0: No output. Default for mount_mfs unless -N specified
1: Output size of partition and cylinder groups.
2: Follow with a progress-bar line of dots (scaled to finish at RH margin)
3: Include a single line of alternate suberblock addresses before progress
bar. Default for newfs.
4: Output lots of lines of alternate superblock numbers that scroll madly
up the screen.
If -N given, newfs/mount_mfs exits before displaying any progress bar.
Output constrained (almost always) to 1 column less than the terminal width.
were full then not enough bits were left for the inode allocation map.
Always put a multiple of 8 fragments (and non-zero) inodes into the eqns
so that answer is correct.
Fix the sum that may discard the last cylinder group if it isn't large enough
to contain all its inodes.
Spotted during some other tests, eg:
$ newfs -s 109610 -n1 -f512 -b4096 -N -O2 -F ./z
CGSIZE miscalculated 4097 > 4096
$
big filesystems can have thousands of them - no one ever writes them down.
After the first line of numbers just output a '.' for each cylinder group.
Also limit the lines to 79 columns so broken terminal emulaters don't
double-space the output lines.
- Remove all NFS related stuff from file system specific code.
- Drop the vfs_checkexp hook and generalize it in the new nfs_check_export
function, thus removing redundancy from all file systems.
- Move all NFS export-related stuff from kern/vfs_subr.c to the new
file sys/nfs/nfs_export.c. The former was becoming large and its code
is always compiled, regardless of the build options. Using the latter,
the code is only compiled in when NFSSERVER is enabled. While doing this,
also make some functions in nfs_subs.c conditional to NFSSERVER.
- Add a new command in nfssvc(2), called NFSSVC_SETEXPORTSLIST, that takes a
path and a set of export entries. At the moment it can only clear the
exports list or append entries, one by one, but it is done in a way that
allows setting the whole set of entries atomically in the future (see the
comment in mountd_set_exports_list or in doc/TODO).
- Change mountd(8) to use the nfssvc(2) system call instead of mount(2) so
that it becomes file system agnostic. In fact, all this whole thing was
done to remove a 'XXX' block from this utility!
- Change the mount*, newfs and fsck* userland utilities to not deal with NFS
exports initialization; done internally by the kernel when initializing
the NFS support for each file system.
- Implement an interface for VFS (called VFS hooks) so that several kernel
subsystems can run arbitrary code upon receipt of specific VFS events.
At the moment, this only provides support for unmount and is used to
destroy NFS exports lists from the file systems being unmounted, though it
has room for extension.
Thanks go to yamt@, chs@, thorpej@, wrstuden@ and others for their comments
and advice in the development of this patch.
this addresses pr/23924
this includes most of support for creating fslevel 3 compatible filesystems,
although there is currently no command line option to invoke it when
not using apple_ufs
use the size of 'device' for teh file syste size - fixes pr 18353.
(It might be better to be able to say 50% of the size...)
Fix 'mount_mfs -N ...', as well as supressing the creation of the fs, the -N
inhibits the supression of the prints of the mfs parameters.
and don't try the disklabel.
Allows to create a filesystem on a floppy again.
(It is arguably another bug that DIOCGDINFO returns nonsense
for floppies.)
kernels) so that newfs works on vinum (and similar).
Kill the -V hack for vinum.
Don't bother faking up a label for -F and mfs, nothing is needed from it.
Ignore label if special doesn't match DISKPART(sb.st_rdev);
Simplifly logic for default block/frag sizes.
Update man page to match.
WARNS=3.
There's no reasonable situation where there will be one there, except if the
disk had data on it previously for some reason. It's significantly more
likely (read "the world until UFS2 was merged") that sector 0(..15)
contains really important stuff like boot blocks and disk labels.
Once again, I ask, why wasn't UFS2 implemented as a separate file
system a la lfs & ext2fs ?
It could have shared a chunk of the kernel code (just like those),
and had different userland tools and a different fs_type.
Correct calculation of number of inodes from density for small filesystems.
Add a '-n inodes' option so that the desired number of inodes can be
explicitly given - init needs this for mfs /dev, -i density is too crude.