Para> 109 110<Para> 111However, I didn't have the luxury of choice when I started my project - 112Linux is a relatively new (and great!) operating system. The extended-2 113filesystem is even newer - Its first release lies somewhere in 1993 - Only 114passed two years until I started working on my project. 115</Para> 116 117<Para> 118The situation I found myself at the beginning was that I didn't have a fully 119detailed document which describes the ext2 filesystem. In fact, I didn't 120have any ext2 document at all. When I asked Avner about documentation, he 121suggested two references: 122 123<ItemizedList> 124<ListItem> 125 126<Para> 127 A general Unix book - THE DESIGN OF THE UNIX OPERATING SYSTEM, by 128Maurice J. Bach. 129</Para> 130</ListItem> 131<ListItem> 132 133<Para> 134 The kernel sources. 135</Para> 136</ListItem> 137 138</ItemizedList> 139 140I read the relevant parts of the book before I started my project - It is a 141bit old now, but the principles are still the same. However, I needed 142more than just the principles. 143</Para> 144 145<Para> 146The kernel sources are a rare bonus! You don't get everyday the full 147sources of the operating system. There is so much that can be learned from 148them, and it is the ultimate source - The exact answer how the kernel 149works is there, with all the fine details. At the first week I started to 150look at random at the relevant parts of the sources. However, it is difficult 151to understand the global picture from direct reading of over one hundred 152page sources. Then, I started to do some programming. I didn't know 153yet what I was looking for, and I started to work on the project like a kid 154who starts to build a large puzzle. 155</Para> 156 157<Para> 158However, this was exactly the interesting part! It is frustrating to know 159it all from advance - I think that the discovery itself, bit by bit, is the 160key to a true learning and understanding. 161</Para> 162 163<Para> 164Now, in this document, I am trying to present the subject. Even though I 165developed EXT2ED progressively, I now can see the entire subject much 166brighter than I did before, and though I do have the option of presenting it 167only in the "engineer" way. However, I will not do that. 168</Para> 169 170<Para> 171My presentation will be mixed - Sometimes I will present a subject with an 172incremental perspective, and sometimes from a "top down" view. I'll leave 173you to decide if my presentation choice was wise :-) 174</Para> 175 176<Para> 177In addition, you'll notice that the sections tend to get shorter as we get 178closer to the end. The reason is simply that I started to feel that I was 179repeating myself so I decided to present only the new ideas. 180</Para> 181 182</Sect1> 183 184<Sect1> 185<Title>Getting started ...</Title> 186 187<Para> 188Getting started is almost always the most difficult task. Once you get 189started, things start "running" ... 190</Para> 191 192<Sect2> 193<Title>Before the actual programming</Title> 194 195<Para> 196From mine talking with Avner, I understood that Linux, like any other Unix 197system, provides accesses to the entire disk as though it were a general 198file - Accessing the device. It is surely a nice idea. Avner suggested two 199ways of action: 200 201<ItemizedList> 202<ListItem> 203 204<Para> 205 Opening the device like a regular file in the user space. 206</Para> 207</ListItem> 208<ListItem> 209 210<Para> 211 Constructing a device driver which will run in the kernel space and 212provide hooks for the user space program. The advantage is that it 213will be a part of the kernel, and would be able to use the ext2 214kernel functions to do some of the work. 215</Para> 216</ListItem> 217 218</ItemizedList> 219 220I chose the first way. I think that the basic reason was simplicity - Learning 221the ext2 filesystem was complicated enough, and adding to it the task of 222learning how to program in the kernel space was too much. I still don't know 223how to program a device driver, and this is perhaps the bad part, but 224concerning the project in a back-perspective, I think that the first way is 225superior to the second; Ironically, because of the very reason I chose it - 226Simplicity. EXT2ED can now run entirely in the user space (which I think is 227a point in favor, because it doesn't require the user to recompile its 228kernel), and the entire hard work is mine, which fitted nicely into the 229learning experience - I didn't use other code to do the job (aside from 230looking at the sources, of-course). 231</Para> 232 233</Sect2> 234 235<Sect2> 236<Title>Jumping into the cold water</Title> 237 238<Para> 239I didn't know almost anything of the structure of the ext2 filesystem. 240Reading the sources was not enough - I needed to experiment. However, a tool 241for experiments in the ext2 filesystem was exactly my project! - Kind of a 242paradox. 243</Para> 244 245<Para> 246I started immediately with constructing a simple <Literal remap="tt">hex editor</Literal> - It would 247open the device as a regular file, provide means of moving inside the 248filesystem with a simple <Literal remap="tt">offset</Literal> method, and just show a 249<Literal remap="tt"> hex dump</Literal> of the contents at this point. Programming this was trivially 250simple of-course. At this point, the user-interface didn't matter to me - I 251wanted a fast way to interact. As a result, I chose a simple command line 252parser. Of course, there where no windows at this point. 253</Para> 254 255<Para> 256A hex editor is nice, but is not enough. It indeed enabled me to see each part 257of the filesystem, but the format of the viewed data was difficult to 258analyze. I wanted to see the data in a more intuitive way. 259</Para> 260 261<Para> 262At this point of time, the most helpful file in the sources was the ext2 263main include file - <Literal remap="tt">/usr/include/linux/ext2_fs.h</Literal>. Among its contents 264there were various structures which I assumed they are disk images - Appear 265exactly like that on the disk. 266</Para> 267 268<Para> 269I wanted a <Literal remap="tt">quick</Literal> way to get going. I didn't have the patience to learn 270each of the structures use in the code. Rather, I wanted to see them in action, 271so that I could explore the connections between them - Test my assumptions, 272and reach other assumptions. 273</Para> 274 275<Para> 276So after the <Literal remap="tt">hex editor</Literal>, EXT2ED progressed into a tool which has some 277elements of a compiler. I programmed EXT2ED to <Literal remap="tt">dynamically read the kernel 278ext2 main include file in run time</Literal>, and process the information. The goal 279was to <Literal remap="tt">imply a structure-definition on the current offset at the 280filesystem</Literal>. EXT2ED would then display the structure as a list of its 281variables names and contents, instead of a meaningless hex dump. 282</Para> 283 284<Para> 285The format of the include file is not very complicated - The structures 286are mostly <Literal remap="tt">flat</Literal> - Didn't contain a lot of recursive structure; Only a 287global structure definition, and some variables. There were cases of 288structures inside structures, I treated them in a somewhat non-elegant way - I 289made all the structures flat, and expanded the arrays. As a result, the parser 290was very simple. After all, this was not an exercise in compiling, and I 291wanted to quickly get some results. 292</Para> 293 294<Para> 295To handle the task, I constructed the <Literal remap="tt">struct_descriptor</Literal> structure. 296Each <Literal remap="tt">struct_descriptor instance</Literal> contained information which is needed 297in order to format a block of data according to the C structure contained in 298the kernel source. The information contained: 299 300<ItemizedList> 301<ListItem> 302 303<Para> 304 The descriptor name, used to reference to the structure in EXT2ED. 305</Para> 306</ListItem> 307<ListItem> 308 309<Para> 310 The name of each variable. 311</Para> 312</ListItem> 313<ListItem> 314 315<Para> 316 The relative offset of the each variable in the data block. 317</Para> 318</ListItem> 319<ListItem> 320 321<Para> 322 The length, in bytes, of each variable. 323</Para> 324</ListItem> 325 326</ItemizedList> 327 328Since I didn't want to limit the number of structures, I chose a simple 329double linked list to store the information. One variable contained the 330<Literal remap="tt">current structure type</Literal> - A pointer to the relevant 331<Literal remap="tt">struct_descriptor</Literal>. 332</Para> 333 334<Para> 335Now EXT2ED contained basically three command line operations: 336 337<ItemizedList> 338<ListItem> 339 340<Para> 341 setdevice 342 343Used to open a device for reading only. Write access was postponed 344to a very advanced state in the project, simply because I didn't 345know a thing of the filesystem structure, and I believed that 346making actual changes would do nothing but damage :-) 347</Para> 348</ListItem> 349<ListItem> 350 351<Para> 352 setoffset 353 354Used to move in the device. 355</Para> 356</ListItem> 357<ListItem> 358 359<Para> 360 settype 361 362Used to imply a structure definition on the current place. 363</Para> 364</ListItem> 365<ListItem> 366 367<Para> 368 show 369 370Used to display the data. It displayed the data in a simple hex dump 371if there was no type set, or in a nice formatted way - As a list of 372the variable contents, if there was. 373</Para> 374</ListItem> 375 376</ItemizedList> 377 378</Para> 379 380<Para> 381Command line analyzing was primitive back then - A simple switch, as far as 382I can remember - Nothing alike the current flow control, but it was enough 383at the time. 384</Para> 385 386<Para> 387At the end, I had something to start working with. It knew to format many 388structures - None of which I understood - and provided me, without too much 389work, something to start with. 390</Para> 391 392</Sect2> 393 394</Sect1> 395 396<Sect1> 397<Title>Starting to explore</Title> 398 399<Para> 400With the above tool in my pocket, I started to explore the ext2 filesystem 401structure. From the brief reading in Bach's book, I got familiar to some 402basic concepts - The <Literal remap="tt">superblock</Literal>, for example. It seems that the 403superblock is an important part of the filesystem. I decided to start 404exploring with that. 405</Para> 406 407<Para> 408I realized that the superblock should be at a fixed location in the 409filesystem - Probably near the beginning. There can be no other way - 410The kernel should start at some place to find it. A brief looking in 411the kernel sources revealed that the superblock is signed by a special 412signature - A <Literal remap="tt">magic number</Literal> - EXT2_SUPER_MAGIC (0xEF53 - EF probably 413stands for Extended Filesystem). I quickly found the superblock at the 414fixed offset 1024 in the filesystem - The <Literal remap="tt">s_magic</Literal> variable in the 415superblock was set exactly to the above value. 416</Para> 417 418<Para> 419It seems that starting with the <Literal remap="tt">superblock</Literal> was a good bet - Just from 420the list of variables, one can learn a lot. I didn't understand all of them 421at the time, but it seemed that the following keywords were repeating themselves 422in various variables: 423 424<ItemizedList> 425<ListItem> 426 427<Para> 428 block 429</Para> 430</ListItem> 431<ListItem> 432 433<Para> 434 inode 435</Para> 436</ListItem> 437<ListItem> 438 439<Para> 440 group 441</Para> 442</ListItem> 443 444</ItemizedList> 445 446At this point, I started to explore the block groups. I will not detail here 447the technical design of the ext2 filesystem. I have written a special 448article which explains just that, in the "engineering" way. Please refer to it 449if you feel that you are lacking knowledge in the structure of the ext2 450filesystem. 451</Para> 452 453<Para> 454I was exploring the filesystem in this way for some time, along with reading 455the sources. This lead naturally to the next step. 456</Para> 457 458</Sect1> 459 460<Sect1> 461<Title>Object specific commands</Title> 462 463<Para> 464What has become clear is that the above way of exploring is not powerful 465enough - I found myself doing various calculations manually in order to pass 466between related structures. I needed to replace some tasks with an automated 467procedure. 468</Para> 469 470<Para> 471In addition, it also became clear that (of-course) each key object in the 472filesystem has its special place in regard to the overall ext2 filesystem 473design, and needs a <Literal remap="tt">fine tuned handling</Literal>. It is at this point that the 474structure definitions <Literal remap="tt">came to life</Literal> - They became <Literal remap="tt">object 475definitions</Literal>, making EXT2ED <Literal remap="tt">object oriented</Literal>. 476</Para> 477 478<Para> 479The actual meaning of the breathtaking words above, is that each structure 480now had a list of <Literal remap="tt">private commands</Literal>, which ended up in 481<Literal remap="tt">calling special fine-tuned C functions</Literal>. This approach was 482found to be very powerful and is <Literal remap="tt">the heart of EXT2ED even now</Literal>. 483</Para> 484 485<Para> 486In order to implement the above concepts, I added the structure 487<Literal remap="tt">struct_commands</Literal>. The role of this structure is to group together a 488group of commands, which can be later assigned to a specific type. Each 489structure had: 490 491<ItemizedList> 492<ListItem> 493 494<Para> 495 A list of command names. 496</Para> 497</ListItem> 498<ListItem> 499 500<Para> 501 A list of pointers to functions, which binds each command to its 502special fine-tuned C function. 