linux/Documentation/filesystems/fiemap.txt
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   1============
   2Fiemap Ioctl
   3============
   4
   5The fiemap ioctl is an efficient method for userspace to get file
   6extent mappings. Instead of block-by-block mapping (such as bmap), fiemap
   7returns a list of extents.
   8
   9
  10Request Basics
  11--------------
  12
  13A fiemap request is encoded within struct fiemap:
  14
  15struct fiemap {
  16        __u64   fm_start;        /* logical offset (inclusive) at
  17                                  * which to start mapping (in) */
  18        __u64   fm_length;       /* logical length of mapping which
  19                                  * userspace cares about (in) */
  20        __u32   fm_flags;        /* FIEMAP_FLAG_* flags for request (in/out) */
  21        __u32   fm_mapped_extents; /* number of extents that were
  22                                    * mapped (out) */
  23        __u32   fm_extent_count; /* size of fm_extents array (in) */
  24        __u32   fm_reserved;
  25        struct fiemap_extent fm_extents[0]; /* array of mapped extents (out) */
  26};
  27
  28
  29fm_start, and fm_length specify the logical range within the file
  30which the process would like mappings for. Extents returned mirror
  31those on disk - that is, the logical offset of the 1st returned extent
  32may start before fm_start, and the range covered by the last returned
  33extent may end after fm_length. All offsets and lengths are in bytes.
  34
  35Certain flags to modify the way in which mappings are looked up can be
  36set in fm_flags. If the kernel doesn't understand some particular
  37flags, it will return EBADR and the contents of fm_flags will contain
  38the set of flags which caused the error. If the kernel is compatible
  39with all flags passed, the contents of fm_flags will be unmodified.
  40It is up to userspace to determine whether rejection of a particular
  41flag is fatal to its operation. This scheme is intended to allow the
  42fiemap interface to grow in the future but without losing
  43compatibility with old software.
  44
  45fm_extent_count specifies the number of elements in the fm_extents[] array
  46that can be used to return extents.  If fm_extent_count is zero, then the
  47fm_extents[] array is ignored (no extents will be returned), and the
  48fm_mapped_extents count will hold the number of extents needed in
  49fm_extents[] to hold the file's current mapping.  Note that there is
  50nothing to prevent the file from changing between calls to FIEMAP.
  51
  52The following flags can be set in fm_flags:
  53
  54* FIEMAP_FLAG_SYNC
  55If this flag is set, the kernel will sync the file before mapping extents.
  56
  57* FIEMAP_FLAG_XATTR
  58If this flag is set, the extents returned will describe the inodes
  59extended attribute lookup tree, instead of its data tree.
  60
  61
  62Extent Mapping
  63--------------
  64
  65Extent information is returned within the embedded fm_extents array
  66which userspace must allocate along with the fiemap structure. The
  67number of elements in the fiemap_extents[] array should be passed via
  68fm_extent_count. The number of extents mapped by kernel will be
  69returned via fm_mapped_extents. If the number of fiemap_extents
  70allocated is less than would be required to map the requested range,
  71the maximum number of extents that can be mapped in the fm_extent[]
  72array will be returned and fm_mapped_extents will be equal to
  73fm_extent_count. In that case, the last extent in the array will not
  74complete the requested range and will not have the FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST
  75flag set (see the next section on extent flags).
  76
  77Each extent is described by a single fiemap_extent structure as
  78returned in fm_extents.
  79
  80struct fiemap_extent {
  81        __u64   fe_logical;  /* logical offset in bytes for the start of
  82                              * the extent */
  83        __u64   fe_physical; /* physical offset in bytes for the start
  84                              * of the extent */
  85        __u64   fe_length;   /* length in bytes for the extent */
  86        __u64   fe_reserved64[2];
  87        __u32   fe_flags;    /* FIEMAP_EXTENT_* flags for this extent */
  88        __u32   fe_reserved[3];
  89};
  90
  91All offsets and lengths are in bytes and mirror those on disk.  It is valid
  92for an extents logical offset to start before the request or its logical
  93length to extend past the request.  Unless FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED is
  94returned, fe_logical, fe_physical, and fe_length will be aligned to the
  95block size of the file system.  With the exception of extents flagged as
  96FIEMAP_EXTENT_MERGED, adjacent extents will not be merged.
  97
  98The fe_flags field contains flags which describe the extent returned.
  99A special flag, FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST is always set on the last extent in
 100the file so that the process making fiemap calls can determine when no
 101more extents are available, without having to call the ioctl again.
 102
 103Some flags are intentionally vague and will always be set in the
 104presence of other more specific flags. This way a program looking for
 105a general property does not have to know all existing and future flags
 106which imply that property.
 107
 108For example, if FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_INLINE or FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_TAIL
 109are set, FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED will also be set. A program looking
 110for inline or tail-packed data can key on the specific flag. Software
 111which simply cares not to try operating on non-aligned extents
 112however, can just key on FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED, and not have to
 113worry about all present and future flags which might imply unaligned
 114data. Note that the opposite is not true - it would be valid for
 115FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED to appear alone.
