the file system

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THE FILE SYSTEM Files -------- long-term storage RAM --------- short-term storage Programs, data, and text are all stored in files, which is stored on hard disk and other media, such as tape and floppy disk.

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THE FILE SYSTEM. Files -------- long-term storage RAM --------- short-term storage Programs, data, and text are all stored in files, which is stored on hard disk and other media, such as tape and floppy disk. THE FILE SYSTEM. - PowerPoint PPT Presentation

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Page 1: THE FILE SYSTEM

THE FILE SYSTEM

Files -------- long-term storageRAM --------- short-term storage

Programs, data, and text are all stored in files, which is stored on hard disk and other media, such as tape and floppy disk.

Page 2: THE FILE SYSTEM

THE FILE SYSTEMUNIX files are organized by a hierarchy of labels ---- directory structure

Three kinds:+ Regular files, containing a sequence of bytes that generally corresponds to code or data. Referenced via the standard I/O system calls.+ Directory files, a special format and forming the backbone of the file system. Referenced only via directory-specific system calls.+ Special files, correspond to peripherals such as printers and disks, and interprocess communication mechanisms, such as pipes and sockets. Referenced via the standard I/O system calls.

Page 3: THE FILE SYSTEM

Disk ArchitectureSector

Track

Platter

Arm

Block: 4kb

Read/write head

Page 4: THE FILE SYSTEM

Interleaving1:1 interleave

1

2

3

45

6

7

89

10

11

1213

14

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16

Delay, interleave factor, between each block due to the overhead of the communication between the disk controller and the device driver

Page 5: THE FILE SYSTEM

Interleaving1:3 interleave

1

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3 4

5

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78

9

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11 12

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1516

Page 6: THE FILE SYSTEM

Storing a File

1

2

3

45

6

7

89

10

11

1213

14

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16

First 4K

Second 4K

Last 1K

Page 7: THE FILE SYSTEM

Inodes—Index nodeTo store information about each file+ the type of the file: regular, directory, block special, character special, etc.+ file permissions+ the owner and group IDs+ a hard link count+ the last modification time and last access time+ the location of the blocks if the file is a regular or directory file+ the major and minor device numbers if the file is a special file+ the value of the symbolic link if the file is a symbolic link

In other words, it contains all of the information when you perform an “ls -l”, except for the filename

Page 8: THE FILE SYSTEM

Inodes—Index node

Every inode in a particular file system is allocated a unique inode number.

Every file has exactly one inode.

All the inodes associated with the files on a disk are stored in a special area at the start of the disk called the inode list

Page 9: THE FILE SYSTEM

Every file has an inode

1

2

3

45

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89

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Block mapInode

0123

72

14

Page 10: THE FILE SYSTEM

The Block MapInode only stores the first 10 blocks of a file. (most UNIX files are less than 40K)

An indirect access scheme is used for addressing larger files.

Direct block pointers

Indirect pointer

Disk blocks

Inode

Page 11: THE FILE SYSTEM

Direct block pointers

Indirect pointer

Disk blocks

Inode

Double indirect pointer

Page 12: THE FILE SYSTEM

File System Layout

boot block: first logical block of a disk, containing some executable code that is used when UNIX is first activated.

super block: second logical block of a disk, containing information concerning the disk itself.

inode list: following fixed-size set of blocks, holding all of the inodes associated with the files on the disk.

Page 13: THE FILE SYSTEM

File System Layout

Boot block

Super block

Inode 1…40

Inode 41..80

User block

User block

User block

Logical disk layout

Physical disk layout

Page 14: THE FILE SYSTEM

The SuperblockIt contains information pertaining to the entire file system.

+ the total number of blocks in the file system+ the number of inodes in the inode free list+ the size of a block in bytes+ the number of free blocks+ the number of used blocks

Free

Used

Free

Free

Used

Free

Disk blocks

1 0 1 1 0 1

Bitmap

Page 15: THE FILE SYSTEM

DirectoriesInode number 2 contains the location of the block possessing the root directory. (inode number 1 for bad blocks)

/2

bin3

ls5 cp7

usr4

Test.c6

. 2

.. 2

bin 3

usr 4

label Inode #

Hard Link

Page 16: THE FILE SYSTEM

Mounting File SystemsThe mount utility allows a superuser to splice the root directory of a file system into the existing directory hierarchy.

/

bin usrmnt

/

tmp1 tmp2

/

bin usrmnt

tmp1 tmp2

$ mount /dev/flp /mnt

$ unmount /dev/flp or $unmount /mnt