503</Para> 504</ListItem> 505 506</ItemizedList> 507 508In order to relate a list of commands to a type definition, each 509<Literal remap="tt">struct_descriptor</Literal> structure (explained earlier) was added a private 510<Literal remap="tt">struct_commands</Literal> structure. 511</Para> 512 513<Para> 514Follows the current definitions of <Literal remap="tt">struct_descriptor</Literal> and of 515<Literal remap="tt">struct_command</Literal>: 516 517<ProgramListing> 518struct struct_descriptor { 519 unsigned long length; 520 unsigned char name [60]; 521 unsigned short fields_num; 522 unsigned char field_names [MAX_FIELDS][80]; 523 unsigned short field_lengths [MAX_FIELDS]; 524 unsigned short field_positions [MAX_FIELDS]; 525 struct struct_commands type_commands; 526 struct struct_descriptor *prev,*next; 527}; 528 529typedef void (*PF) (char *); 530 531struct struct_commands { 532 int last_command; 533 char *names [MAX_COMMANDS_NUM]; 534 char *descriptions [MAX_COMMANDS_NUM]; 535 PF callback [MAX_COMMANDS_NUM]; 536}; 537</ProgramListing> 538 539 540</Para> 541 542</Sect1> 543 544<Sect1 id="flow-control"> 545<Title>Program flow control</Title> 546 547<Para> 548Obviously the above approach lead to a major redesign of EXT2ED. The 549main engine of the resulting design is basically the same even now. 550</Para> 551 552<Para> 553I redesigned the program flow control. Up to now, I analyzed the user command 554line with the simple switch method. Now I used the far superior callback 555method. 556</Para> 557 558<Para> 559I divided the available user commands into two groups: 560 561<OrderedList> 562<ListItem> 563 564<Para> 565 General commands. 566</Para> 567</ListItem> 568<ListItem> 569 570<Para> 571 Type specific commands. 572</Para> 573</ListItem> 574 575</OrderedList> 576 577As a result, at each point in time, the user was able to enter a 578<Literal remap="tt">general command</Literal>, selectable from a list of general commands which was 579always available, or a <Literal remap="tt">type specific command</Literal>, selectable from a list of 580commands which <Literal remap="tt">changed in time</Literal> according to the current type that the 581user was editing. The special <Literal remap="tt">type specific command</Literal> "knew" how to 582handle the object in the best possible way - It was "fine tuned" for the 583object's place in the ext2 filesystem design. 584</Para> 585 586<Para> 587In order to implement the above idea, I constructed a global variable of 588type <Literal remap="tt">struct_commands</Literal>, which contained the <Literal remap="tt">general commands</Literal>. 589The <Literal remap="tt">type specific commands</Literal> were accessible through the <Literal remap="tt">struct 590descriptors</Literal>, as explained earlier. 591</Para> 592 593<Para> 594The program flow was now done according to the following algorithm: 595 596<OrderedList> 597<ListItem> 598 599<Para> 600 Ask the user for a command line. 601</Para> 602</ListItem> 603<ListItem> 604 605<Para> 606 Analyze the user command - Separate it into <Literal remap="tt">command</Literal> and 607<Literal remap="tt">arguments</Literal>. 608</Para> 609</ListItem> 610<ListItem> 611 612<Para> 613 Trace the list of known objects to match the command name to a type. 614If the type is found, call the callback function, with the arguments 615as a parameter. Then go back to step (1). 616</Para> 617</ListItem> 618<ListItem> 619 620<Para> 621 If the command is not type specific, try to find it in the general 622commands, and call it if found. Go back to step (1). 623</Para> 624</ListItem> 625<ListItem> 626 627<Para> 628 If the command is not found, issue a short error message, and return 629to step (1). 630</Para> 631</ListItem> 632 633</OrderedList> 634 635Note the <Literal remap="tt">order</Literal> of the above steps. In particular, note that a command 636is first assumed to be a type-specific command and only if this fails, a 637general command is searched. The "<Literal remap="tt">side-effect</Literal>" (main effect, actually) 638is that when we have two commands with the <Literal remap="tt">same name</Literal> - One that is a 639type specific command, and one that is a general command, the dispatching 640algorithm will call the <Literal remap="tt">type specific command</Literal>. This allows 641<Literal remap="tt">overriding</Literal> of a command to provide <Literal remap="tt">fine-tuned</Literal> operation. 642For example, the <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command is overridden nearly everywhere, 643to accommodate for the different ways in which different objects are displayed, 644in order to provide an intuitive fine-tuned display. 645</Para> 646 647<Para> 648The above is done in the <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> function, in <Literal remap="tt">main.c</Literal>. Since 649it is a very important function in EXT2ED, and it is relatively short, I will 650list it entirely here. Note that a redesign was made since then - Another 651level was added between the two described, but I'll elaborate more on this 652later. However, the basic structure follows the explanation described above. 653 654<ProgramListing> 655int dispatch (char *command_line) 656 657{ 658 int i,found=0; 659 char command [80]; 660 661 parse_word (command_line,command); 662 663 if (strcmp (command,"quit")==0) return (1); 664 665 /* 1. Search for type specific commands FIRST - Allows overriding of a general command */ 666 667 if (current_type != NULL) 668 for (i=0;i<=current_type->type_commands.last_command && !found;i++) { 669 if (strcmp (command,current_type->type_commands.names [i])==0) { 670 (*current_type->type_commands.callback [i]) (command_line); 671 found=1; 672 } 673 } 674 675 /* 2. Now search for ext2 filesystem general commands */ 676 677 if (!found) 678 for (i=0;i<=ext2_commands.last_command && !found;i++) { 679 if (strcmp (command,ext2_commands.names [i])==0) { 680 (*ext2_commands.callback [i]) (command_line); 681 found=1; 682 } 683 } 684 685 686 /* 3. If not found, search the general commands */ 687 688 if (!found) 689 for (i=0;i<=general_commands.last_command && !found;i++) { 690 if (strcmp (command,general_commands.names [i])==0) { 691 (*general_commands.callback [i]) (command_line); 692 found=1; 693 } 694 } 695 696 if (!found) { 697 wprintw (command_win,"Error: Unknown command\n"); 698 refresh_command_win (); 699 } 700 701 return (0); 702} 703</ProgramListing> 704 705</Para> 706 707</Sect1> 708 709<Sect1> 710<Title>Source files in EXT2ED</Title> 711 712<Para> 713The project was getting large enough to be split into several source 714files. I split the source as much as I could into self-contained 715source files. The source files consist of the following blocks: 716 717<ItemizedList> 718<ListItem> 719 720<Para> 721 <Literal remap="tt">Main include file - ext2ed.h</Literal> 722 723This file contains the definitions of the various structures, 724variables and functions used in EXT2ED. It is included by all source 725files in EXT2ED. 726 727</Para> 728</ListItem> 729<ListItem> 730 731<Para> 732 <Literal remap="tt">Main block - main.c</Literal> 733 734<Literal remap="tt">main.c</Literal> handles the upper level of the program flow control. 735It contains the <Literal remap="tt">parser</Literal> and the <Literal remap="tt">dispatcher</Literal>. Its task is 736to ask the user for a required action, and to pass control to other 737lower level functions in order to do the actual job. 738 739</Para> 740</ListItem> 741<ListItem> 742 743<Para> 744 <Literal remap="tt">Initialization - init.c</Literal> 745 746The init source is responsible for the various initialization 747actions which need to be done through the program. For example, 748auto detection of an ext2 filesystem when selecting a device and 749initialization of the filesystem-specific structures described 750earlier. 751 752</Para> 753</ListItem> 754<ListItem> 755 756<Para> 757 <Literal remap="tt">Disk activity - disk.c</Literal> 758 759<Literal remap="tt">disk.c</Literal> is handles the lower level interaction with the 760device. All disk activity is passed through this file - The various 761functions through the source code request disk actions from the 762functions in this file. In this way, for example, we can easily block 763the write access to the device. 764 765</Para> 766</ListItem> 767<ListItem> 768 769<Para> 770 <Literal remap="tt">Display output activity - win.c</Literal> 771 772In a similar way to <Literal remap="tt">disk.c</Literal>, the user-interface functions and 773most of the interaction with the <Literal remap="tt">ncurses library</Literal> are done 774here. Nothing will be actually written to a specific window without 775calling a function from this file. 776 777</Para> 778</ListItem> 779<ListItem> 780 781<Para> 782 <Literal remap="tt">Commands available through dispatching - *_com.c </Literal> 783 784The above file name is generic - Each file which ends with 785<Literal remap="tt">_com.c</Literal> contains a group of related commands which can be 786called through <Literal remap="tt">the dispatching function</Literal>. 787 788Each object typically has its own file. A separate file is also 789available for the general commands. 790</Para> 791</ListItem> 792 793</ItemizedList> 794 795The entire list of source files available at this time is: 796 797<ItemizedList> 798<ListItem> 799 800<Para> 801 blockbitmap_com.c 802</Para> 803</ListItem> 804<ListItem> 805 806<Para> 807 dir_com.c 808</Para> 809</ListItem> 810<ListItem> 811 812<Para> 813 disk.c 814</Para> 815</ListItem> 816<ListItem> 817 818<Para> 819 ext2_com.c 820</Para> 821</ListItem> 822<ListItem> 823 824<Para> 825 file_com.c 826</Para> 827</ListItem> 828<ListItem> 829 830<Para> 831 general_com.c 832</Para> 833</ListItem> 834<ListItem> 835 836<Para> 837 group_com.c 838</Para> 839</ListItem> 840<ListItem> 841 842<Para> 843 init.c 844</Para> 845</ListItem> 846<ListItem> 847 848<Para> 849 inode_com.c 850</Para> 851</ListItem> 852<ListItem> 853 854<Para> 855 inodebitmap_com.c 856</Para> 857</ListItem> 858<ListItem> 859 860<Para> 861 main.c 862</Para> 863</ListItem> 864<ListItem> 865 866<Para> 867 super_com.c 868</Para> 869</ListItem> 870<ListItem> 871 872<Para> 873 win.c 874</Para> 875</ListItem> 876 877</ItemizedList> 878 879</Para> 880 881</Sect1> 882 883<Sect1> 884<Title>User interface</Title> 885 886<Para> 887The user interface is text-based only and is based on the following 888libraries: 889</Para> 890 891<Para> 892 893<ItemizedList> 894<ListItem> 895 896<Para> 897 The <Literal remap="tt">ncurses</Literal> library, developed by <Literal remap="tt">Zeyd Ben-Halim</Literal>. 898</Para> 899</ListItem> 900<ListItem> 901 902<Para> 903 The <Literal remap="tt">GNU readline</Literal> library. 904</Para> 905</ListItem> 906 907</ItemizedList> 908 909</Para> 910 911<Para> 912The user interaction is command line based - The user enters a command 913line, which consists of a <Literal remap="tt">command</Literal> and of <Literal remap="tt">arguments</Literal>. This fits 914nicely with the program flow control described earlier - The <Literal remap="tt">command</Literal> 915is used by <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> to select the right function, and the 916<Literal remap="tt">arguments</Literal> are interpreted by the function itself. 917</Para> 918 919<Sect2> 920<Title>The ncurses library</Title> 921 922<Para> 923The <Literal remap="tt">ncurses</Literal> library enables me to divide the screen into "windows". 924The main advantage is that I treat the "window" in a virtual way, asking 925the ncurses library to "write to a window". However, the ncurses 926library internally buffers the requests, and nothing is actually passed to the 927terminal until an explicit refresh is requested. When the refresh request is 928made, ncurses compares the current terminal state (as known in the last time 929that a refresh was done) with the new to be shown state, and passes to the 930terminal the minimal information required to update the display. As a 931result, the display output is optimized behind the scenes by the 932<Literal remap="tt">ncurses</Literal> library, while I can still treat it in a virtual way. 933</Para> 934 935<Para> 936There are two basic concepts in the <Literal remap="tt">ncurses</Literal> library: 937 938<ItemizedList> 939<ListItem> 940 941<Para> 942 A window. 943</Para> 944</ListItem> 945<ListItem> 946 947<Para> 948 A pad. 949</Para> 950</ListItem> 951 952</ItemizedList> 953 954A window can be no bigger than the actual terminal size. A pad, however, is 955not limited in its size. 956</Para> 957 958<Para> 959The user screen is divided by EXT2ED into three windows and one pad: 960 961<ItemizedList> 962<ListItem> 963 964<Para> 965 Title window. 966</Para> 967</ListItem> 968<ListItem> 969 970<Para> 971 Status window. 972</Para> 973</ListItem> 974<ListItem> 975 976<Para> 977 Main display pad. 978</Para> 979</ListItem> 980<ListItem> 981 982<Para> 983 Command window. 984</Para> 985</ListItem> 986 987</ItemizedList> 988 989</Para> 990 991<Para> 992The <Literal remap="tt">title window</Literal> is static - It just displays the current version 993of EXT2ED. 994</Para> 995 996<Para> 997The user interaction is done in the <Literal remap="tt">command window</Literal>. The user enters a 998<Literal remap="tt">command line</Literal>, feedback is usually displayed there, and then relevant 999data is usually displayed in the main display and in the status window. 1000</Para> 1001 1002<Para> 1003The <Literal remap="tt">main display</Literal> is using a <Literal remap="tt">pad</Literal> instead of a window because 1004the amount of information which is written to it is not known in advance. 