NetBSD/sbin/Makefile
reinoud 69a586f230 Import read-only part of the NiLFS (v2) implementation for NetBSD. It has been
tested with a DEBUG+DIAGNOSTIC+LOCKDEBUG kernel. To summerise NiLFS, i'll
repeat my posting to tech-kern here:

NiLFS stands for New implementation of Logging File System; LFS done
right they claim :) It is at version 2 now and is being developed by NTT, the
Japanese telecom company and recently put into the linux source tree. See
http://www.nilfs.org. The on-disc format is not completely frozen and i expect
at least one minor revision to come in time.

The benefits of NiLFS are build-in fine-grained checkpointing, persistent
snapshots, multiple mounts and very large file and media support. Every
checkpoint can be transformed into a snapshot and v.v. It is said to perform
very well on flash media since it is not overwriting pieces apart from a
incidental update of the superblock, but that might change. It is accompanied
by a cleaner to clean up the segments and recover lost space.

My work is not a port of the linux code; its a new implementation. Porting the
code would be more work since its very linux oriented and never written to be
ported outside linux. The goal is to be fully interchangable. The code is non
intrusive to other parts of the kernel. It is also very light-weight.

The current state of the code is read-only access to both clean and dirty
NiLFS partitions. On mounting a dirty partition it rolls forward the log to
the last checkpoint. Full read-write support is however planned!

Just as the linux code, mount_nilfs allows for the `head' to be mounted
read/write and allows multiple read-only snapshots/checkpoint mounts next to
it.

By allowing the RW mount at a different snapshot for read-write it should be
possible eventually to revert back to a previous state; i.e. try to upgrade a
system and being able to revert to the exact state prior to the upgrade.

Compared to other FS's its pretty light-weight, suitable for embedded use and
on flash media. The read-only code is currently 17kb object code on
NetBSD/i386. I doubt the read-write code will surpass the 50 or 60. Compared
this to FFS being 156kb, UDF being 84 kb and NFS being 130kb. Run-time memory
usage is most likely not very different from other uses though maybe a bit
higher than FFS.
2009-07-18 16:31:41 +00:00

62 lines
1.5 KiB
Makefile

# $NetBSD: Makefile,v 1.114 2009/07/18 16:31:41 reinoud Exp $
# @(#)Makefile 8.5 (Berkeley) 3/31/94
# Not ported: XNSrouted enpload scsiformat startslip
# Missing: icheck ncheck
.include <bsd.own.mk>
SUBDIR= amrctl apmlabel atactl badsect bioctl brconfig ccdconfig \
disklabel dkctl dkscan_bsdlabel dmesg \
drvctl edlabel fastboot fdisk fsck fsirand gpt ifconfig init ldconfig \
mbrlabel mknod modload modstat modunload mount newbtconf nologin \
pdisk ping pppoectl raidctl reboot rcorder rndctl route routed \
savecore scan_ffs scsictl shutdown slattach svhlabel swapctl sysctl \
ttyflags umount veriexecctl wdogctl wsconsctl
# support for various file systems
SUBDIR+= newfs_ext2fs fsck_ext2fs
SUBDIR+= newfs fsck_ffs fsdb dump restore clri tunefs
SUBDIR+= newfs_lfs fsck_lfs dump_lfs resize_lfs
SUBDIR+= newfs_msdos fsck_msdos
SUBDIR+= newfs_sysvbfs
SUBDIR+= newfs_udf
SUBDIR+= mount_ados
SUBDIR+= mount_cd9660
SUBDIR+= mount_efs
SUBDIR+= mount_ext2fs
SUBDIR+= mount_fdesc
SUBDIR+= mount_filecore
SUBDIR+= mount_ffs
SUBDIR+= mount_hfs
SUBDIR+= mount_kernfs
SUBDIR+= mount_lfs
SUBDIR+= mount_msdos
SUBDIR+= mount_udf
SUBDIR+= mount_nfs
SUBDIR+= mount_nilfs
SUBDIR+= mount_ntfs
SUBDIR+= mount_null
SUBDIR+= mount_overlay
SUBDIR+= mount_portal
SUBDIR+= mount_procfs
SUBDIR+= mount_ptyfs
SUBDIR+= mount_smbfs
SUBDIR+= mount_sysvbfs
SUBDIR+= mount_tmpfs
SUBDIR+= mount_umap
SUBDIR+= mount_union
.if (${MKCRYPTO} != "no")
SUBDIR+= cgdconfig
.endif
.if (${USE_INET6} != "no")
SUBDIR+= ping6 rtsol
.endif
# IPsec
SUBDIR+= setkey
.include <bsd.subdir.mk>