mirror of
https://github.com/LadybirdBrowser/ladybird.git
synced 2024-11-21 23:20:20 +00:00
Documentation: Add a document about TmpFS
This commit is contained in:
parent
9e7d099678
commit
71536e91c5
Notes:
sideshowbarker
2024-07-17 06:35:16 +09:00
Author: https://github.com/supercomputer7 Commit: https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/commit/71536e91c5 Pull-request: https://github.com/SerenityOS/serenity/pull/16025 Reviewed-by: https://github.com/ADKaster ✅
1 changed files with 70 additions and 0 deletions
70
Documentation/Kernel/TmpFS.md
Normal file
70
Documentation/Kernel/TmpFS.md
Normal file
|
@ -0,0 +1,70 @@
|
|||
# `TmpFS` filesystem and its purposes
|
||||
|
||||
`TmpFS` is a RAM-backed filesystem. It is used to hold files and directories in the `/tmp` directory and
|
||||
device nodes in the `/dev` directory.
|
||||
|
||||
## What are the `TmpFS` filesystem characteristics?
|
||||
|
||||
`TmpFS` is a pure RAM-backed filesystem, which means all files and directories
|
||||
actually live in memory, each in its own `TmpFS` instance in the kernel.
|
||||
|
||||
The `TmpFS` in its current design is very conservative about allocating virtual memory ranges
|
||||
for itself, and instead it uses the `AnonymousVMObject` object to hold physical pages containing
|
||||
data for its inodes. When doing actual IO, the `TmpFS` code temporarily allocates a small virtual memory
|
||||
`Memory::Region` to perform the task, which works quite well although it puts a strain on the virtual memory
|
||||
mapping code. The current design also ensures that fabricated huge files can be easily created in the filesystem
|
||||
with very small overhead until actual IO is performed.
|
||||
|
||||
### The `/tmp` directory and its purposes
|
||||
|
||||
Currently, the `/tmp` directory is the **place** for facilitating the inter-process
|
||||
communication layer, with many Unix sockets nodes being present in the directory.
|
||||
|
||||
Many test suites in the project leverage the `/tmp` for placing their test files
|
||||
when trying to check the correctness of many system-related functionality.
|
||||
Other programs rely on `/tmp` for placing their temporary files to properly function.
|
||||
|
||||
### Why does the `TmpFS` work well for the `/dev` directory?
|
||||
|
||||
To understand why `TmpFS` works reliably when mounted on `/dev`, we must understand
|
||||
first what we did in the past and how `TmpFS` solves many of the issues with the previous design.
|
||||
|
||||
At first, we didn't have any special filesystem mounted in `/dev` as the image build
|
||||
script generated all the required device nodes in `/dev`. This was quite sufficient in
|
||||
the early days of the project, where hardware support was extremely limited and of course
|
||||
hotplugging any kind of hardware was not even a consideration.
|
||||
|
||||
As the project grew larger and more hardware support was introduced, it became obvious
|
||||
that this "solution" was not future-proof. For example, if one user has two SATA drives
|
||||
connected to his computer, and another user has just one old IDE drive being used,
|
||||
then how should we support both cases? The answer was that each user could simply invoke
|
||||
the `mknod` utility to create device nodes. This solution meant that user interaction as well
|
||||
as a deep understanding of kernel internals was required to achieve a proper setup.
|
||||
|
||||
When it became apparent that another solution was needed, the `DevFS` filesystem was
|
||||
invented. The idea was plain simple - the `DevFS` is a read-only filesystem that only
|
||||
lists all present char and block devices. Permissions were hardcoded at known value,
|
||||
and modifying the filesystem (including adding subdirectories) was strictly prohibited.
|
||||
This solution was efficient in the sense of ensuring minimal user interaction for using
|
||||
device nodes in `/dev`. The shortcomings were strictly immutable filesystem layout and hardcoded
|
||||
permissions. Also, the filesystem implementation was specific to `/dev`, because no other
|
||||
mount in the system used this special filesystem, which meant it needed special test cases, etc.
|
||||
|
||||
The `DevFS` solution was short-lived, and was quickly replaced by the `DevTmpFS` solution.
|
||||
That new shiny filesystem was again specific to `/dev`, but it solved many of the issues
|
||||
`DevFS` suffered from - no more hardcoded permissions and now the design has flexible filesystem
|
||||
layout in its mindset.
|
||||
This was achieved by implementing from scratch a filesystem that resembles the `TmpFS`
|
||||
filesystem, but was different in one major aspect - only device nodes and directories are allowed
|
||||
to be in `/dev`. This strict requirement has been mandated to ensure the user doesn't
|
||||
accidentally put unrelated files in `/dev`. When the `DevTmpFS` was invented, it clearly
|
||||
needed userspace cooperation to create device nodes in `/dev`, so `SystemServer` was modified
|
||||
to create those during boot. The process of how `SystemServer` does that is not discussed
|
||||
in this document, but ultimately evolved to be flexible enough to work quite well.
|
||||
|
||||
Everything worked quite well, but there was still a prominent problem with `DevTmpFS` -
|
||||
it was an entire filesystem solution just for `/dev` and nobody else used it.
|
||||
Testing the filesystem was quite clunky and truthfully lacking from the beginning until its removal.
|
||||
To solve this problem, it was decided to stop using it, and instead just use `TmpFS`.
|
||||
To ensure the current behavior of disallowing regular files in `/dev`, a new mount flag called
|
||||
`MS_NOREGULAR` was invented, so it could be mounted with it.
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue