Internal Filesystem

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Revision as of 09:40, 26 November 2013 by Tangrs (talk | contribs) (→‎FlashFX Pro)
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There are two layers involved with the internal filesystem. FlashFX Pro does wear leveling and bad block management while Reliance is the filesystem on top of it.

FlashFX Pro

FlashFX Pro maps logical addresses to physical addresses on the NAND. The physical space is divided into regions which are divided into units, each unit divided up into blocks (each equal to page size of the NAND). All integers are read as little endian.

The first block in a unit has a header describing the unit:

0x0 0x1 0x2 0x3
0x00 Signature
0x04 Signature
0x08 Signature
0x0C Signature
0x10 clientAddress
0x14 eraseCount
0x18 ulSequenceNumber
0x1C serialNumber
0x20 lnuTotal
0x24 lnuTag
0x28 numSpareUnits blockSize
0x2C lnuPerRegion partitionStartUnit
0x30 unitTotalBlocks unitClientBlocks
0x34 unitDataBlocks checksum

The spare area of the NAND is 1/32th of the page size and holds extra information

1 2 3 4
Alloc info ones-complement of byte 0 XOR byte 1 error-correcting Hamming code of bytes 0-2
seems to always be FF FF FF 0F for used pages, FF FF FF FF for unused
error-correcting code of second half of page data
error-correcting code of first half of page data

Checksum

The checksum in the unit header is calculated by adding all the bytes in the header mod 2^16.

uint16_t checksum(void *_ptr, size_t size) {
	uint16_t sum = 0;
	uint8_t *ptr = _ptr;

	while (size--) {
		sum += *ptr++;
	}

	return sum;
}

Allocation information

This contains the status and logical address of the block. A unit header will have a magic signature (0x48E2).

Status

Bits 12-15 indicate the status of the block.

Bit 12 Indicates NAND metatag?
Bit 13 Indicates a unit header?
Bit 14 If set, indicates invalid block.
Bit 15 Indicates a valid block

A free block has all bits set and a discarded block has none of the bits set.

Logical address

Mask with 0x0FFF to get address.

Retrieving a page

There are no region headers since all the information required are stored in each unit header. To get how many blocks are there in a region, you take lnuPerRegion and multiply it with unitDataBlocks. It is worth noting that the block size is the same as the page size.

For each unit, work out the range of blocks is contained in the region. Take the clientAddress and divide it by the block size to get the starting page number, add the number of blocks in the region for the end number.

If the page number requested is in range, search through all the blocks contained in the unit. If not, skip to next unit header.

For each block, read the alloc information. First check if it is a free block by ANDing with 0xF000 and check if it equals 0xF000, next check if it's a valid block by checking bit 14. If it is not free and is a valid block, grab the logical block number by ANDing with 0x0FFF and adding the region starting page number. If it is equal to the requested page number, you've found the right block. Return the data found in the page.

Continue until all the unit headers have been searched. If not found, the page has not been allocated and you should return an empty page.

Reliance

TODO

Resources

Goplat's post on Omnimaga

Patent for FlashFX