1005Therefor, the user treats the main display as a "window" into a bigger 1006display and can <Literal remap="tt">scroll vertically</Literal> using the <Literal remap="tt">pgdn</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">pgup</Literal> 1007commands. Although the <Literal remap="tt">pad</Literal> mechanism enables me to use horizontal 1008scrolling, I have not utilized this. 1009</Para> 1010 1011<Para> 1012When I need to show something to the user, I use the ncurses <Literal remap="tt">wprintw</Literal> 1013command. Then an explicit refresh command is required. As explained before, 1014the refresh commands is piped through <Literal remap="tt">win.c</Literal>. For example, to update 1015the command window, <Literal remap="tt">refresh_command_win ()</Literal> is used. 1016</Para> 1017 1018</Sect2> 1019 1020<Sect2> 1021<Title>The readline library</Title> 1022 1023<Para> 1024Avner suggested me to integrate the GNU <Literal remap="tt">readline</Literal> library in my project. 1025The <Literal remap="tt">readline</Literal> library is designed specifically for programs which use 1026command line interface. It provides a nice package of <Literal remap="tt">command line editing 1027tools</Literal> - Inserting, deleting words, and the whole package of editing tools 1028which are normally available in the <Literal remap="tt">bash</Literal> shell (Refer to the readline 1029documentation for details). In addition, I utilized the <Literal remap="tt">history</Literal> 1030feature of the readline library - The entered commands are saved in a 1031<Literal remap="tt">command history</Literal>, and can be called later by whatever means that the 1032readline package provides. Command completion is also supported - When the 1033user enters a partial command name, EXT2ED will provide the readline library 1034with the possible completions. 1035</Para> 1036 1037</Sect2> 1038 1039</Sect1> 1040 1041<Sect1> 1042<Title>Possible support of other filesystems</Title> 1043 1044<Para> 1045The entire ext2 layer is provided through specific objects. Given another 1046set of objects, support of other filesystem can be provided using the same 1047dispatching mechanism. In order to prepare the surface for this option, I 1048added yet another layer to the two-layer structure presented earlier. EXT2ED 1049commands now consist of three layers: 1050 1051<ItemizedList> 1052<ListItem> 1053 1054<Para> 1055 The general commands. 1056</Para> 1057</ListItem> 1058<ListItem> 1059 1060<Para> 1061 The ext2 general commands. 1062</Para> 1063</ListItem> 1064<ListItem> 1065 1066<Para> 1067 The ext2 object specific commands. 1068</Para> 1069</ListItem> 1070 1071</ItemizedList> 1072 1073The general commands are provided by the <Literal remap="tt">general_com.c</Literal> source file, 1074and are always available. The two other levels are not present when EXT2ED 1075loads - They are dynamically added by <Literal remap="tt">init.c</Literal> when EXT2ED detects an 1076ext2 filesystem on the device. 1077</Para> 1078 1079<Para> 1080The abstraction levels presented above helps to extend EXT2ED to fully 1081support a new filesystem, with its own specific type commands. 1082</Para> 1083 1084<Para> 1085Even without any source code modification, the user is free to add structure 1086definitions in a separate file (specified in the configuration file), 1087which will be added to the list of available objects. The added objects will 1088consist only of variables, of-course, and will be used through the more 1089primitive <Literal remap="tt">setoffset</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">settype</Literal> commands. 1090</Para> 1091 1092</Sect1> 1093 1094<Sect1> 1095<Title>On the implementation of the various commands</Title> 1096 1097<Para> 1098This section points out some typical programming style that I used in many 1099places at the code. 1100</Para> 1101 1102<Sect2> 1103<Title>The explicit use of the dispatch function</Title> 1104 1105<Para> 1106The various commands are reached by the user through the <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> 1107function. This is not surprising. The fact that can be surprising, at least in 1108a first look, is that <Literal remap="tt">you'll find the dispatch call in many of my 1109own functions!</Literal>. 1110</Para> 1111 1112<Para> 1113I am in fact using my own implemented functions to construct higher 1114level operations. I am heavily using the fact that the dispatching mechanism 1115is object oriented ant that the <Literal remap="tt">overriding</Literal> principle takes place and 1116selects the proper function to call when several commands with the same name 1117are accessible. 1118</Para> 1119 1120<Para> 1121Sometimes, however, I call the explicit command directly, without passing 1122through <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal>. This is typically done when I want to bypass the 1123<Literal remap="tt">overriding</Literal> effect. 1124</Para> 1125 1126<Para> 1127 1128This is used, for example, in the interaction between the global cd command 1129and the dir object specific cd command. You will see there that in order 1130to implement the "entire" cd command, the type specific cd command uses both 1131a dispatching mechanism to call itself recursively if a relative path is 1132used, or a direct call of the general cd handling function if an explicit path 1133is used. 1134 1135</Para> 1136 1137</Sect2> 1138 1139<Sect2> 1140<Title>Passing information between handling functions</Title> 1141 1142<Para> 1143Typically, every source code file which handles one object type has a global 1144structure specifically designed for it which is used by most of the 1145functions in that file. This is used to pass information between the various 1146functions there, and to physically provide the link to other related 1147objects, typically for initialization use. 1148</Para> 1149 1150<Para> 1151 1152For example, in order to edit a file, information about the 1153inode is needed - The file command is available only when editing an 1154inode. When the file command is issued, the handling function (found, 1155according to the source division outlined above, in inode_com.c) will 1156store the necessary information about the inode in a specific structure 1157of type struct_file_info which will be available for use by the file_com.c 1158functions. Only then it will set the type to file. This is also the reason 1159that a direct asynchronous set of the object type to a file through a settype 1160command will fail - The above data structure will not be initialized 1161properly because the user never was at the inode of the file. 1162 1163</Para> 1164 1165</Sect2> 1166 1167<Sect2> 1168<Title>A very simplified overview of a typical command handling function</Title> 1169 1170<Para> 1171This is a very simplified overview. Detailed information will follow 1172where appropriate. 1173</Para> 1174 1175<Sect3> 1176<Title>The prototype of a typical handling function</Title> 1177 1178<Para> 1179 1180<OrderedList> 1181<ListItem> 1182 1183<Para> 1184 I chose a unified <Literal remap="tt">naming convention</Literal> for the various object 1185specific commands. It is perhaps best showed with an example: 1186 1187The prototype of the handling function of the command <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal> of 1188the type <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> is: 1189 1190<Screen> 1191 extern void type_file___next (char *command_line); 1192 1193</Screen> 1194 1195 1196For other types and commands, the words <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal> 1197should be replaced accordingly. 1198 1199</Para> 1200</ListItem> 1201<ListItem> 1202 1203<Para> 1204 The ext2 general commands syntax is similar. For example, the ext2 1205general command <Literal remap="tt">super</Literal> results in calling: 1206 1207<Screen> 1208 extern void type_ext2___super (char *command_line); 1209 1210</Screen> 1211 1212Those functions are available in <Literal remap="tt">ext2_com.c</Literal>. 1213</Para> 1214</ListItem> 1215<ListItem> 1216 1217<Para> 1218 The general commands syntax is even simpler - The name of the 1219handling function is exactly the name of the commands. Those 1220functions are available in <Literal remap="tt">general_com.c</Literal>. 1221</Para> 1222</ListItem> 1223 1224</OrderedList> 1225 1226</Para> 1227 1228</Sect3> 1229 1230<Sect3> 1231<Title>"Typical" algorithm</Title> 1232 1233<Para> 1234This section can't of-course provide meaningful information - Each 1235command is handled differently, but the following frame is typical: 1236 1237<OrderedList> 1238<ListItem> 1239 1240<Para> 1241 Parse command line arguments and analyze them. Return with an error 1242message if the syntax is wrong. 1243</Para> 1244</ListItem> 1245<ListItem> 1246 1247<Para> 1248 "Act accordingly", perhaps making use of the global variable available 1249to this type. 1250</Para> 1251</ListItem> 1252<ListItem> 1253 1254<Para> 1255 Use some <Literal remap="tt">dispatch / direct </Literal> calls in order to pass control to 1256other lower-level user commands. 1257</Para> 1258</ListItem> 1259<ListItem> 1260 1261<Para> 1262 Sometimes <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> to the object's <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command to 1263display the resulting data to the user. 1264</Para> 1265</ListItem> 1266 1267</OrderedList> 1268 1269I told you it is meaningless :-) 1270</Para> 1271 1272</Sect3> 1273 1274</Sect2> 1275 1276</Sect1> 1277 1278<Sect1> 1279<Title>Initialization overview</Title> 1280 1281<Para> 1282In this section I will discuss some aspects of the various initialization 1283routines available in the source file <Literal remap="tt">init.c</Literal>. 1284</Para> 1285 1286<Sect2> 1287<Title>Upon startup</Title> 1288 1289<Para> 1290Follows the function <Literal remap="tt">main</Literal>, appearing of-course in <Literal remap="tt">main.c</Literal>: 1291 1292 1293<ProgramListing> 1294int main (void) 1295 1296{ 1297 if (!init ()) return (0); /* Perform some initial initialization */ 1298 /* Quit if failed */ 1299 1300 parser (); /* Get and parse user commands */ 1301 1302 prepare_to_close (); /* Do some cleanup */ 1303 printf ("Quitting ...\n"); 1304 return (1); /* And quit */ 1305} 1306</ProgramListing> 1307 1308</Para> 1309 1310<Para> 1311The two initialization functions, which are called by <Literal remap="tt">main</Literal>, are: 1312 1313<ItemizedList> 1314<ListItem> 1315 1316<Para> 1317 init 1318</Para> 1319</ListItem> 1320<ListItem> 1321 1322<Para> 1323 prepare_to_close 1324</Para> 1325</ListItem> 1326 1327</ItemizedList> 1328 1329</Para> 1330 1331<Sect3> 1332<Title>The init function</Title> 1333 1334<Para> 1335<Literal remap="tt">init</Literal> is called from <Literal remap="tt">main</Literal> upon startup. It initializes the 1336following tasks / subsystems: 1337 1338<OrderedList> 1339<ListItem> 1340 1341<Para> 1342 Processing of the <Literal remap="tt">user configuration file</Literal>, by using the 1343<Literal remap="tt">process_configuration_file</Literal> function. Failing to complete the 1344configuration file processing is considered a <Literal remap="tt">fatal error</Literal>, 1345and EXT2ED is aborted. I did it this way because the configuration 1346file has some sensitive user options like write access behavior, and 1347I wanted to be sure that the user is aware of them. 1348</Para> 1349</ListItem> 1350<ListItem> 1351 1352<Para> 1353 Registration of the <Literal remap="tt">general commands</Literal> through the use of 1354the <Literal remap="tt">add_general_commands</Literal> function. 1355</Para> 1356</ListItem> 1357<ListItem> 1358 1359<Para> 1360 Reset of the object memory rotating lifo structure. 1361</Para> 1362</ListItem> 1363<ListItem> 1364 1365<Para> 1366 Reset of the device parameters and of the current type. 1367</Para> 1368</ListItem> 1369<ListItem> 1370 1371<Para> 1372 Initialization of the windows subsystem - The interface between the 1373ncurses library and EXT2ED, through the use of the <Literal remap="tt">init_windows</Literal> 1374function, available in <Literal remap="tt">win.c</Literal>. 1375</Para> 1376</ListItem> 1377<ListItem> 1378 1379<Para> 1380 Initialization of the interface between the readline library and 1381EXT2ED, through <Literal remap="tt">init_readline</Literal>. 1382</Para> 1383</ListItem> 1384<ListItem> 1385 1386<Para> 1387 Initialization of the <Literal remap="tt">signals</Literal> subsystem, through 1388<Literal remap="tt">init_signals</Literal>. 1389</Para> 1390</ListItem> 1391<ListItem> 1392 1393<Para> 1394 Disabling write access. Write access needs to be explicitly enabled 1395using a user command, to prevent accidental user mistakes. 1396</Para> 1397</ListItem> 1398 1399</OrderedList> 1400 1401When <Literal remap="tt">init</Literal> is finished, it dispatches the <Literal remap="tt">help</Literal> command in order 1402to show the available commands to the user. Note that the ext2 layer is still 1403not added; It will be added if and when EXT2ED will detect an ext2 1404filesystem on a device. 1405</Para> 1406 1407</Sect3> 1408 1409<Sect3> 1410<Title>The prepare_to_close function</Title> 1411 1412<Para> 1413The <Literal remap="tt">prepare_to_close</Literal> function reverses some of the actions done 1414earlier in EXT2ED and freeing the dynamically allocated memory. 1415Specifically, it: 1416 1417<OrderedList> 1418<ListItem> 1419 1420<Para> 1421 Closes the open device, if any. 1422</Para> 1423</ListItem> 1424<ListItem> 1425 1426<Para> 1427 Removes the first level - Removing the general commands, through 1428the use of <Literal remap="tt">free_user_commands</Literal>, with a pointer to the 1429general_commands structure as a parameter. 1430</Para> 1431</ListItem> 1432<ListItem> 1433 1434<Para> 1435 Removes of the second level - Removing the ext2 ext2 general 1436commands, in much the same way. 1437</Para> 1438</ListItem> 1439<ListItem> 1440 1441<Para> 1442 Removes of the third level - Removing the objects and the object 1443specific commands, by using <Literal remap="tt">free_struct_descriptors</Literal>. 