Operating Systems 2017F Lecture 18: Difference between revisions

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How do you recover from damage?<br>
How do you recover from damage?<br>
* filesystems never "reboot", must remain correct over the course of years <br>
* filesystems never "reboot", must remain correct over the course of years <br>
* Errors will happen: bitrot, accidental corruption
* Errors will happen: bitrot, accidental corruption, computer failiure/memory corruption/hard reboot <br>
<br>
To make filesystems fast, data and meta-data is cached in RAM <br>
* Bad things happen if this data hasn't been writen to disk and you reboot <br>
* Even worse things happen if your RAM is bad and corrupts the data <br>
* FSCK is like scandisk in Windows 98
*

Revision as of 18:40, 16 November 2017

Additional Notes

Lec 18

  • More on filesystems
  • How can you recover a fs and how do you delete a file?


A filesystem is a:

  • Persistent data structure
  • Stored in fixed size blocks (at least 512 bytes in size)
  • Maps hierarchical filenames to file contents
  • Has metadata about files somehow


What's in a filesystem

  • data blocks
  • metadata blocks, you need someway to find the blocks


How do you organize metadata?

First identify basic characteristics of the filesystem

You need a "superblock" which is a "summary" block that tells you about everything else

Normally the superblock is the first block of the filesystem

In the superblock

  • Type of filesystem
    • What filesystem magic number is there
    • file command to know file type
  • Size of the filesystem
  • How the filesystem is organized
  • Where can I find the rest of the metadata

He opened a .jpg as a binary file to show us the magic number in a file, first several bytes identify type of file. Kernel does not care about file extension. Userspace programs may care about the extension.

POSIX is a standard for UNIX
For POSIX filesystems

  • File metadata is stored in INODES
  • most have pre-reserved inodes

Usenet is a worldwide distribute discussion system that is deprecated now because it could not handle the spam people uploaded into it, lol. Format for usenet was every message stored in individual file. You will have lots of files!
So we have:

  • superblock
  • inode blocks
  • data blocks
    • data blocks for directories
    • data blocks for files


How do you recover from damage?

  • filesystems never "reboot", must remain correct over the course of years
  • Errors will happen: bitrot, accidental corruption, computer failiure/memory corruption/hard reboot


To make filesystems fast, data and meta-data is cached in RAM

  • Bad things happen if this data hasn't been writen to disk and you reboot
  • Even worse things happen if your RAM is bad and corrupts the data
  • FSCK is like scandisk in Windows 98