| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 | 
 |  | 
 | =========================================== | 
 | Cramfs - cram a filesystem onto a small ROM | 
 | =========================================== | 
 |  | 
 | cramfs is designed to be simple and small, and to compress things well. | 
 |  | 
 | It uses the zlib routines to compress a file one page at a time, and | 
 | allows random page access.  The meta-data is not compressed, but is | 
 | expressed in a very terse representation to make it use much less | 
 | diskspace than traditional filesystems. | 
 |  | 
 | You can't write to a cramfs filesystem (making it compressible and | 
 | compact also makes it _very_ hard to update on-the-fly), so you have to | 
 | create the disk image with the "mkcramfs" utility. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Usage Notes | 
 | ----------- | 
 |  | 
 | File sizes are limited to less than 16MB. | 
 |  | 
 | Maximum filesystem size is a little over 256MB.  (The last file on the | 
 | filesystem is allowed to extend past 256MB.) | 
 |  | 
 | Only the low 8 bits of gid are stored.  The current version of | 
 | mkcramfs simply truncates to 8 bits, which is a potential security | 
 | issue. | 
 |  | 
 | Hard links are supported, but hard linked files | 
 | will still have a link count of 1 in the cramfs image. | 
 |  | 
 | Cramfs directories have no ``.`` or ``..`` entries.  Directories (like | 
 | every other file on cramfs) always have a link count of 1.  (There's | 
 | no need to use -noleaf in ``find``, btw.) | 
 |  | 
 | No timestamps are stored in a cramfs, so these default to the epoch | 
 | (1970 GMT).  Recently-accessed files may have updated timestamps, but | 
 | the update lasts only as long as the inode is cached in memory, after | 
 | which the timestamp reverts to 1970, i.e. moves backwards in time. | 
 |  | 
 | Currently, cramfs must be written and read with architectures of the | 
 | same endianness, and can be read only by kernels with PAGE_SIZE | 
 | == 4096.  At least the latter of these is a bug, but it hasn't been | 
 | decided what the best fix is.  For the moment if you have larger pages | 
 | you can just change the #define in mkcramfs.c, so long as you don't | 
 | mind the filesystem becoming unreadable to future kernels. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Memory Mapped cramfs image | 
 | -------------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | The CRAMFS_MTD Kconfig option adds support for loading data directly from | 
 | a physical linear memory range (usually non volatile memory like Flash) | 
 | instead of going through the block device layer. This saves some memory | 
 | since no intermediate buffering is necessary to hold the data before | 
 | decompressing. | 
 |  | 
 | And when data blocks are kept uncompressed and properly aligned, they will | 
 | automatically be mapped directly into user space whenever possible providing | 
 | eXecute-In-Place (XIP) from ROM of read-only segments. Data segments mapped | 
 | read-write (hence they have to be copied to RAM) may still be compressed in | 
 | the cramfs image in the same file along with non compressed read-only | 
 | segments. Both MMU and no-MMU systems are supported. This is particularly | 
 | handy for tiny embedded systems with very tight memory constraints. | 
 |  | 
 | The location of the cramfs image in memory is system dependent. You must | 
 | know the proper physical address where the cramfs image is located and | 
 | configure an MTD device for it. Also, that MTD device must be supported | 
 | by a map driver that implements the "point" method. Examples of such | 
 | MTD drivers are cfi_cmdset_0001 (Intel/Sharp CFI flash) or physmap | 
 | (Flash device in physical memory map). MTD partitions based on such devices | 
 | are fine too. Then that device should be specified with the "mtd:" prefix | 
 | as the mount device argument. For example, to mount the MTD device named | 
 | "fs_partition" on the /mnt directory:: | 
 |  | 
 |     $ mount -t cramfs mtd:fs_partition /mnt | 
 |  | 
 | To boot a kernel with this as root filesystem, suffice to specify | 
 | something like "root=mtd:fs_partition" on the kernel command line. | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Tools | 
 | ----- | 
 |  | 
 | A version of mkcramfs that can take advantage of the latest capabilities | 
 | described above can be found here: | 
 |  | 
 | https://github.com/npitre/cramfs-tools | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | For /usr/share/magic | 
 | -------------------- | 
 |  | 
 | =====	=======================	======================= | 
 | 0	ulelong	0x28cd3d45	Linux cramfs offset 0 | 
 | >4	ulelong	x		size %d | 
 | >8	ulelong	x		flags 0x%x | 
 | >12	ulelong	x		future 0x%x | 
 | >16	string	>\0		signature "%.16s" | 
 | >32	ulelong	x		fsid.crc 0x%x | 
 | >36	ulelong	x		fsid.edition %d | 
 | >40	ulelong	x		fsid.blocks %d | 
 | >44	ulelong	x		fsid.files %d | 
 | >48	string	>\0		name "%.16s" | 
 | 512	ulelong	0x28cd3d45	Linux cramfs offset 512 | 
 | >516	ulelong	x		size %d | 
 | >520	ulelong	x		flags 0x%x | 
 | >524	ulelong	x		future 0x%x | 
 | >528	string	>\0		signature "%.16s" | 
 | >544	ulelong	x		fsid.crc 0x%x | 
 | >548	ulelong	x		fsid.edition %d | 
 | >552	ulelong	x		fsid.blocks %d | 
 | >556	ulelong	x		fsid.files %d | 
 | >560	string	>\0		name "%.16s" | 
 | =====	=======================	======================= | 
 |  | 
 |  | 
 | Hacker Notes | 
 | ------------ | 
 |  | 
 | See fs/cramfs/README for filesystem layout and implementation notes. |