1444</Para> 1445</ListItem> 1446<ListItem> 1447 1448<Para> 1449 Closes the window subsystem, and deattaches EXT2ED from the ncurses 1450library, through the use of the <Literal remap="tt">close_windows</Literal> function, 1451available in <Literal remap="tt">win.c</Literal>. 1452</Para> 1453</ListItem> 1454 1455</OrderedList> 1456 1457</Para> 1458 1459</Sect3> 1460 1461</Sect2> 1462 1463<Sect2> 1464<Title>Registration of commands</Title> 1465 1466<Para> 1467Addition of a user command is done through the <Literal remap="tt">add_user_command</Literal> 1468function. The prototype is: 1469 1470<Screen> 1471void add_user_command (struct struct_commands *ptr,char *name,char 1472*description,PF callback); 1473</Screen> 1474 1475The function receives a pointer to a structure of type 1476<Literal remap="tt">struct_commands</Literal>, a desired name for the command which will be used by 1477the user to identify the command, a short description which is utilized by the 1478<Literal remap="tt">help</Literal> subsystem, and a pointer to a C function which will be called if 1479<Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> decides that this command was requested. 1480</Para> 1481 1482<Para> 1483The <Literal remap="tt">add_user_command</Literal> is a <Literal remap="tt">low level function</Literal> used in the three 1484levels to add user commands. For example, addition of the <Literal remap="tt">ext2 1485general commands is done by:</Literal> 1486 1487<ProgramListing> 1488void add_ext2_general_commands (void) 1489 1490{ 1491 add_user_command (&ext2_commands,"super","Moves to the superblock of the filesystem",type_ext2___super); 1492 add_user_command (&ext2_commands,"group","Moves to the first group descriptor",type_ext2___group); 1493 add_user_command (&ext2_commands,"cd","Moves to the directory specified",type_ext2___cd); 1494} 1495</ProgramListing> 1496 1497</Para> 1498 1499</Sect2> 1500 1501<Sect2> 1502<Title>Registration of objects</Title> 1503 1504<Para> 1505Registration of objects is based, as explained earlier, on the "compilation" 1506of an external user file, which has a syntax similar to the C language 1507<Literal remap="tt">struct</Literal> keyword. The primitive parser I have implemented detects the 1508definition of structures, and calls some lower level functions to actually 1509register the new detected object. The parser's prototype is: 1510 1511<Screen> 1512int set_struct_descriptors (char *file_name) 1513</Screen> 1514 1515It opens the given file name, and calls, when appropriate: 1516 1517<ItemizedList> 1518<ListItem> 1519 1520<Para> 1521 add_new_descriptor 1522</Para> 1523</ListItem> 1524<ListItem> 1525 1526<Para> 1527 add_new_variable 1528</Para> 1529</ListItem> 1530 1531</ItemizedList> 1532 1533<Literal remap="tt">add_new_descriptor</Literal> is a low level function which adds a new descriptor 1534to the doubly linked list of the available objects. It will then call 1535<Literal remap="tt">fill_type_commands</Literal>, which will add specific commands to the object, 1536if the object is known. 1537</Para> 1538 1539<Para> 1540<Literal remap="tt">add_new_variable</Literal> will add a new variable of the requested length to the 1541specified descriptor. 1542</Para> 1543 1544</Sect2> 1545 1546<Sect2> 1547<Title>Initialization upon specification of a device</Title> 1548 1549<Para> 1550When the general command <Literal remap="tt">setdevice</Literal> is used to open a device, some 1551initialization sequence takes place, which is intended to determine two 1552factors: 1553 1554<ItemizedList> 1555<ListItem> 1556 1557<Para> 1558 Are we dealing with an ext2 filesystem ? 1559</Para> 1560</ListItem> 1561<ListItem> 1562 1563<Para> 1564 What are the basic filesystem parameters, such as its total size and 1565its block size ? 1566</Para> 1567</ListItem> 1568 1569</ItemizedList> 1570 1571This questions are answered by the <Literal remap="tt">set_file_system_info</Literal>, possibly 1572using some <Literal remap="tt">help from the user</Literal>, through the configuration file. 1573The answers are placed in the <Literal remap="tt">file_system_info</Literal> structure, which is of 1574type <Literal remap="tt">struct_file_system_info</Literal>: 1575 1576<ProgramListing> 1577struct struct_file_system_info { 1578 unsigned long file_system_size; 1579 unsigned long super_block_offset; 1580 unsigned long first_group_desc_offset; 1581 unsigned long groups_count; 1582 unsigned long inodes_per_block; 1583 unsigned long blocks_per_group; /* The name is misleading; beware */ 1584 unsigned long no_blocks_in_group; 1585 unsigned short block_size; 1586 struct ext2_super_block super_block; 1587}; 1588</ProgramListing> 1589 1590</Para> 1591 1592<Para> 1593Autodetection of an ext2 filesystem is usually recommended. However, on a damaged 1594filesystem I can't assure a success. That's were the user comes in - He can 1595<Literal remap="tt">override</Literal> the auto detection procedure and force an ext2 filesystem, by 1596selecting the proper options in the configuration file. 1597</Para> 1598 1599<Para> 1600If auto detection succeeds, the second question above is automatically 1601answered - I get all the information I need from the filesystem itself. In 1602any case, default parameters can be supplied in the configuration file and 1603the user can select the required behavior. 1604</Para> 1605 1606<Para> 1607If we decide to treat the filesystem as an ext2 filesystem, <Literal remap="tt">registration of 1608the ext2 specific objects</Literal> is done at this point, by calling the 1609<Literal remap="tt">set_struct_descriptors</Literal> outlined earlier, with the name of the file 1610which describes the ext2 objects, and is basically based on the ext2 sources 1611main include file. At this point, EXT2ED can be fully used by the user. 1612</Para> 1613 1614<Para> 1615If we do not register the ext2 specific objects, the user can still provide 1616object definitions in a separate file, and will be able to use EXT2ED in a 1617<Literal remap="tt">limited form</Literal>, but more sophisticated than a simple hex editor. 1618</Para> 1619 1620</Sect2> 1621 1622</Sect1> 1623 1624<Sect1> 1625<Title>main.c</Title> 1626 1627<Para> 1628As described earlier, <Literal remap="tt">main.c</Literal> is used as a front-head to the entire 1629program. <Literal remap="tt">main.c</Literal> contains the following elements: 1630</Para> 1631 1632<Sect2> 1633<Title>The main routine</Title> 1634 1635<Para> 1636The <Literal remap="tt">main</Literal> routine was displayed above. Its task is to pass control to 1637the initialization routines and to the parser. 1638</Para> 1639 1640</Sect2> 1641 1642<Sect2> 1643<Title>The parser</Title> 1644 1645<Para> 1646The parser consists of the following functions: 1647 1648<ItemizedList> 1649<ListItem> 1650 1651<Para> 1652 The <Literal remap="tt">parser</Literal> function, which reads the command line from the 1653user and saves it in readline's history buffer and in the internal 1654last-command buffer. 1655</Para> 1656</ListItem> 1657<ListItem> 1658 1659<Para> 1660 The <Literal remap="tt">parse_word</Literal> function, which receives a string and parses 1661the first word from it, ignoring whitespaces, and returns a pointer 1662to the rest of the string. 1663</Para> 1664</ListItem> 1665<ListItem> 1666 1667<Para> 1668 The <Literal remap="tt">complete_command</Literal> function, which is used by the readline 1669library for command completion. It scans the available commands at 1670this point and determines the possible completions. 1671</Para> 1672</ListItem> 1673 1674</ItemizedList> 1675 1676</Para> 1677 1678</Sect2> 1679 1680<Sect2> 1681<Title>The dispatcher</Title> 1682 1683<Para> 1684The dispatcher was already explained in the flow control section - section 1685<XRef LinkEnd="flow-control">. Its task is to pass control to the proper command 1686handling function, based on the command line's command. 1687</Para> 1688 1689</Sect2> 1690 1691<Sect2> 1692<Title>The self-sanity control</Title> 1693 1694<Para> 1695This is not fully implemented. 1696</Para> 1697 1698<Para> 1699The general idea was to provide a control system which will supervise the 1700internal work of EXT2ED. Since I am pretty sure that bugs exist, I have 1701double checked myself in a few instances, and issued an <Literal remap="tt">internal 1702error</Literal> warning if I reached the conclusion that something is not logical. 1703The internal error is reported by the function <Literal remap="tt">internal_error</Literal>, 1704available in <Literal remap="tt">main.c</Literal>. 1705</Para> 1706 1707<Para> 1708The self sanity check is compiled only if the compile time option 1709<Literal remap="tt">DEBUG</Literal> is selected. 1710</Para> 1711 1712</Sect2> 1713 1714</Sect1> 1715 1716<Sect1> 1717<Title>The windows interface</Title> 1718 1719<Para> 1720Screen handling and interfacing to the <Literal remap="tt">ncurses</Literal> library is done in 1721<Literal remap="tt">win.c</Literal>. 1722</Para> 1723 1724<Sect2> 1725<Title>Initialization</Title> 1726 1727<Para> 1728Opening of the windows is done in <Literal remap="tt">init_windows</Literal>. In 1729<Literal remap="tt">close_windows</Literal>, we just close our windows. The various window lengths 1730with an exception to the <Literal remap="tt">show pad</Literal> are defined in the main header file. 1731The rest of the display will be used by the <Literal remap="tt">show pad</Literal>. 1732</Para> 1733 1734</Sect2> 1735 1736<Sect2> 1737<Title>Display output</Title> 1738 1739<Para> 1740Each actual refreshing of the terminal monitor is done by using the 1741appropriate refresh function from this file: <Literal remap="tt">refresh_title_win</Literal>, 1742<Literal remap="tt">refresh_show_win</Literal>, <Literal remap="tt">refresh_show_pad</Literal> and 1743<Literal remap="tt">refresh_command_win</Literal>. 1744</Para> 1745 1746<Para> 1747With the exception of the <Literal remap="tt">show pad</Literal>, each function simply calls the 1748<Literal remap="tt">ncurses refresh command</Literal>. In order to provide to <Literal remap="tt">scrolling</Literal> in 1749the <Literal remap="tt">show pad</Literal>, some information about its status is constantly updated 1750by the various functions which display output in it. <Literal remap="tt">refresh_show_pad</Literal> 1751passes this information to <Literal remap="tt">ncurses</Literal> so that the correct part of the pad 1752is actually copied to the display. 1753</Para> 1754 1755<Para> 1756The above information is saved in a global variable of type <Literal remap="tt">struct 1757struct_pad_info</Literal>: 1758</Para> 1759 1760<Para> 1761 1762<ProgramListing> 1763struct struct_pad_info { 1764 int display_lines,display_cols; 1765 int line,col; 1766 int max_line,max_col; 1767 int disable_output; 1768}; 1769</ProgramListing> 1770 1771</Para> 1772 1773</Sect2> 1774 1775<Sect2> 1776<Title>Screen redraw</Title> 1777 1778<Para> 1779The <Literal remap="tt">redraw_all</Literal> function will just reopen the windows. This action is 1780necessary if the display gets garbled from some reason. 1781</Para> 1782 1783</Sect2> 1784 1785</Sect1> 1786 1787<Sect1> 1788<Title>The disk interface</Title> 1789 1790<Para> 1791All the disk activity with regard to the filesystem passes through the file 1792<Literal remap="tt">disk.c</Literal>. This is done that way to provide additional levels of safety 1793concerning the disk access. This way, global decisions considering the disk 1794can be easily accomplished. The benefits of this isolation will become even 1795clearer in the next sections. 1796</Para> 1797 1798<Sect2> 1799<Title>Low level functions</Title> 1800 1801<Para> 1802Read requests are ultimately handled by <Literal remap="tt">low_read</Literal> and write requests 1803are handled by <Literal remap="tt">low_write</Literal>. They just receive the length of the data 1804block, the offset in the filesystem and a pointer to the buffer and pass the 1805request to the <Literal remap="tt">fread</Literal> or <Literal remap="tt">fwrite</Literal> standard library functions. 1806</Para> 1807 1808</Sect2> 1809 1810<Sect2> 1811<Title>Mounted filesystems</Title> 1812 1813<Para> 1814EXT2ED design assumes that the edited filesystem is not mounted. Even if 1815a <Literal remap="tt">reasonably simple</Literal> way to handle mounted filesystems exists, it is 1816probably <Literal remap="tt">too complicated</Literal> :-) 1817</Para> 1818 1819<Para> 1820Write access to a mounted filesystem will be denied. Read access can be 1821allowed by using a configuration file option. The mount status is determined 1822by reading the file /etc/mtab. 1823</Para> 1824 1825</Sect2> 1826 1827<Sect2> 1828<Title>Write access</Title> 1829 1830<Para> 1831Write access is the most sensitive part in the program. This program is 1832intended for <Literal remap="tt">editing filesystems</Literal>. It is obvious that a small mistake 1833in this regard can make the filesystem not usable anymore. 1834</Para> 1835 1836<Para> 1837The following safety measures are added, of-course, to the general Unix 1838permission protection - The user can always disable write access on the 1839device file itself. 1840</Para> 1841 1842<Para> 1843Considering the user, the following safety measures were taken: 1844 1845<OrderedList> 1846<ListItem> 1847 1848<Para> 1849 The filesystem is <Literal remap="tt">never</Literal> opened with write-access enables. 1850Rather, the user must explicitly request to enable write-access. 1851</Para> 1852</ListItem> 1853<ListItem> 1854 1855<Para> 1856 The user can <Literal remap="tt">disable</Literal> write access entirely by using a 1857<Literal remap="tt">configuration file option</Literal>. 1858</Para> 1859</ListItem> 1860<ListItem> 1861 1862<Para> 1863 Changes are never done automatically - Whenever the user makes 1864changes, they are done in memory. An explicit <Literal remap="tt">writedata</Literal> 1865command should be issued to make the changes active in the disk. 1866</Para> 1867</ListItem> 1868 1869</OrderedList> 1870 1871Considering myself, I tried to protect against my bugs by: 1872 1873<ItemizedList> 1874<ListItem> 1875 1876<Para> 1877 Opening the device in read-only mode until a write request is 1878issued by the user. 1879</Para> 1880</ListItem> 1881<ListItem> 1882 1883<Para> 1884 Limiting <Literal remap="tt">actual</Literal> filesystem access to two functions only - 1885<Literal remap="tt">low_read</Literal> for reading, and <Literal remap="tt">low_write</Literal> for writing. Those 1886functions were programmed carefully, and I added the self 1887sanity checks there. In addition, this is the only place in which I 1888need to check the user options described above - There can be no 1889place in which I can "forget" to check them. 1890 1891Note that The disabling of write-access through the configuration file 1892is double checked here only as a <Literal remap="tt">self-sanity</Literal> check - If 1893<Literal remap="tt">DEBUG</Literal> is selected, since write enable should have been refused 1894and write-access is always disabled at startup, hence finding 1895<Literal remap="tt">here</Literal> that the user has write access disabled through the 1896configuration file clearly indicates that I have a bug somewhere. 1897</Para> 1898</ListItem> 1899 1900</ItemizedList> 1901 1902</Para> 1903 1904<Para> 1905The following safety measure can provide protection against <Literal remap="tt">both</Literal> user 1906mistakes and my own bugs: 1907 1908<ItemizedList> 1909<ListItem> 1910 1911<Para> 1912 I added a <Literal remap="tt">logging option</Literal>, which logs every actual write 1913access to the disk in the lowest level - In <Literal remap="tt">low_write</Literal> itself. 1914 1915The logging has nothing to do with the current type and the various 1916other higher level operations of EXT2ED - It is simply a hex dump of 1917the contents which will be overwritten; Both the original contents 1918and the new written data. 1919 1920In that case, even if the user makes a mistake, the original data 1921can be retrieved. 1922 1923Even If I have a bug somewhere which causes incorrect data to be 1924written to the disk, the logging option will still log exactly the 1925original contents at the place were data was incorrectly overwritten. 1926(This assumes, of-course, that <Literal remap="tt">low-write</Literal> and the <Literal remap="tt">logging 1927itself</Literal> work correctly. I have done my best to verify that this is 1928indeed the case). 1929 1930The <Literal remap="tt">logging</Literal> option is implemented in the <Literal remap="tt">log_changes</Literal> 1931function. 1932</Para> 1933</ListItem> 1934 1935</ItemizedList> 1936 1937</Para> 1938 1939</Sect2> 1940 1941<Sect2> 1942<Title>Reading / Writing objects</Title> 1943 1944<Para> 1945Usually <Literal remap="tt">(not always)</Literal>, the current object data is available in the 1946global variable <Literal remap="tt">type_data</Literal>, which is of the type: 1947 1948<ProgramListing> 1949struct struct_type_data { 1950 long offset_in_block; 1951 1952 union union_type_data { 1953 char buffer [EXT2_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE]; 1954 struct ext2_acl_header t_ext2_acl_header; 1955 struct ext2_acl_entry t_ext2_acl_entry; 1956 struct ext2_old_group_desc t_ext2_old_group_desc; 1957 struct ext2_group_desc t_ext2_group_desc; 1958 struct ext2_inode t_ext2_inode; 1959 struct ext2_super_block t_ext2_super_block; 1960 struct ext2_dir_entry t_ext2_dir_entry; 1961 } u; 1962}; 1963</ProgramListing> 1964 1965The above union enables me, in the program, to treat the data as raw data or 1966as a meaningful filesystem object. 1967</Para> 1968 1969<Para> 1970The reading and writing, if done to this global variable, are done through 1971the functions <Literal remap="tt">load_type_data</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">write_type_data</Literal>, available in 1972<Literal remap="tt">disk.c</Literal>. 1973</Para> 1974 1975</Sect2> 1976 1977</Sect1> 1978 1979<Sect1> 1980<Title>The general commands</Title> 1981 1982<Para> 1983The <Literal remap="tt">general commands</Literal> are handled in the file <Literal remap="tt">general_com.c</Literal>. 1984</Para> 1985 1986<Sect2> 1987<Title>The help system</Title> 1988 1989<Para> 1990The help command is handled by the function <Literal remap="tt">help</Literal>. The algorithm is as 1991follows: 1992</Para> 1993 1994<Para> 1995 1996<OrderedList> 1997<ListItem> 1998 1999<Para> 2000 Check the command line arguments. If there is an argument, pass 2001control to the <Literal remap="tt">detailed_help</Literal> function, in order to provide 2002help on the specific command. 2003</Para> 2004</ListItem> 2005<ListItem> 2006 2007<Para> 2008 If general help was requested, display a list of the available 2009commands at this point. The three levels are displayed in reverse 2010order - First the commands which are specific to the current type 2011(If a current type is defined), then the ext2 general commands (If 2012we decided that the filesystem should be treated like an ext2 2013filesystem), then the general commands. 2014</Para> 2015</ListItem> 2016<ListItem> 2017 2018<Para> 2019 Display information about EXT2ED - Current version, general 2020information about the project, etc. 2021</Para> 2022</ListItem> 2023 2024</OrderedList> 2025 2026</Para> 2027 2028</Sect2> 2029 2030<Sect2> 2031<Title>The setdevice command</Title> 2032 2033<Para> 2034The <Literal remap="tt">setdevice</Literal> commands result in calling the <Literal remap="tt">set_device</Literal> 2035function. The algorithm is: 2036</Para> 2037 2038<Para> 2039 2040<OrderedList> 2041<ListItem> 2042 2043<Para> 2044 Parse the command line argument. If it isn't available report the 2045error and return. 2046</Para> 2047</ListItem> 2048<ListItem> 2049 2050<Para> 2051 Close the current open device, if there is one. 2052</Para> 2053</ListItem> 2054<ListItem> 2055 2056<Para> 2057 Open the new device in read-only mode. Update the global variables 2058<Literal remap="tt">device_name</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">device_handle</Literal>. 2059</Para> 2060</ListItem> 2061<ListItem> 2062 2063<Para> 2064 Disable write access. 2065</Para> 2066</ListItem> 2067<ListItem> 2068 2069<Para> 2070 Empty the object memory. 2071</Para> 2072</ListItem> 2073<ListItem> 2074 2075<Para> 2076 Unregister the ext2 general commands, using 2077<Literal remap="tt">free_user_commands</Literal>. 2078</Para> 2079</ListItem> 2080<ListItem> 2081 2082<Para> 2083 Unregister the current objects, using <Literal remap="tt">free_struct_descriptors</Literal> 2084</Para> 2085</ListItem> 2086<ListItem> 2087 2088<Para> 2089 Call <Literal remap="tt">set_file_system_info</Literal> to auto-detect an ext2 filesystem 2090and set the basic filesystem values. 2091</Para> 2092</ListItem> 2093<ListItem> 2094 2095<Para> 2096 Add the <Literal remap="tt">alternate descriptors</Literal>, supplied by the user. 2097</Para> 2098</ListItem> 2099<ListItem> 2100 2101<Para> 2102 Set the device offset to the filesystem start by dispatching 2103<Literal remap="tt">setoffset 0</Literal>. 2104</Para> 2105</ListItem> 2106<ListItem> 2107 2108<Para> 2109 Show the new available commands by dispatching the <Literal remap="tt">help</Literal> 2110command. 2111</Para> 2112</ListItem> 2113 2114</OrderedList> 2115 2116</Para> 2117 2118</Sect2> 2119 2120<Sect2> 2121<Title>Basic maneuvering</Title> 2122 2123<Para> 2124Basic maneuvering is done using the <Literal remap="tt">setoffset</Literal> and the <Literal remap="tt">settype</Literal> 2125user commands. 2126</Para> 2127 2128<Para> 2129<Literal remap="tt">set_offset</Literal> accepts some alternative forms of specifying the new 2130offset. They all ultimately lead to changing the <Literal remap="tt">device_offset</Literal> 2131global variable and seeking to the new position. <Literal remap="tt">set_offset</Literal> also 2132calls <Literal remap="tt">load_type_data</Literal> to read a block ahead of the new position into 2133the <Literal remap="tt">type_data</Literal> global variable. 2134</Para> 2135 2136<Para> 2137<Literal remap="tt">set_type</Literal> will point the global variable <Literal remap="tt">current_type</Literal> to the 2138correct entry in the double linked list of the known objects. If the 2139requested type is <Literal remap="tt">hex</Literal> or <Literal remap="tt">none</Literal>, <Literal remap="tt">current_type</Literal> will be 2140initialized to <Literal remap="tt">NULL</Literal>. <Literal remap="tt">set_type</Literal> will also dispatch <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal>, 2141so that the object data will be re-formatted in the new format. 2142</Para> 2143 2144<Para> 2145When editing an ext2 filesystem, it is not intended that those commands will 2146be used directly, and it is usually not required. My implementation of the 2147ext2 layer, on the other hand, uses this lower level commands on countless 2148occasions. 2149</Para> 2150 2151</Sect2> 2152 2153<Sect2> 2154<Title>The display functions</Title> 2155 2156<Para> 2157The general command version of <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> is handled by the <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> 2158function. This command is overridden by various objects to provide a display 2159which is better suited to the object. 2160</Para> 2161 2162<Para> 2163The general show command will format the data in <Literal remap="tt">type_data</Literal> according 2164to the structure definition of the current type and show it on the <Literal remap="tt">show 2165pad</Literal>. If there is no current type, the data will be shown as a simple hex 2166dump; Otherwise, the list of variables, along with their values will be shown. 2167</Para> 2168 2169<Para> 2170A call to <Literal remap="tt">show_info</Literal> is also made - <Literal remap="tt">show_info</Literal> will provide 2171<Literal remap="tt">general statistics</Literal> on the <Literal remap="tt">show_window</Literal>, such as the current 2172block, current type, current offset and current page. 2173</Para> 2174 2175<Para> 2176The <Literal remap="tt">pgup</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">pgdn</Literal> general commands just update the 2177<Literal remap="tt">show_pad_info</Literal> global variable - We just increment 2178<Literal remap="tt">show_pad_info.line</Literal> with the number of lines in the screen - 2179<Literal remap="tt">show_pad_info.display_lines</Literal>, which was initialized in 2180<Literal remap="tt">init_windows</Literal>. 2181</Para> 2182 2183</Sect2> 2184 2185<Sect2> 2186<Title>Changing data</Title> 2187 2188<Para> 2189Data change is done in memory only. An update to the disk if followed by an 2190explicit <Literal remap="tt">writedata</Literal> command to the disk. The <Literal remap="tt">write_data</Literal> 2191function simple calls the <Literal remap="tt">write_type_data</Literal> function, outlined earlier. 2192</Para> 2193 2194<Para> 2195The <Literal remap="tt">set</Literal> command is used for changing the data. 2196</Para> 2197 2198<Para> 2199If there is no current type, control is passed to the <Literal remap="tt">hex_set</Literal> function, 2200which treats the data as a block of bytes and uses the 2201<Literal remap="tt">type_data.offset_in_block</Literal> variable to write the new text or hex string 2202to the correct place in the block. 2203</Para> 2204 2205<Para> 2206If a current type is defined, the requested variable is searched in the 2207current object, and the desired new valued is entered. 2208</Para> 2209 2210<Para> 2211The <Literal remap="tt">enablewrite</Literal> commands just sets the global variable 2212<Literal remap="tt">write_access</Literal> to <Literal remap="tt">1</Literal> and re-opens the filesystem in read-write 2213mode, if possible. 2214</Para> 2215 2216<Para> 2217If the current type is NULL, a hex-mode is assumed - The <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal> and 2218<Literal remap="tt">prev</Literal> commands will just update <Literal remap="tt">type_data.offset_in_block</Literal>. 2219</Para> 2220 2221<Para> 2222If the current type is not NULL, the The <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">prev</Literal> command 2223are usually overridden anyway. If they are not overridden, it will be assumed 2224that the user is editing an array of such objects, and they will just pass 2225to the next / prev element by dispatching to <Literal remap="tt">setoffset</Literal> using the 2226<Literal remap="tt">setoffset type + / - X</Literal> syntax. 2227</Para> 2228 2229</Sect2> 2230 2231</Sect1> 2232 2233<Sect1> 2234<Title>The ext2 general commands</Title> 2235 2236<Para> 2237The ext2 general commands are contained in the <Literal remap="tt">ext2_general_commands</Literal> 2238global variable (which is of type <Literal remap="tt">struct struct_commands</Literal>). 2239</Para> 2240 2241<Para> 2242The handling functions are implemented in the source file <Literal remap="tt">ext2_com.c</Literal>. 2243I will include the entire source code since it is relatively short. 2244</Para> 2245 2246<Sect2> 2247<Title>The super command</Title> 2248 2249<Para> 2250The super command just "brings the user" to the main superblock and set the 2251type to ext2_super_block. The implementation is trivial: 2252</Para> 2253 2254<Para> 2255 2256<ProgramListing> 2257void type_ext2___super (char *command_line) 2258 2259{ 2260 char buffer [80]; 2261 2262 super_info.copy_num=0; 2263 sprintf (buffer,"setoffset %ld",file_system_info.super_block_offset);dispatch (buffer); 2264 sprintf (buffer,"settype ext2_super_block");dispatch (buffer); 2265} 2266</ProgramListing> 2267 2268It involves only setting the <Literal remap="tt">copy_num</Literal> variable to indicate the main 2269copy, dispatching a <Literal remap="tt">setoffset</Literal> command to reach the superblock, and 2270dispatching a <Literal remap="tt">settype</Literal> to enable the superblock specific commands. 2271This last command will also call the <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command of the 2272<Literal remap="tt">ext2_super_block</Literal> type, through dispatching at the general command 2273<Literal remap="tt">settype</Literal>. 2274</Para> 2275 2276</Sect2> 2277 2278<Sect2> 2279<Title>The group command</Title> 2280 2281<Para> 2282The group command will bring the user to the specified group descriptor in 2283the main copy of the group descriptors. The type will be set to 2284<Literal remap="tt">ext2_group_desc</Literal>: 2285 2286<ProgramListing> 2287void type_ext2___group (char *command_line) 2288 2289{ 2290 long group_num=0; 2291 char *ptr,buffer [80]; 2292 2293 ptr=parse_word (command_line,buffer); 2294 if (*ptr!=0) { 2295 ptr=parse_word (ptr,buffer); 2296 group_num=atol (buffer); 2297 } 2298 2299 group_info.copy_num=0;group_info.group_num=0; 2300 sprintf (buffer,"setoffset %ld",file_system_info.first_group_desc_offset);dispatch (buffer); 2301 sprintf (buffer,"settype ext2_group_desc");dispatch (buffer); 2302 sprintf (buffer,"entry %ld",group_num);dispatch (buffer); 2303} 2304</ProgramListing> 2305 2306The implementation is as trivial as the <Literal remap="tt">super</Literal> implementation. Note 2307the use of the <Literal remap="tt">entry</Literal> command, which is a command of the 2308<Literal remap="tt">ext2_group_desc</Literal> object, to pass to the correct group descriptor. 2309</Para> 2310 2311</Sect2> 2312 2313<Sect2> 2314<Title>The cd command</Title> 2315 2316<Para> 2317The <Literal remap="tt">cd</Literal> command performs the usual cd function. The path to the global 2318cd command is a path from <Literal remap="tt">/</Literal>. 2319</Para> 2320 2321<Para> 2322<Literal remap="tt">This is one of the best examples of the power of the object oriented 2323design and of the dispatching mechanism. The operation is complicated, yet the 2324implementation is surprisingly short!</Literal> 2325</Para> 2326 2327<Para> 2328 2329<ProgramListing> 2330void type_ext2___cd (char *command_line) 2331 2332{ 2333 char temp [80],buffer [80],*ptr; 2334 2335 ptr=parse_word (command_line,buffer); 2336 if (*ptr==0) { 2337 wprintw (command_win,"Error - No argument specified\n"); 2338 refresh_command_win ();return; 2339 } 2340 ptr=parse_word (ptr,buffer); 2341 2342 if (buffer [0] != '/') { 2343 wprintw (command_win,"Error - Use a full pathname (begin with '/')\n"); 2344 refresh_command_win ();return; 2345 } 2346 2347 dispatch ("super");dispatch ("group");dispatch ("inode"); 2348 dispatch ("next");dispatch ("dir"); 2349 if (buffer [1] != 0) { 2350 sprintf (temp,"cd %s",buffer+1);dispatch (temp); 2351 } 2352} 2353</ProgramListing> 2354 2355</Para> 2356 2357<Para> 2358Note the number of the dispatch calls! 2359</Para> 2360 2361<Para> 2362<Literal remap="tt">super</Literal> is used to get to the superblock. <Literal remap="tt">group</Literal> to get to the 2363first group descriptor. <Literal remap="tt">inode</Literal> brings us to the first inode - The bad 2364blocks inode. A <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal> is command to pass to the root directory inode, 2365a <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> command "enters" the directory, and then we let the <Literal remap="tt">object 2366specific cd command</Literal> to take us from there (The object is <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal>, so 2367that <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> will call the <Literal remap="tt">cd</Literal> command of the <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> type). 2368Note that a symbolic link following could bring us back to the root directory, 2369thus the innocent calls above treats nicely such a recursive case! 2370</Para> 2371 2372<Para> 2373I feel that the above is <Literal remap="tt">intuitive</Literal> - I was expressing myself "in the 2374language" of the ext2 filesystem - (Go to the inode, etc), and the code was 2375written exactly in this spirit! 2376</Para> 2377 2378<Para> 2379I can write more at this point, but I guess I am already a bit carried 2380away with the self compliments :-) 2381</Para> 2382 2383</Sect2> 2384 2385</Sect1> 2386 2387<Sect1> 2388<Title>The superblock</Title> 2389 2390<Para> 2391This section details the handling of the superblock. 2392</Para> 2393 2394<Sect2> 2395<Title>The superblock variables</Title> 2396 2397<Para> 2398The superblock object is <Literal remap="tt">ext2_super_block</Literal>. The definition is just 2399taken from the kernel ext2 main include file - /usr/include/linux/ext2_fs.h. 2400<FOOTNOTE> 2401 2402<Para> 2403Those lines of source are copyrighted by <Literal remap="tt">Remy Card</Literal> - The author of the 2404ext2 filesystem, and by <Literal remap="tt">Linus Torvalds</Literal> - The first author of the Linux 2405operating system. Please cross reference the section Acknowledgments for the 2406full copyright. 2407</Para> 2408 2409</FOOTNOTE> 2410 2411 2412 2413<ProgramListing> 2414struct ext2_super_block { 2415 __u32 s_inodes_count; /* Inodes count */ 2416 __u32 s_blocks_count; /* Blocks count */ 2417 __u32 s_r_blocks_count; /* Reserved blocks count */ 2418 __u32 s_free_blocks_count; /* Free blocks count */ 2419 __u32 s_free_inodes_count; /* Free inodes count */ 2420 __u32 s_first_data_block; /* First Data Block */ 2421 __u32 s_log_block_size; /* Block size */ 2422 __s32 s_log_frag_size; /* Fragment size */ 2423 __u32 s_blocks_per_group; /* # Blocks per group */ 2424 __u32 s_frags_per_group; /* # Fragments per group */ 2425 __u32 s_inodes_per_group; /* # Inodes per group */ 2426 __u32 s_mtime; /* Mount time */ 2427 __u32 s_wtime; /* Write time */ 2428 __u16 s_mnt_count; /* Mount count */ 2429 __s16 s_max_mnt_count; /* Maximal mount count */ 2430 __u16 s_magic; /* Magic signature */ 2431 __u16 s_state; /* File system state */ 2432 __u16 s_errors; /* Behavior when detecting errors */ 2433 __u16 s_pad; 2434 __u32 s_lastcheck; /* time of last check */ 2435 __u32 s_checkinterval; /* max. time between checks */ 2436 __u32 s_creator_os; /* OS */ 2437 __u32 s_rev_level; /* Revision level */ 2438 __u16 s_def_resuid; /* Default uid for reserved blocks */ 2439 __u16 s_def_resgid; /* Default gid for reserved blocks */ 2440 __u32 s_reserved[0]; /* Padding to the end of the block */ 2441 __u32 s_reserved[1]; /* Padding to the end of the block */ 2442 . 2443 . 2444 . 2445 __u32 s_reserved[234]; /* Padding to the end of the block */ 2446}; 2447</ProgramListing> 2448 2449</Para> 2450 2451<Para> 2452Note that I <Literal remap="tt">expanded</Literal> the array due to my primitive parser 2453implementation. The various fields are described in the <Literal remap="tt">technical 2454document</Literal>. 2455</Para> 2456 2457</Sect2> 2458 2459<Sect2> 2460<Title>The superblock commands</Title> 2461 2462<Para> 2463This section explains the commands available in the <Literal remap="tt">ext2_super_block</Literal> 2464type. They all appear in <Literal remap="tt">super_com.c</Literal> 2465</Para> 2466 2467<Sect3> 2468<Title>The show command</Title> 2469 2470<Para> 2471The <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command is overridden here in order to provide more 2472information than just the list of variables. A <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command will end 2473up in calling <Literal remap="tt">type_super_block___show</Literal>. 2474</Para> 2475 2476<Para> 2477The first thing that we do is calling the <Literal remap="tt">general show command</Literal> in 2478order to display the list of variables. 2479</Para> 2480 2481<Para> 2482We then add some interpretation to the various lines to make the data 2483somewhat more intuitive (Expansion of the time variables and the creator 2484operating system code, for example). 2485</Para> 2486 2487<Para> 2488We also display the <Literal remap="tt">backup copy number</Literal> of the superblock in the status 2489window. This copy number is saved in the <Literal remap="tt">super_info</Literal> global variable - 2490<Literal remap="tt">super_info.copy_num</Literal>. Currently, this is the only variable there ... 2491but this type of internal variable saving is typical through my 2492implementation. 2493</Para> 2494 2495</Sect3> 2496 2497<Sect3> 2498<Title>The backup copies handling commands</Title> 2499 2500<Para> 2501The <Literal remap="tt">current copy number</Literal> is available in <Literal remap="tt">super_info.copy_num</Literal>. It 2502was initialized in the ext2 command <Literal remap="tt">super</Literal>, and is used by the various 2503superblock routines. 2504</Para> 2505 2506<Para> 2507The <Literal remap="tt">gocopy</Literal> routine will pass to another copy of the superblock. The 2508new device offset will be computed with the aid of the variables in the 2509<Literal remap="tt">file_system_info</Literal> structure. Then the routine will <Literal remap="tt">dispatch</Literal> to 2510the <Literal remap="tt">setoffset</Literal> and the <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> routines. 2511</Para> 2512 2513<Para> 2514The <Literal remap="tt">setactivecopy</Literal> routine will just save the current superblock data 2515in a temporary variable of type <Literal remap="tt">ext2_super_block</Literal>, and will dispatch 2516<Literal remap="tt">gocopy 0</Literal> to pass to the main superblock. Then it will place the saved 2517data in place of the actual data. 2518</Para> 2519 2520<Para> 2521The above two commands can be used if the main superblock is corrupted. 2522</Para> 2523 2524</Sect3> 2525 2526</Sect2> 2527 2528</Sect1> 2529 2530<Sect1> 2531<Title>The group descriptors</Title> 2532 2533<Para> 2534The group descriptors handling mechanism allows the user to take a tour in 2535the group descriptors table, stopping at each point, and examining the 2536relevant inode table, block allocation map or inode allocation map through 2537dispatching to the relevant objects. 2538</Para> 2539 2540<Para> 2541Some information about the group descriptors is available in the global 2542variable <Literal remap="tt">group_info</Literal>, which is of type <Literal remap="tt">struct_group_info</Literal>: 2543</Para> 2544 2545<Para> 2546 2547<ProgramListing> 2548struct struct_group_info { 2549 unsigned long copy_num; 2550 unsigned long group_num; 2551}; 2552</ProgramListing> 2553 2554</Para> 2555 2556<Para> 2557<Literal remap="tt">group_num</Literal> is the index of the current descriptor in the table. 2558</Para> 2559 2560<Para> 2561<Literal remap="tt">copy_num</Literal> is the number of the current backup copy. 2562</Para> 2563 2564<Sect2> 2565<Title>The group descriptor's variables</Title> 2566 2567<Para> 2568 2569<ProgramListing> 2570struct ext2_group_desc 2571{ 2572 __u32 bg_block_bitmap; /* Blocks bitmap block */ 2573 __u32 bg_inode_bitmap; /* Inodes bitmap block */ 2574 __u32 bg_inode_table; /* Inodes table block */ 2575 __u16 bg_free_blocks_count; /* Free blocks count */ 2576 __u16 bg_free_inodes_count; /* Free inodes count */ 2577 __u16 bg_used_dirs_count; /* Directories count */ 2578 __u16 bg_pad; 2579 __u32 bg_reserved[3]; 2580}; 2581</ProgramListing> 2582 2583</Para> 2584 2585<Para> 2586The first three variables are used to provide the links to the 2587<Literal remap="tt">blockbitmap, inodebitmap and inode</Literal> objects. 2588</Para> 2589 2590</Sect2> 2591 2592<Sect2> 2593<Title>Movement in the table</Title> 2594 2595<Para> 2596Movement in the group descriptors table is done using the <Literal remap="tt">next, prev and 2597entry</Literal> commands. Note that the first two commands <Literal remap="tt">override</Literal> the 2598general commands of the same name. The <Literal remap="tt">next and prev</Literal> command are just 2599calling the <Literal remap="tt">entry</Literal> function to do the job. I will show <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal>, 2600for example: 2601</Para> 2602 2603<Para> 2604 2605<ProgramListing> 2606void type_ext2_group_desc___next (char *command_line) 2607 2608{ 2609 long entry_offset=1; 2610 char *ptr,buffer [80]; 2611 2612 ptr=parse_word (command_line,buffer); 2613 if (*ptr!=0) { 2614 ptr=parse_word (ptr,buffer); 2615 entry_offset=atol (buffer); 2616 } 2617 2618 sprintf (buffer,"entry %ld",group_info.group_num+entry_offset); 2619 dispatch (buffer); 2620} 2621</ProgramListing> 2622 2623The <Literal remap="tt">entry</Literal> function is also simple - It just calculates the offset 2624using the information in <Literal remap="tt">group_info</Literal> and in <Literal remap="tt">file_system_info</Literal>, 2625and uses the usual <Literal remap="tt">setoffset / show</Literal> pair. 2626</Para> 2627 2628</Sect2> 2629 2630<Sect2> 2631<Title>The show command</Title> 2632 2633<Para> 2634As usual, the <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command is overridden. The implementation is 2635similar to the superblock's show implementation - We just call the general 2636show command, and add some information in the status window - The contents of 2637the <Literal remap="tt">group_info</Literal> structure. 2638</Para> 2639 2640</Sect2> 2641 2642<Sect2> 2643<Title>Moving between backup copies</Title> 2644 2645<Para> 2646This is done exactly like the superblock case. Please refer to explanation 2647there. 