ubi-media.h 21 KB

123456789101112131415161718192021222324252627282930313233343536373839404142434445464748495051525354555657585960616263646566676869707172737475767778798081828384858687888990919293949596979899100101102103104105106107108109110111112113114115116117118119120121122123124125126127128129130131132133134135136137138139140141142143144145146147148149150151152153154155156157158159160161162163164165166167168169170171172173174175176177178179180181182183184185186187188189190191192193194195196197198199200201202203204205206207208209210211212213214215216217218219220221222223224225226227228229230231232233234235236237238239240241242243244245246247248249250251252253254255256257258259260261262263264265266267268269270271272273274275276277278279280281282283284285286287288289290291292293294295296297298299300301302303304305306307308309310311312313314315316317318319320321322323324325326327328329330331332333334335336337338339340341342343344345346347348349350351352353354355356357358359360361362363364365366367368369370371372373374375376377378379380381382383384385386387388389390391392393394395396397398399400401402403404405406407408409410411412413414415416417418419420421422423424425426427428429430431432433434435436437438439440441442443444445446447448449450451452453454455456457458459460461462463464465466467468469470471472473474475476477478479480481482483484485486487488489490491492493494495496497498499500501502503504505506507508509510511512513514515516517518519520521522523524525526527528529530531532533534535536537538539540541542543
  1. /*
  2. * Copyright (c) International Business Machines Corp., 2006
  3. *
  4. * This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify
  5. * it under the terms of the GNU General Public License as published by
  6. * the Free Software Foundation; either version 2 of the License, or
  7. * (at your option) any later version.
  8. *
  9. * This program is distributed in the hope that it will be useful,
  10. * but WITHOUT ANY WARRANTY; without even the implied warranty of
  11. * MERCHANTABILITY or FITNESS FOR A PARTICULAR PURPOSE. See
  12. * the GNU General Public License for more details.
  13. *
  14. * You should have received a copy of the GNU General Public License
  15. * along with this program; if not, write to the Free Software
  16. * Foundation, Inc., 59 Temple Place, Suite 330, Boston, MA 02111-1307 USA
  17. *
  18. * Authors: Artem Bityutskiy (Битюцкий Артём)
  19. * Thomas Gleixner
  20. * Frank Haverkamp
  21. * Oliver Lohmann
  22. * Andreas Arnez
  23. */
  24. /*
  25. * This file defines the layout of UBI headers and all the other UBI on-flash
  26. * data structures.
  27. */
  28. #ifndef __UBI_MEDIA_H__
  29. #define __UBI_MEDIA_H__
  30. #define CONFIG_UBI_SHARE_BUFFER
  31. #include <asm/byteorder.h>
  32. /* The version of UBI images supported by this implementation */
  33. #define UBI_VERSION 1
  34. /* The highest erase counter value supported by this implementation */
  35. #define UBI_MAX_ERASECOUNTER 0x7FFFFFFF
  36. /* The initial CRC32 value used when calculating CRC checksums */
  37. #define UBI_CRC32_INIT 0xFFFFFFFFU
  38. /* Erase counter header magic number (ASCII "UBI#") */
  39. #define UBI_EC_HDR_MAGIC 0x55424923
  40. /* Volume identifier header magic number (ASCII "UBI!") */
  41. #define UBI_VID_HDR_MAGIC 0x55424921
  42. /*
  43. * Volume type constants used in the volume identifier header.
  44. *
  45. * @UBI_VID_DYNAMIC: dynamic volume
  46. * @UBI_VID_STATIC: static volume
  47. */
  48. enum {
  49. UBI_VID_DYNAMIC = 1,
  50. UBI_VID_STATIC = 2
  51. };
  52. /*
  53. * Volume flags used in the volume table record.