 116
 117* FIEMAP_EXTENT_LAST
 118This is the last extent in the file. A mapping attempt past this
 119extent will return nothing.
 120
 121* FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNKNOWN
 122The location of this extent is currently unknown. This may indicate
 123the data is stored on an inaccessible volume or that no storage has
 124been allocated for the file yet.
 125
 126* FIEMAP_EXTENT_DELALLOC
 127  - This will also set FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNKNOWN.
 128Delayed allocation - while there is data for this extent, its
 129physical location has not been allocated yet.
 130
 131* FIEMAP_EXTENT_ENCODED
 132This extent does not consist of plain filesystem blocks but is
 133encoded (e.g. encrypted or compressed).  Reading the data in this
 134extent via I/O to the block device will have undefined results.
 135
 136Note that it is *always* undefined to try to update the data
 137in-place by writing to the indicated location without the
 138assistance of the filesystem, or to access the data using the
 139information returned by the FIEMAP interface while the filesystem
 140is mounted.  In other words, user applications may only read the
 141extent data via I/O to the block device while the filesystem is
 142unmounted, and then only if the FIEMAP_EXTENT_ENCODED flag is
 143clear; user applications must not try reading or writing to the
 144filesystem via the block device under any other circumstances.
 145
 146* FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_ENCRYPTED
 147  - This will also set FIEMAP_EXTENT_ENCODED
 148The data in this extent has been encrypted by the file system.
 149
 150* FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED
 151Extent offsets and length are not guaranteed to be block aligned.
 152
 153* FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_INLINE
 154  This will also set FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED
 155Data is located within a meta data block.
 156
 157* FIEMAP_EXTENT_DATA_TAIL
 158  This will also set FIEMAP_EXTENT_NOT_ALIGNED
 159Data is packed into a block with data from other files.
 160
 161* FIEMAP_EXTENT_UNWRITTEN
 162Unwritten extent - the extent is allocated but its data has not been
 163initialized.  This indicates the extent's data will be all zero if read
 164through the filesystem but the contents are undefined if read directly from
 165the device.
 166
 167* FIEMAP_EXTENT_MERGED
 168This will be set when a file does not support extents, i.e., it uses a block
 169based addressing scheme.  Since returning an extent for each block back to
 170userspace would be highly inefficient, the kernel will try to merge most
 171adjacent blocks into 'extents'.
 172
 173
 174VFS -> File System Implementation
 175---------------------------------
 176
 177File systems wishing to support fiemap must implement a ->fiemap callback on
 178their inode_operations structure. The fs ->fiemap call is responsible for
 179defining its set of supported fiemap flags, and calling a helper function on
 180each discovered extent:
 181
 182struct inode_operations {
 183       ...
 184
 185       int (*fiemap)(struct inode *, struct fiemap_extent_info *, u64 start,
 186                     u64 len);
 187
 188->fiemap is passed struct fiemap_extent_info which describes the
 189fiemap request:
 190
 191struct fiemap_extent_info {
 192        unsigned int fi_flags;          /* Flags as passed from user */
 193        unsigned int fi_extents_mapped; /* Number of mapped extents */
 194        unsigned int fi_extents_max;    /* Size of fiemap_extent array */
 195        struct fiemap_extent *fi_extents_start; /* Start of fiemap_extent array */
 196};
 197
 198It is intended that the file system should not need to access any of this
 199structure directly. Filesystem handlers should be tolerant to signals and return
 200EINTR once fatal signal received.
 201
 202
 203Flag checking should be done at the beginning of the ->fiemap callback via the
 204fiemap_check_flags() helper:
 205
 206int fiemap_check_flags(struct fiemap_extent_info *fieinfo, u32 fs_flags);
 207
 208The struct fieinfo should be passed in as received from ioctl_fiemap(). The
 209set of fiemap flags which the fs understands should be passed via fs_flags. If
 210fiemap_check_flags finds invalid user flags, it will place the bad values in
 211fieinfo->fi_flags and return -EBADR. If the file system gets -EBADR, from
 212fiemap_check_flags(), it should immediately exit, returning that error back to
 213ioctl_fiemap().
 214
 215
 216For each extent in the request range, the file system should call
 217the helper function, fiemap_fill_next_extent():
 218
 219int fiemap_fill_next_extent(struct fiemap_extent_info *info, u64 logical,
 220                            u64 phys, u64 len, u32 flags, u32 dev);
 221
 222fiemap_fill_next_extent() will use the passed values to populate the
 223next free extent in the fm_extents array. 'General' extent flags will
 224automatically be set from specific flags on behalf of the calling file
 225system so that the userspace API is not broken.
 226
 227fiemap_fill_next_extent() returns 0 on success, and 1 when the
 228user-supplied fm_extents array is full. If an error is encountered
 229while copying the extent to user memory, -EFAULT will be returned.
 230