2648</Para> 2649 2650</Sect2> 2651 2652<Sect2> 2653<Title>Links to the available friends</Title> 2654 2655<Para> 2656From a group descriptor, one typically wants to reach an <Literal remap="tt">inode</Literal>, or 2657one of the <Literal remap="tt">allocation bitmaps</Literal>. This is done using the <Literal remap="tt">inode, 2658blockbitmap or inodebitmap</Literal> commands. The implementation is again trivial 2659- Get the necessary information from the group descriptor, initialize the 2660structures of the next type, and issue the <Literal remap="tt">setoffset / settype</Literal> pair. 2661</Para> 2662 2663<Para> 2664For example, here is the implementation of the <Literal remap="tt">blockbitmap</Literal> command: 2665</Para> 2666 2667<Para> 2668 2669<ProgramListing> 2670void type_ext2_group_desc___blockbitmap (char *command_line) 2671 2672{ 2673 long block_bitmap_offset; 2674 char buffer [80]; 2675 2676 block_bitmap_info.entry_num=0; 2677 block_bitmap_info.group_num=group_info.group_num; 2678 2679 block_bitmap_offset=type_data.u.t_ext2_group_desc.bg_block_bitmap; 2680 sprintf (buffer,"setoffset block %ld",block_bitmap_offset);dispatch (buffer); 2681 sprintf (buffer,"settype block_bitmap");dispatch (buffer); 2682} 2683</ProgramListing> 2684 2685</Para> 2686 2687</Sect2> 2688 2689</Sect1> 2690 2691<Sect1> 2692<Title>The inode table</Title> 2693 2694<Para> 2695The inode handling enables the user to move in the inode table, edit the 2696various attributes of the inode, and follow to the next stage - A file or a 2697directory. 2698</Para> 2699 2700<Sect2> 2701<Title>The inode variables</Title> 2702 2703<Para> 2704 2705<ProgramListing> 2706struct ext2_inode { 2707 __u16 i_mode; /* File mode */ 2708 __u16 i_uid; /* Owner Uid */ 2709 __u32 i_size; /* Size in bytes */ 2710 __u32 i_atime; /* Access time */ 2711 __u32 i_ctime; /* Creation time */ 2712 __u32 i_mtime; /* Modification time */ 2713 __u32 i_dtime; /* Deletion Time */ 2714 __u16 i_gid; /* Group Id */ 2715 __u16 i_links_count; /* Links count */ 2716 __u32 i_blocks; /* Blocks count */ 2717 __u32 i_flags; /* File flags */ 2718 union { 2719 struct { 2720 __u32 l_i_reserved1; 2721 } linux1; 2722 struct { 2723 __u32 h_i_translator; 2724 } hurd1; 2725 } osd1; /* OS dependent 1 */ 2726 __u32 i_block[EXT2_N_BLOCKS]; /* Pointers to blocks */ 2727 __u32 i_version; /* File version (for NFS) */ 2728 __u32 i_file_acl; /* File ACL */ 2729 __u32 i_size_high; /* High 32bits of size */ 2730 __u32 i_faddr; /* Fragment address */ 2731 union { 2732 struct { 2733 __u8 l_i_frag; /* Fragment number */ 2734 __u8 l_i_fsize; /* Fragment size */ 2735 __u16 i_pad1; 2736 __u32 l_i_reserved2[2]; 2737 } linux2; 2738 struct { 2739 __u8 h_i_frag; /* Fragment number */ 2740 __u8 h_i_fsize; /* Fragment size */ 2741 __u16 h_i_mode_high; 2742 __u16 h_i_uid_high; 2743 __u16 h_i_gid_high; 2744 __u32 h_i_author; 2745 } hurd2; 2746 } osd2; /* OS dependent 2 */ 2747}; 2748</ProgramListing> 2749 2750</Para> 2751 2752<Para> 2753The above is the original source code definition. We can see that the inode 2754supports <Literal remap="tt">Operating systems specific structures</Literal>. In addition to the 2755expansion of the arrays, I have <Literal remap="tt">"flattened</Literal> the inode to support only 2756the <Literal remap="tt">Linux</Literal> declaration. It seemed that this one occasion of multiple 2757variable aliases didn't justify the complication of generally supporting 2758aliases. In any case, the above system specific variables are not used 2759internally by EXT2ED, and the user is free to change the definition in 2760<Literal remap="tt">ext2.descriptors</Literal> to accommodate for his needs. 2761</Para> 2762 2763</Sect2> 2764 2765<Sect2> 2766<Title>The handling functions</Title> 2767 2768<Para> 2769The user interface to <Literal remap="tt">movement</Literal> is the usual <Literal remap="tt">next / prev / 2770entry</Literal> interface. There is really nothing special in those functions - The 2771size of the inode is fixed, the total number of inodes is known from the 2772superblock information, and the current entry can be figured up from the 2773device offset and the inode table start offset, which is known from the 2774corresponding group descriptor. Those functions are a bit older then some 2775other implementations of <Literal remap="tt">next</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">prev</Literal>, and they do not save 2776information in a special structure. Rather, they recompute it when 2777necessary. 2778</Para> 2779 2780<Para> 2781The <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command is overridden here, and provides a lot of additional 2782information about the inode - Its type, interpretation of the permissions, 2783special ext2 attributes (Immutable file, for example), and a lot more. 2784Again, the <Literal remap="tt">general show</Literal> is called first, and then the additional 2785information is written. 2786</Para> 2787 2788</Sect2> 2789 2790<Sect2> 2791<Title>Accessing files and directories</Title> 2792 2793<Para> 2794From the inode, a <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> or a <Literal remap="tt">directory</Literal> can typically be reached. 2795In order to treat a file, for example, its inode needs to be constantly 2796accessed. To satisfy that need, when editing a file or a directory, the 2797inode is still saved in memory - <Literal remap="tt">type_data</Literal> is not overwritten. 2798Rather, the following takes place: 2799 2800<ItemizedList> 2801<ListItem> 2802 2803<Para> 2804 An internal global structure which is used by the types <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> 2805and <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> handling functions is initialized by calling the 2806appropriate function. 2807</Para> 2808</ListItem> 2809<ListItem> 2810 2811<Para> 2812 The type is changed accordingly. 2813</Para> 2814</ListItem> 2815 2816</ItemizedList> 2817 2818The result is that a <Literal remap="tt">settype ext2_inode</Literal> is the only action necessary 2819to return to the inode - We actually never left it. 2820</Para> 2821 2822<Para> 2823Follows the implementation of the inode's <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> command: 2824</Para> 2825 2826<Para> 2827 2828<ProgramListing> 2829void type_ext2_inode___file (char *command_line) 2830 2831{ 2832 char buffer [80]; 2833 2834 if (!S_ISREG (type_data.u.t_ext2_inode.i_mode)) { 2835 wprintw (command_win,"Error - Inode type is not file\n"); 2836 refresh_command_win (); return; 2837 } 2838 2839 if (!init_file_info ()) { 2840 wprintw (command_win,"Error - Unable to show file\n"); 2841 refresh_command_win ();return; 2842 } 2843 2844 sprintf (buffer,"settype file");dispatch (buffer); 2845} 2846</ProgramListing> 2847 2848</Para> 2849 2850<Para> 2851As we can see - We just call <Literal remap="tt">init_file_info</Literal> to get the necessary 2852information from the inode, and set the type to <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal>. The next call 2853to <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal>, will dispatch to the <Literal remap="tt">file's show</Literal> implementation. 2854</Para> 2855 2856</Sect2> 2857 2858</Sect1> 2859 2860<Sect1> 2861<Title>Viewing a file</Title> 2862 2863<Para> 2864There isn't an ext2 kernel structure which corresponds to a file - A file is 2865just a series of blocks which are determined by its inode. As explained in 2866the last section, the inode is never actually left - The type is changed to 2867<Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> - A type which contains no variables, and a special structure is 2868initialized: 2869</Para> 2870 2871<Para> 2872 2873<ProgramListing> 2874struct struct_file_info { 2875 2876 struct ext2_inodes *inode_ptr; 2877 2878 long inode_offset; 2879 long global_block_num,global_block_offset; 2880 long block_num,blocks_count; 2881 long file_offset,file_length; 2882 long level; 2883 unsigned char buffer [EXT2_MAX_BLOCK_SIZE]; 2884 long offset_in_block; 2885 2886 int display; 2887 /* The following is used if the file is a directory */ 2888 2889 long dir_entry_num,dir_entries_count; 2890 long dir_entry_offset; 2891}; 2892</ProgramListing> 2893 2894</Para> 2895 2896<Para> 2897The <Literal remap="tt">inode_ptr</Literal> will just point to the inode in <Literal remap="tt">type_data</Literal>, which 2898is not overwritten while the user is editing the file, as the 2899<Literal remap="tt">setoffset</Literal> command is not internally used. The <Literal remap="tt">buffer</Literal> 2900will contain the current viewed block of the file. The other variables 2901contain information about the current place in the file. For example, 2902<Literal remap="tt">global_block_num</Literal> just contains the current block number. 2903</Para> 2904 2905<Para> 2906The general idea is that the above data structure will provide the file 2907handling functions all the accurate information which is needed to accomplish 2908their task. 2909</Para> 2910 2911<Para> 2912The global structure of the above type, <Literal remap="tt">file_info</Literal>, is initialized by 2913<Literal remap="tt">init_file_info</Literal> in <Literal remap="tt">file_com.c</Literal>, which is called by the 2914<Literal remap="tt">type_ext2_inode___file</Literal> function when the user requests to watch the 2915file. <Literal remap="tt">It is updated as necessary to provide accurate information as long as 2916the file is edited.</Literal> 2917</Para> 2918 2919<Sect2> 2920<Title>Returning to the file's inode</Title> 2921 2922<Para> 2923Concerning the method I used to handle files, the above task is trivial: 2924 2925<ProgramListing> 2926void type_file___inode (char *command_line) 2927 2928{ 2929 dispatch ("settype ext2_inode"); 2930} 2931</ProgramListing> 2932 2933</Para> 2934 2935</Sect2> 2936 2937<Sect2> 2938<Title>File movement</Title> 2939 2940<Para> 2941EXT2ED keeps track of the current position in the file. Movement inside the 2942current block is done using <Literal remap="tt">next, prev and offset</Literal> - They just change 2943<Literal remap="tt">file_info.offset_in_block</Literal>. 2944</Para> 2945 2946<Para> 2947Movement between blocks is done using <Literal remap="tt">nextblock, prevblock and block</Literal>. 2948To accomplish this, the direct blocks, indirect blocks, etc, need to be 2949traced. This is done by <Literal remap="tt">file_block_to_global_block</Literal>, which accepts a 2950file's internal block number, and converts it to the actual filesystem block 2951number. 2952</Para> 2953 2954<Para> 2955 2956<ProgramListing> 2957long file_block_to_global_block (long file_block,struct struct_file_info *file_info_ptr) 2958 2959{ 2960 long last_direct,last_indirect,last_dindirect; 2961 long f_indirect,s_indirect; 2962 2963 last_direct=EXT2_NDIR_BLOCKS-1; 2964 last_indirect=last_direct+file_system_info.block_size/4; 2965 last_dindirect=last_indirect+(file_system_info.block_size/4) \ 2966 *(file_system_info.block_size/4); 2967 2968 if (file_block <= last_direct) { 2969 file_info_ptr->level=0; 2970 return (file_info_ptr->inode_ptr->i_block [file_block]); 2971 } 2972 2973 if (file_block <= last_indirect) { 2974 file_info_ptr->level=1; 2975 file_block=file_block-last_direct-1; 2976 return (return_indirect (file_info_ptr->inode_ptr-> \ 2977 i_block [EXT2_IND_BLOCK],file_block)); 2978 } 2979 2980 if (file_block <= last_dindirect) { 2981 file_info_ptr->level=2; 2982 file_block=file_block-last_indirect-1; 2983 return (return_dindirect (file_info_ptr->inode_ptr-> \ 2984 i_block [EXT2_DIND_BLOCK],file_block)); 2985 } 2986 2987 file_info_ptr->level=3; 2988 file_block=file_block-last_dindirect-1; 2989 return (return_tindirect (file_info_ptr->inode_ptr-> \ 2990 i_block [EXT2_TIND_BLOCK],file_block)); 2991} 2992</ProgramListing> 2993 2994<Literal remap="tt">last_direct, last_indirect, etc</Literal>, contain the last internal block number 2995which is accessed by this method - If the requested block is smaller then 2996<Literal remap="tt">last_direct</Literal>, for example, it is a direct block. 2997</Para> 2998 2999<Para> 3000If the block is a direct block, its number is just taken from the inode. 3001A non-direct block is handled by <Literal remap="tt">return_indirect, return_dindirect and 3002return_tindirect</Literal>, which correspond to indirect, double-indirect and 3003triple-indirect. Each of the above functions is constructed using the lower 3004level functions. For example, <Literal remap="tt">return_dindirect</Literal> is constructed as 3005follows: 3006</Para> 3007 3008<Para> 3009 3010<ProgramListing> 3011long return_dindirect (long table_block,long block_num) 3012 3013{ 3014 long f_indirect; 3015 3016 f_indirect=block_num/(file_system_info.block_size/4); 3017 f_indirect=return_indirect (table_block,f_indirect); 3018 return (return_indirect (f_indirect,block_num%(file_system_info.block_size/4))); 3019} 3020</ProgramListing> 3021 3022</Para> 3023 3024</Sect2> 3025 3026<Sect2> 3027<Title>Object memory</Title> 3028 3029<Para> 3030The <Literal remap="tt">remember</Literal> command is overridden here and in the <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> type - 3031We just remember the inode of the file. It is just simpler to implement, and 3032doesn't seem like a big limitation. 3033</Para> 3034 3035</Sect2> 3036 3037<Sect2> 3038<Title>Changing data</Title> 3039 3040<Para> 3041The <Literal remap="tt">set</Literal> command is overridden, and provides the same functionality 3042like the usage of the <Literal remap="tt">general set</Literal> command with no type declared. The 3043<Literal remap="tt">writedata</Literal> is overridden so that we'll write the edited block 3044(file_info.buffer) and not <Literal remap="tt">type_data</Literal> (Which contains the inode). 3045</Para> 3046 3047</Sect2> 3048 3049</Sect1> 3050 3051<Sect1> 3052<Title>Directories</Title> 3053 3054<Para> 3055A directory is just a file which is formatted according to a special format. 