  54. *
  55. * @UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG: auto-resize this volume
  56. *
  57. * %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG flag can be set only for one volume in the volume
  58. * table. UBI automatically re-sizes the volume which has this flag and makes
  59. * the volume to be of largest possible size. This means that if after the
  60. * initialization UBI finds out that there are available physical eraseblocks
  61. * present on the device, it automatically appends all of them to the volume
  62. * (the physical eraseblocks reserved for bad eraseblocks handling and other
  63. * reserved physical eraseblocks are not taken). So, if there is a volume with
  64. * the %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG flag set, the amount of available logical
  65. * eraseblocks will be zero after UBI is loaded, because all of them will be
  66. * reserved for this volume. Note, the %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG bit is cleared
  67. * after the volume had been initialized.
  68. *
  69. * The auto-resize feature is useful for device production purposes. For
  70. * example, different NAND flash chips may have different amount of initial bad
  71. * eraseblocks, depending of particular chip instance. Manufacturers of NAND
  72. * chips usually guarantee that the amount of initial bad eraseblocks does not
  73. * exceed certain percent, e.g. 2%. When one creates an UBI image which will be
  74. * flashed to the end devices in production, he does not know the exact amount
  75. * of good physical eraseblocks the NAND chip on the device will have, but this
  76. * number is required to calculate the volume sized and put them to the volume
  77. * table of the UBI image. In this case, one of the volumes (e.g., the one
  78. * which will store the root file system) is marked as "auto-resizable", and
  79. * UBI will adjust its size on the first boot if needed.
  80. *
  81. * Note, first UBI reserves some amount of physical eraseblocks for bad
  82. * eraseblock handling, and then re-sizes the volume, not vice-versa. This
  83. * means that the pool of reserved physical eraseblocks will always be present.
  84. */
  85. enum {
  86. UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG = 0x01,
  87. };
  88. /*
  89. * Compatibility constants used by internal volumes.
  90. *
  91. * @UBI_COMPAT_DELETE: delete this internal volume before anything is written
  92. * to the flash
  93. * @UBI_COMPAT_RO: attach this device in read-only mode
  94. * @UBI_COMPAT_PRESERVE: preserve this internal volume - do not touch its
  95. * physical eraseblocks, don't allow the wear-leveling
  96. * sub-system to move them
  97. * @UBI_COMPAT_REJECT: reject this UBI image
  98. */
  99. enum {
  100. UBI_COMPAT_DELETE = 1,
  101. UBI_COMPAT_RO = 2,
  102. UBI_COMPAT_PRESERVE = 4,
  103. UBI_COMPAT_REJECT = 5
  104. };
  105. /* Sizes of UBI headers */
  106. #define UBI_EC_HDR_SIZE sizeof(struct ubi_ec_hdr)
  107. #define UBI_VID_HDR_SIZE sizeof(struct ubi_vid_hdr)
  108. /* Sizes of UBI headers without the ending CRC */
  109. #define UBI_EC_HDR_SIZE_CRC (UBI_EC_HDR_SIZE - sizeof(__be32))
  110. #define UBI_VID_HDR_SIZE_CRC (UBI_VID_HDR_SIZE - sizeof(__be32))
  111. /**
  112. * struct ubi_ec_hdr - UBI erase counter header.
  113. * @magic: erase counter header magic number (%UBI_EC_HDR_MAGIC)
  114. * @version: version of UBI implementation which is supposed to accept this
  115. * UBI image
  116. * @padding1: reserved for future, zeroes
  117. * @ec: the erase counter
  118. * @vid_hdr_offset: where the VID header starts
  119. * @data_offset: where the user data start
  120. * @image_seq: image sequence number
  121. * @padding2: reserved for future, zeroes
  122. * @hdr_crc: erase counter header CRC checksum
  123. *
  124. * The erase counter header takes 64 bytes and has a plenty of unused space for
  125. * future usage. The unused fields are zeroed. The @version field is used to
  126. * indicate the version of UBI implementation which is supposed to be able to
  127. * work with this UBI image. If @version is greater than the current UBI
  128. * version, the image is rejected. This may be useful in future if something
  129. * is changed radically. This field is duplicated in the volume identifier
  130. * header.
  131. *
  132. * The @vid_hdr_offset and @data_offset fields contain the offset of the the
  133. * volume identifier header and user data, relative to the beginning of the
  134. * physical eraseblock. These values have to be the same for all physical
  135. * eraseblocks.
  136. *
  137. * The @image_seq field is used to validate a UBI image that has been prepared
  138. * for a UBI device. The @image_seq value can be any value, but it must be the
  139. * same on all eraseblocks. UBI will ensure that all new erase counter headers
  140. * also contain this value, and will check the value when attaching the flash.
  141. * One way to make use of @image_seq is to increase its value by one every time
  142. * an image is flashed over an existing image, then, if the flashing does not
  143. * complete, UBI will detect the error when attaching the media.
  144. */
  145. struct ubi_ec_hdr {
  146. __be32 magic;
  147. __u8 version;
  148. __u8 padding1[3];
  149. __be64 ec; /* Warning: the current limit is 31-bit anyway! */
  150. __be32 vid_hdr_offset;
  151. __be32 data_offset;
  152. __be32 image_seq;
  153. __u8 padding2[32];
  154. __be32 hdr_crc;
  155. } __packed;
  156. /**
  157. * struct ubi_vid_hdr - on-flash UBI volume identifier header.
  158. * @magic: volume identifier header magic number (%UBI_VID_HDR_MAGIC)
  159. * @version: UBI implementation version which is supposed to accept this UBI
  160. * image (%UBI_VERSION)
  161. * @vol_type: volume type (%UBI_VID_DYNAMIC or %UBI_VID_STATIC)
  162. * @copy_flag: if this logical eraseblock was copied from another physical
  163. * eraseblock (for wear-leveling reasons)
  164. * @compat: compatibility of this volume (%0, %UBI_COMPAT_DELETE,
  165. * %UBI_COMPAT_IGNORE, %UBI_COMPAT_PRESERVE, or %UBI_COMPAT_REJECT)
  166. * @vol_id: ID of this volume
  167. * @lnum: logical eraseblock number
  168. * @padding1: reserved for future, zeroes
  169. * @data_size: how many bytes of data this logical eraseblock contains
  170. * @used_ebs: total number of used logical eraseblocks in this volume
  171. * @data_pad: how many bytes at the end of this physical eraseblock are not
  172. * used
  173. * @data_crc: CRC checksum of the data stored in this logical eraseblock
  174. * @padding2: reserved for future, zeroes
  175. * @sqnum: sequence number
  176. * @padding3: reserved for future, zeroes
  177. * @hdr_crc: volume identifier header CRC checksum
  178. *
  179. * The @sqnum is the value of the global sequence counter at the time when this
  180. * VID header was created. The global sequence counter is incremented each time
  181. * UBI writes a new VID header to the flash, i.e. when it maps a logical
  182. * eraseblock to a new physical eraseblock. The global sequence counter is an
  183. * unsigned 64-bit integer and we assume it never overflows. The @sqnum
  184. * (sequence number) is used to distinguish between older and newer versions of
  185. * logical eraseblocks.
  186. *
  187. * There are 2 situations when there may be more than one physical eraseblock
  188. * corresponding to the same logical eraseblock, i.e., having the same @vol_id
  189. * and @lnum values in the volume identifier header. Suppose we have a logical
  190. * eraseblock L and it is mapped to the physical eraseblock P.
  191. *
  192. * 1. Because UBI may erase physical eraseblocks asynchronously, the following
  193. * situation is possible: L is asynchronously erased, so P is scheduled for
  194. * erasure, then L is written to,i.e. mapped to another physical eraseblock P1,
  195. * so P1 is written to, then an unclean reboot happens. Result - there are 2
  196. * physical eraseblocks P and P1 corresponding to the same logical eraseblock
  197. * L. But P1 has greater sequence number, so UBI picks P1 when it attaches the
  198. * flash.
  199. *
  200. * 2. From time to time UBI moves logical eraseblocks to other physical
  201. * eraseblocks for wear-leveling reasons. If, for example, UBI moves L from P
  202. * to P1, and an unclean reboot happens before P is physically erased, there
  203. * are two physical eraseblocks P and P1 corresponding to L and UBI has to
  204. * select one of them when the flash is attached. The @sqnum field says which
  205. * PEB is the original (obviously P will have lower @sqnum) and the copy. But
  206. * it is not enough to select the physical eraseblock with the higher sequence
  207. * number, because the unclean reboot could have happen in the middle of the
  208. * copying process, so the data in P is corrupted. It is also not enough to
  209. * just select the physical eraseblock with lower sequence number, because the
  210. * data there may be old (consider a case if more data was added to P1 after
  211. * the copying). Moreover, the unclean reboot may happen when the erasure of P
  212. * was just started, so it result in unstable P, which is "mostly" OK, but
  213. * still has unstable bits.
  214. *
  215. * UBI uses the @copy_flag field to indicate that this logical eraseblock is a
  216. * copy. UBI also calculates data CRC when the data is moved and stores it at
  217. * the @data_crc field of the copy (P1). So when UBI needs to pick one physical
  218. * eraseblock of two (P or P1), the @copy_flag of the newer one (P1) is
  219. * examined. If it is cleared, the situation* is simple and the newer one is
  220. * picked. If it is set, the data CRC of the copy (P1) is examined. If the CRC
  221. * checksum is correct, this physical eraseblock is selected (P1). Otherwise
  222. * the older one (P) is selected.
  223. *
  224. * There are 2 sorts of volumes in UBI: user volumes and internal volumes.
  225. * Internal volumes are not seen from outside and are used for various internal
  226. * UBI purposes. In this implementation there is only one internal volume - the
  227. * layout volume. Internal volumes are the main mechanism of UBI extensions.
  228. * For example, in future one may introduce a journal internal volume. Internal
  229. * volumes have their own reserved range of IDs.
  230. *
  231. * The @compat field is only used for internal volumes and contains the "degree
  232. * of their compatibility". It is always zero for user volumes. This field
  233. * provides a mechanism to introduce UBI extensions and to be still compatible
  234. * with older UBI binaries. For example, if someone introduced a journal in
  235. * future, he would probably use %UBI_COMPAT_DELETE compatibility for the
  236. * journal volume. And in this case, older UBI binaries, which know nothing
  237. * about the journal volume, would just delete this volume and work perfectly
  238. * fine. This is similar to what Ext2fs does when it is fed by an Ext3fs image
  239. * - it just ignores the Ext3fs journal.
  240. *
  241. * The @data_crc field contains the CRC checksum of the contents of the logical
  242. * eraseblock if this is a static volume. In case of dynamic volumes, it does
  243. * not contain the CRC checksum as a rule. The only exception is when the
  244. * data of the physical eraseblock was moved by the wear-leveling sub-system,
  245. * then the wear-leveling sub-system calculates the data CRC and stores it in
  246. * the @data_crc field. And of course, the @copy_flag is %in this case.
  247. *
  248. * The @data_size field is used only for static volumes because UBI has to know
  249. * how many bytes of data are stored in this eraseblock. For dynamic volumes,
  250. * this field usually contains zero. The only exception is when the data of the
  251. * physical eraseblock was moved to another physical eraseblock for
  252. * wear-leveling reasons. In this case, UBI calculates CRC checksum of the
  253. * contents and uses both @data_crc and @data_size fields. In this case, the
  254. * @data_size field contains data size.
  255. *
  256. * The @used_ebs field is used only for static volumes and indicates how many
  257. * eraseblocks the data of the volume takes. For dynamic volumes this field is
  258. * not used and always contains zero.