3056As such, EXT2ED handles directories and files quite alike. Specifically, the 3057same variable of type <Literal remap="tt">struct_file_info</Literal> which is used in the 3058<Literal remap="tt">file</Literal>, is used here. 3059</Para> 3060 3061<Para> 3062The <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> type uses all the variables in the above structure, as 3063opposed to the <Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> type, which didn't use the last ones. 3064</Para> 3065 3066<Sect2> 3067<Title>The search_dir_entries function</Title> 3068 3069<Para> 3070The entire situation is similar to that which was described in the 3071<Literal remap="tt">file</Literal> type, with one main change: 3072</Para> 3073 3074<Para> 3075The main function in <Literal remap="tt">dir_com.c</Literal> is <Literal remap="tt">search_dir_entries</Literal>. This 3076function will <Literal remap="tt">"run"</Literal> on the entire entries in the directory, and will 3077call a client's function each time. The client's function is supplied as an 3078argument, and will check the current entry for a match, based on its own 3079criterion. It will then signal <Literal remap="tt">search_dir_entries</Literal> whether to 3080<Literal remap="tt">ABORT</Literal> the search, whether it <Literal remap="tt">FOUND</Literal> the entry it was looking 3081for, or that the entry is still not found, and we should <Literal remap="tt">CONTINUE</Literal> 3082searching. Follows the declaration: 3083 3084<ProgramListing> 3085struct struct_file_info search_dir_entries \ 3086 (int (*action) (struct struct_file_info *info),int *status) 3087 3088/* 3089 This routine runs on all directory entries in the current directory. 3090 For each entry, action is called. The return code of action is one of 3091 the following: 3092 3093 ABORT - Current dir entry is returned. 3094 CONTINUE - Continue searching. 3095 FOUND - Current dir entry is returned. 3096 3097 If the last entry is reached, it is returned, along with an ABORT status. 3098 3099 status is updated to the returned code of action. 3100*/ 3101</ProgramListing> 3102 3103</Para> 3104 3105<Para> 3106With the above tool in hand, many operations are simple to perform - Here is 3107the way I counted the entries in the current directory: 3108</Para> 3109 3110<Para> 3111 3112<ProgramListing> 3113long count_dir_entries (void) 3114 3115{ 3116 int status; 3117 3118 return (search_dir_entries (&action_count,&status).dir_entry_num); 3119} 3120 3121int action_count (struct struct_file_info *info) 3122 3123{ 3124 return (CONTINUE); 3125} 3126</ProgramListing> 3127 3128It will just <Literal remap="tt">CONTINUE</Literal> until the last entry. The returned structure 3129(of type <Literal remap="tt">struct_file_info</Literal>) will have its number in the 3130<Literal remap="tt">dir_entry_num</Literal> field, and this is exactly the required number! 3131</Para> 3132 3133</Sect2> 3134 3135<Sect2> 3136<Title>The cd command</Title> 3137 3138<Para> 3139The <Literal remap="tt">cd</Literal> command accepts a relative path, and moves there ... 3140The implementation is of-course a bit more complicated: 3141 3142<OrderedList> 3143<ListItem> 3144 3145<Para> 3146 The path is checked that it is not an absolute path (from <Literal remap="tt">/</Literal>). 3147If it is, we let the <Literal remap="tt">general cd</Literal> to do the job by calling 3148directly <Literal remap="tt">type_ext2___cd</Literal>. 3149</Para> 3150</ListItem> 3151<ListItem> 3152 3153<Para> 3154 The path is divided into the nearest path and the rest of the path. 3155For example, cd 1/2/3/4 is divided into <Literal remap="tt">1</Literal> and into 3156<Literal remap="tt">2/3/4</Literal>. 3157</Para> 3158</ListItem> 3159<ListItem> 3160 3161<Para> 3162 It is the first part of the path that we need to search for in the 3163current directory. We search for it using <Literal remap="tt">search_dir_entries</Literal>, 3164which accepts the <Literal remap="tt">action_name</Literal> function as the user defined 3165function. 3166</Para> 3167</ListItem> 3168<ListItem> 3169 3170<Para> 3171 <Literal remap="tt">search_dir_entries</Literal> will scan the entire entries and will call 3172our <Literal remap="tt">action_name</Literal> function for each entry. In 3173<Literal remap="tt">action_name</Literal>, the required name will be checked against the 3174name of the current entry, and <Literal remap="tt">FOUND</Literal> will be returned when a 3175match occurs. 3176</Para> 3177</ListItem> 3178<ListItem> 3179 3180<Para> 3181 If the required entry is found, we dispatch a <Literal remap="tt">remember</Literal> 3182command to insert the current <Literal remap="tt">inode</Literal> into the object memory. 3183This is required to easily support <Literal remap="tt">symbolic links</Literal> - If we 3184find later that the inode pointed by the entry is actually a 3185symbolic link, we'll need to return to this point, and the above 3186inode doesn't have (and can't have, because of <Literal remap="tt">hard links</Literal>) the 3187information necessary to "move back". 3188</Para> 3189</ListItem> 3190<ListItem> 3191 3192<Para> 3193 We then dispatch a <Literal remap="tt">followinode</Literal> command to reach the inode 3194pointed by the required entry. This command will automatically 3195change the type to <Literal remap="tt">ext2_inode</Literal> - We are now at an inode, and 3196all the inode commands are available. 3197</Para> 3198</ListItem> 3199<ListItem> 3200 3201<Para> 3202 We check the inode's type to see if it is a directory. If it is, we 3203dispatch a <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> command to "enter the directory", and 3204recursively call ourself (The type is <Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> again) by 3205dispatching a <Literal remap="tt">cd</Literal> command, with the rest of the path as an 3206argument. 3207</Para> 3208</ListItem> 3209<ListItem> 3210 3211<Para> 3212 If the inode's type is a symbolic link (only fast symbolic link were 3213meanwhile implemented. I guess this is typically the case.), we note 3214the path it is pointing at, the saved inode is recalled, we dispatch 3215<Literal remap="tt">dir</Literal> to get back to the original directory, and we call 3216ourself again with the <Literal remap="tt">link path/rest of the path</Literal> argument. 3217</Para> 3218</ListItem> 3219<ListItem> 3220 3221<Para> 3222 In any other case, we just stop at the resulting inode. 3223</Para> 3224</ListItem> 3225 3226</OrderedList> 3227 3228</Para> 3229 3230</Sect2> 3231 3232</Sect1> 3233 3234<Sect1> 3235<Title>The block and inode allocation bitmaps</Title> 3236 3237<Para> 3238The block allocation bitmap is reached by the corresponding group descriptor. 3239The group descriptor handling functions will save the necessary information 3240into a structure of the <Literal remap="tt">struct_block_bitmap_info</Literal> type: 3241</Para> 3242 3243<Para> 3244 3245<ProgramListing> 3246struct struct_block_bitmap_info { 3247 unsigned long entry_num; 3248 unsigned long group_num; 3249}; 3250</ProgramListing> 3251 3252</Para> 3253 3254<Para> 3255The <Literal remap="tt">show</Literal> command is overridden, and will show the block as a series of 3256bits, each bit corresponding to a block. The main variable is the 3257<Literal remap="tt">entry_num</Literal> variable, declared above, which is just the current block 3258number in this block group. The current entry is highlighted, and the 3259<Literal remap="tt">next, prev and entry</Literal> commands just change the above variable. 3260</Para> 3261 3262<Para> 3263The <Literal remap="tt">allocate and deallocate</Literal> change the specified bits. Nothing 3264special about them - They just contain code which converts between bit and 3265byte locations. 3266</Para> 3267 3268<Para> 3269The <Literal remap="tt">inode allocation bitmap</Literal> is treated in much the same fashion, with 3270the same commands available. 3271</Para> 3272 3273</Sect1> 3274 3275<Sect1> 3276<Title>Filesystem size limitation</Title> 3277 3278<Para> 3279While an ext2 filesystem has a size limit of <Literal remap="tt">4 TB</Literal>, EXT2ED currently 3280<Literal remap="tt">can't</Literal> handle filesystems which are <Literal remap="tt">bigger than 2 GB</Literal>. 3281</Para> 3282 3283<Para> 3284This limitation results from my usage of <Literal remap="tt">32 bit long variables</Literal> and 3285of the <Literal remap="tt">fseek</Literal> filesystem call, which can't seek up to 4 TB. 3286</Para> 3287 3288<Para> 3289By looking in the <Literal remap="tt">ext2 library</Literal> source code by <Literal remap="tt">Theodore Ts'o</Literal>, 3290I discovered the <Literal remap="tt">llseek</Literal> system call which can seek to a 3291<Literal remap="tt">64 bit unsigned long long</Literal> offset. Correcting the situation is not 3292difficult in concept - I need to change long into unsigned long long where 3293appropriate and modify <Literal remap="tt">disk.c</Literal> to use the llseek system call. 3294</Para> 3295 3296<Para> 3297However, fixing the above limitation involves making changes in many places 3298in the code and will obviously make the entire code less stable. For that 3299reason, I chose to release EXT2ED as it is now and to postpone the above fix 3300to the next release. 3301</Para> 3302 3303</Sect1> 3304 3305<Sect1> 3306<Title>Conclusion</Title> 3307 3308<Para> 3309Had I known in advance the structure of the ext2 filesystem, I feel that 3310the resulting design would have been quite different from the presented 3311design above. 3312</Para> 3313 3314<Para> 3315EXT2ED has now two levels of abstraction - A <Literal remap="tt">general</Literal> filesystem, and an 3316<Literal remap="tt">ext2</Literal> filesystem, and the surface is more or less prepared for additions 3317of other filesystems. Had I approached the design in the "engineering" way, 3318I guess that the first level above would not have existed. 3319</Para> 3320 3321</Sect1> 3322 3323<Sect1> 3324<Title>Copyright</Title> 3325 3326<Para> 3327EXT2ED is Copyright (C) 1995 Gadi Oxman. 3328</Para> 3329 3330<Para> 3331EXT2ED is hereby placed under the GPL - Gnu Public License. You are free and 3332welcome to copy, view and modify the sources. My only wish is that my 3333copyright presented above will be left and that a list of the bug fixes, 3334added features, etc, will be provided. 3335</Para> 3336 3337<Para> 3338The entire EXT2ED project is based, of-course, on the kernel sources. The 3339<Literal remap="tt">ext2.descriptors</Literal> distributed with EXT2ED is a slightly modified 3340version of the main ext2 include file, /usr/include/linux/ext2_fs.h. Follows 3341the original copyright: 3342</Para> 3343 3344<Para> 3345 3346<ProgramListing> 3347/* 3348 * linux/include/linux/ext2_fs.h 3349 * 3350 * Copyright (C) 1992, 1993, 1994, 1995 3351 * Remy Card (card@masi.ibp.fr) 3352 * Laboratoire MASI - Institut Blaise Pascal 3353 * Universite Pierre et Marie Curie (Paris VI) 3354 * 3355 * from 3356 * 3357 * linux/include/linux/minix_fs.h 3358 * 3359 * Copyright (C) 1991, 1992 Linus Torvalds 3360 */ 3361 3362</ProgramListing> 3363 3364</Para> 3365 3366</Sect1> 3367 3368<Sect1> 3369<Title>Acknowledgments</Title> 3370 3371<Para> 3372EXT2ED was constructed as a student project in the software 3373laboratory of the faculty of electrical-engineering in the 3374<Literal remap="tt">Technion - Israel's institute of technology</Literal>. 3375</Para> 3376 3377<Para> 3378At first, I would like to thank <Literal remap="tt">Avner Lottem</Literal> and <Literal remap="tt">Doctor Ilana 3379David</Literal> for their interest and assistance in this project. 3380</Para> 3381 3382<Para> 3383I would also like to thank the following people, who were involved in the 3384design and implementation of the ext2 filesystem kernel code and support 3385utilities: 3386 3387<ItemizedList> 3388<ListItem> 3389 3390<Para> 3391 <Literal remap="tt">Remy Card</Literal> 3392 3393Who designed, implemented and maintains the ext2 filesystem kernel 3394code, and some of the ext2 utilities. <Literal remap="tt">Remy Card</Literal> is also the 3395author of several helpful slides concerning the ext2 filesystem. 3396Specifically, he is the author of <Literal remap="tt">File Management in the Linux 3397Kernel</Literal> and of <Literal remap="tt">The Second Extended File System - Current 3398State, Future Development</Literal>. 3399 3400</Para> 3401</ListItem> 3402<ListItem> 3403 3404<Para> 3405 <Literal remap="tt">Wayne Davison</Literal> 3406 3407Who designed the ext2 filesystem. 3408</Para> 3409</ListItem> 3410<ListItem> 3411 3412<Para> 3413 <Literal remap="tt">Stephen Tweedie</Literal> 3414 3415Who helped designing the ext2 filesystem kernel code and wrote the 3416slides <Literal remap="tt">Optimizations in File Systems</Literal>. 3417</Para> 3418</ListItem> 3419<ListItem> 3420 3421<Para> 3422 <Literal remap="tt">Theodore Ts'o</Literal> 3423 3424Who is the author of several ext2 utilities and of the ext2 library 3425<Literal remap="tt">libext2fs</Literal> (which I didn't use, simply because I didn't know 3426it exists when I started to work on my project). 3427</Para> 3428</ListItem> 3429 3430</ItemizedList> 3431 3432</Para> 3433 3434<Para> 3435Lastly, I would like to thank, of-course, <Literal remap="tt">Linus Torvalds</Literal> and the 3436<Literal remap="tt">Linux community</Literal> for providing all of us with such a great operating 3437system. 3438</Para> 3439 3440<Para> 3441Please contact me in a case of bug report, suggestions, or just about 3442anything concerning EXT2ED. 3443</Para> 3444 3445<Para> 3446Enjoy, 3447</Para> 3448 3449<Para> 3450Gadi Oxman <tgud@tochnapc2.technion.ac.il> 3451</Para> 3452 3453<Para> 3454Haifa, August 95 3455</Para> 3456 3457</Sect1> 3458 3459</Article> 3460