  259. *
  260. * The @data_pad is calculated when volumes are created using the alignment
  261. * parameter. So, effectively, the @data_pad field reduces the size of logical
  262. * eraseblocks of this volume. This is very handy when one uses block-oriented
  263. * software (say, cramfs) on top of the UBI volume.
  264. */
  265. struct ubi_vid_hdr {
  266. __be32 magic;
  267. __u8 version;
  268. __u8 vol_type;
  269. __u8 copy_flag;
  270. __u8 compat;
  271. __be32 vol_id;
  272. __be32 lnum;
  273. __u8 padding1[4];
  274. __be32 data_size;
  275. __be32 used_ebs;
  276. __be32 data_pad;
  277. __be32 data_crc;
  278. __u8 padding2[4];
  279. __be64 sqnum;
  280. __u8 padding3[12];
  281. __be32 hdr_crc;
  282. } __packed;
  283. /* Internal UBI volumes count */
  284. #ifdef CONFIG_MTD_UBI_LOWPAGE_BACKUP
  285. #define UBI_INT_VOL_COUNT 2
  286. #else
  287. #define UBI_INT_VOL_COUNT 1
  288. #endif
  289. /*
  290. * Starting ID of internal volumes: 0x7fffefff.
  291. * There is reserved room for 4096 internal volumes.
  292. */
  293. #define UBI_INTERNAL_VOL_START (0x7FFFFFFF - 4096)
  294. /* The layout volume contains the volume table */
  295. #define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ID UBI_INTERNAL_VOL_START
  296. #define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_TYPE UBI_VID_DYNAMIC
  297. #define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ALIGN 1
  298. #define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_EBS 2
  299. #define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_NAME "layout volume"
  300. #define UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_COMPAT UBI_COMPAT_REJECT
  301. /* The backup volume contains LSB page backup */
  302. #ifdef CONFIG_MTD_UBI_LOWPAGE_BACKUP
  303. #define UBI_BACKUP_VOLUME_ID (UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ID+1)
  304. #define UBI_BACKUP_VOLUME_TYPE UBI_VID_DYNAMIC
  305. #define UBI_BACKUP_VOLUME_ALIGN 1
  306. #define UBI_BACKUP_VOLUME_EBS 2
  307. #define UBI_BACKUP_VOLUME_NAME "backup volume"
  308. #define UBI_BACKUP_VOLUME_COMPAT 0
  309. #endif
  310. /* The maximum number of volumes per one UBI device */
  311. #define UBI_MAX_VOLUMES 128
  312. /* The maximum volume name length */
  313. #define UBI_VOL_NAME_MAX 127
  314. /* Size of the volume table record */
  315. #define UBI_VTBL_RECORD_SIZE sizeof(struct ubi_vtbl_record)
  316. /* Size of the volume table record without the ending CRC */
  317. #define UBI_VTBL_RECORD_SIZE_CRC (UBI_VTBL_RECORD_SIZE - sizeof(__be32))
  318. /**
  319. * struct ubi_vtbl_record - a record in the volume table.
  320. * @reserved_pebs: how many physical eraseblocks are reserved for this volume
  321. * @alignment: volume alignment
  322. * @data_pad: how many bytes are unused at the end of the each physical
  323. * eraseblock to satisfy the requested alignment
  324. * @vol_type: volume type (%UBI_DYNAMIC_VOLUME or %UBI_STATIC_VOLUME)
  325. * @upd_marker: if volume update was started but not finished
  326. * @name_len: volume name length
  327. * @name: the volume name
  328. * @flags: volume flags (%UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG)
  329. * @padding: reserved, zeroes
  330. * @crc: a CRC32 checksum of the record
  331. *
  332. * The volume table records are stored in the volume table, which is stored in
  333. * the layout volume. The layout volume consists of 2 logical eraseblock, each
  334. * of which contains a copy of the volume table (i.e., the volume table is
  335. * duplicated). The volume table is an array of &struct ubi_vtbl_record
  336. * objects indexed by the volume ID.
  337. *
  338. * If the size of the logical eraseblock is large enough to fit
  339. * %UBI_MAX_VOLUMES records, the volume table contains %UBI_MAX_VOLUMES
  340. * records. Otherwise, it contains as many records as it can fit (i.e., size of
  341. * logical eraseblock divided by sizeof(struct ubi_vtbl_record)).
  342. *
  343. * The @upd_marker flag is used to implement volume update. It is set to %1
  344. * before update and set to %0 after the update. So if the update operation was
  345. * interrupted, UBI knows that the volume is corrupted.
  346. *
  347. * The @alignment field is specified when the volume is created and cannot be
  348. * later changed. It may be useful, for example, when a block-oriented file
  349. * system works on top of UBI. The @data_pad field is calculated using the
  350. * logical eraseblock size and @alignment. The alignment must be multiple to the
  351. * minimal flash I/O unit. If @alignment is 1, all the available space of
  352. * the physical eraseblocks is used.
  353. *
  354. * Empty records contain all zeroes and the CRC checksum of those zeroes.
  355. */
  356. struct ubi_vtbl_record {
  357. __be32 reserved_pebs;
  358. __be32 alignment;
  359. __be32 data_pad;
  360. __u8 vol_type;
  361. __u8 upd_marker;
  362. __be16 name_len;
  363. __u8 name[UBI_VOL_NAME_MAX+1];
  364. __u8 flags;
  365. __u8 padding[23];
  366. __be32 crc;
  367. } __packed;
  368. #ifdef CONFIG_MTD_UBI_LOWPAGE_BACKUP
  369. struct ubi_blb_spare {
  370. __be16 pnum;
  371. __be16 lnum;
  372. __be16 num;
  373. __be16 page;
  374. __be32 vol_id;
  375. __be64 sqnum;
  376. __be32 crc;
  377. } __packed;
  378. #endif
  379. /* UBI fastmap on-flash data structures */
  380. #define UBI_FM_SB_VOLUME_ID (UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ID + 2)
  381. #define UBI_FM_DATA_VOLUME_ID (UBI_LAYOUT_VOLUME_ID + 3)
  382. /* fastmap on-flash data structure format version */
  383. #define UBI_FM_FMT_VERSION 1
  384. #define UBI_FM_SB_MAGIC 0x7B11D69F
  385. #define UBI_FM_HDR_MAGIC 0xD4B82EF7
  386. #define UBI_FM_VHDR_MAGIC 0xFA370ED1
  387. #define UBI_FM_POOL_MAGIC 0x67AF4D08
  388. #define UBI_FM_EBA_MAGIC 0xf0c040a8
  389. /* A fastmap supber block can be located between PEB 0 and
  390. * UBI_FM_MAX_START */
  391. #define UBI_FM_MAX_START 64
  392. /* A fastmap can use up to UBI_FM_MAX_BLOCKS PEBs */
  393. #define UBI_FM_MAX_BLOCKS 32
  394. /* 5% of the total number of PEBs have to be scanned while attaching
  395. * from a fastmap.
  396. * But the size of this pool is limited to be between UBI_FM_MIN_POOL_SIZE and
  397. * UBI_FM_MAX_POOL_SIZE */
  398. #define UBI_FM_MIN_POOL_SIZE 8
  399. #define UBI_FM_MAX_POOL_SIZE 256
  400. #define UBI_FM_WL_POOL_SIZE 25
  401. /**
  402. * struct ubi_fm_sb - UBI fastmap super block
  403. * @magic: fastmap super block magic number (%UBI_FM_SB_MAGIC)
  404. * @version: format version of this fastmap
  405. * @data_crc: CRC over the fastmap data
  406. * @used_blocks: number of PEBs used by this fastmap
  407. * @block_loc: an array containing the location of all PEBs of the fastmap
  408. * @block_ec: the erase counter of each used PEB
  409. * @sqnum: highest sequence number value at the time while taking the fastmap
  410. *
  411. */
  412. struct ubi_fm_sb {
  413. __be32 magic;
  414. __u8 version;
  415. __u8 padding1[3];
  416. __be32 data_crc;
  417. __be32 used_blocks;
  418. __be32 block_loc[UBI_FM_MAX_BLOCKS];
  419. __be32 block_ec[UBI_FM_MAX_BLOCKS];
  420. __be64 sqnum;
  421. __u8 padding2[32];
  422. } __packed;
  423. /**
  424. * struct ubi_fm_hdr - header of the fastmap data set
  425. * @magic: fastmap header magic number (%UBI_FM_HDR_MAGIC)
  426. * @free_peb_count: number of free PEBs known by this fastmap
  427. * @used_peb_count: number of used PEBs known by this fastmap
  428. * @scrub_peb_count: number of to be scrubbed PEBs known by this fastmap
  429. * @bad_peb_count: number of bad PEBs known by this fastmap
  430. * @erase_peb_count: number of bad PEBs which have to be erased
  431. * @vol_count: number of UBI volumes known by this fastmap
  432. */
  433. struct ubi_fm_hdr {
  434. __be32 magic;
  435. __be32 free_peb_count;
  436. __be32 used_peb_count;
  437. __be32 scrub_peb_count;
  438. __be32 bad_peb_count;
  439. __be32 erase_peb_count;
  440. __be32 vol_count;
  441. __u8 padding[4];
  442. } __packed;
  443. /* struct ubi_fm_hdr is followed by two struct ubi_fm_scan_pool */
  444. /**
  445. * struct ubi_fm_scan_pool - Fastmap pool PEBs to be scanned while attaching
  446. * @magic: pool magic numer (%UBI_FM_POOL_MAGIC)
  447. * @size: current pool size
  448. * @max_size: maximal pool size
  449. * @pebs: an array containing the location of all PEBs in this pool
  450. */
  451. struct ubi_fm_scan_pool {
  452. __be32 magic;
  453. __be16 size;
  454. __be16 max_size;
  455. __be32 pebs[UBI_FM_MAX_POOL_SIZE];
  456. __be32 padding[4];
  457. } __packed;
  458. /* ubi_fm_scan_pool is followed by nfree+nused struct ubi_fm_ec records */
  459. /**
  460. * struct ubi_fm_ec - stores the erase counter of a PEB
  461. * @pnum: PEB number
  462. * @ec: ec of this PEB
  463. */
  464. struct ubi_fm_ec {
  465. __be32 pnum;
  466. __be32 ec;
  467. } __packed;
  468. /**
  469. * struct ubi_fm_volhdr - Fastmap volume header
  470. * it identifies the start of an eba table
  471. * @magic: Fastmap volume header magic number (%UBI_FM_VHDR_MAGIC)
  472. * @vol_id: volume id of the fastmapped volume
  473. * @vol_type: type of the fastmapped volume
  474. * @data_pad: data_pad value of the fastmapped volume
  475. * @used_ebs: number of used LEBs within this volume
  476. * @last_eb_bytes: number of bytes used in the last LEB
  477. */
  478. struct ubi_fm_volhdr {
  479. __be32 magic;
  480. __be32 vol_id;
  481. __u8 vol_type;
  482. __u8 padding1[3];
  483. __be32 data_pad;
  484. __be32 used_ebs;
  485. __be32 last_eb_bytes;
  486. __u8 padding2[8];
  487. } __packed;
  488. /* struct ubi_fm_volhdr is followed by one struct ubi_fm_eba records */
  489. /**
  490. * struct ubi_fm_eba - denotes an association beween a PEB and LEB
  491. * @magic: EBA table magic number
  492. * @reserved_pebs: number of table entries
  493. * @pnum: PEB number of LEB (LEB is the index)
  494. */
  495. struct ubi_fm_eba {
  496. __be32 magic;
  497. __be32 reserved_pebs;
  498. __be32 pnum[0];
  499. } __packed;
  500. #endif /* !__UBI_MEDIA_H__ */