|  | <title>Rob's ext2 documentation</title> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>This page focuses on the ext2 on-disk format.  The Linux kernel's filesystem | 
|  | implementation (the code to read and write it) is documented in the kernel | 
|  | source, Documentation/filesystems/ext2.txt.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Note: for our purposes, ext3 and ext4 are just ext2 with some extra data | 
|  | fields.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2>Overview</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2>Blocks and Block Groups</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Every ext2 filesystem consists of blocks, which are divided into block | 
|  | groups.  Blocks can be 1k, 2k, or 4k in length.<super><a href="#1">[1]</a></super> | 
|  | All ext2 disk layout is done in terms of these logical blocks, never in | 
|  | terms of 512-byte logical blocks.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Each block group contains as many blocks as one block can hold a | 
|  | bitmap for, so at a 1k block size a block group contains 8192 blocks (1024 | 
|  | bytes * 8 bits), and at 4k block size a block group contains 32768 blocks. | 
|  | Groups are numbered starting at 0, and occur one after another on disk, | 
|  | in order, with no gaps between them.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Block groups contain the following structures, in order:</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <ul> | 
|  | <li>Superblock (sometimes)</li> | 
|  | <li>Group table (sometimes)</li> | 
|  | <li>Block bitmap</li> | 
|  | <li>Inode bitmap</li> | 
|  | <li>Inode table</li> | 
|  | <li>Data blocks</li> | 
|  | </ul> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Not all block groups contain all structures.  Specifically, the first two | 
|  | (superblock and group table) only occur in some groups, and other block | 
|  | groups start with the block bitmap and go from there.  This frees up more | 
|  | data blocks to hold actual file and directory data, see the superblock | 
|  | description for details.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Each structure in this list is stored in its' own block (or blocks in the | 
|  | case of the group and inode tables), and doesn't share blocks with any other | 
|  | structure.  This can involve padding the end of the block with zeroes, or | 
|  | extending tables with extra entries to fill up the rest of the block.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The linux/ext2_fs.h #include file defines struct ext2_super_block, | 
|  | struct ext2_group_desc, struct ext2_inode, struct ext2_dir_entry_2, and a lot | 
|  | of constants.  Toybox doesn't use this file directly, instead it has an e2fs.h | 
|  | include of its own containting cleaned-up versions of the data it needs.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2>Superblock</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The superblock contains a 1024 byte structure, which toybox calls | 
|  | "struct ext2_superblock".  Where exactly this structure is to be found is | 
|  | a bit complicated for historical reasons.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>For copies of the superblock stored in block groups after the first, | 
|  | the superblock structure starts at the beginning of the first block of the | 
|  | group, with zero padding afterwards if necessary (I.E. if the block size is | 
|  | larger than 1k).  In modern "sparse superblock" filesystems (everything | 
|  | anyone still cares about), the superblock occurs in group 0 and in later groups | 
|  | that are powers of 3, 5, and 7.  (So groups 0, 1, 3, 5, 7, 9, 25, 27, 49, 81, | 
|  | 125, 243, 343...)  Any block group starting with a superblock will also | 
|  | have a group descriptor table, and ones that don't won't.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The very first superblock is weird.  This is because if you format an entire | 
|  | block device (rather than a partition), you stomp the very start of the disk | 
|  | which contains the boot sector and the partition table.  Back when ext2 on | 
|  | floppies was common, this was a big deal.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>So the very first 1024 bytes of the very first block are always left alone. | 
|  | When the block size is 1024 bytes, then that block is left alone and the | 
|  | superblock is stored in the second block instead<super><a href="#2">[2]</a>. | 
|  | When the block size is larger than 1024 bytes, the first superblock starts | 
|  | 1024 bytes into the block, with the original data preserved by mke2fs and | 
|  | appropriate zero padding added to the end of the block (if necessary).</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2>Group descriptor table</h2> | 
|  | <h2>Block bitmap</h2> | 
|  | <h2>Inode bitmap</h2> | 
|  | <h2>Inode table</h2> | 
|  | <h2>Data blocks</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <h2>Directories</h2> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>For performance reasons, directory entries are 4-byte aligned (rec_len is | 
|  | a multiple of 4), so up to 3 bytes of padding (zeroes) can be added at the end | 
|  | of each name.  (This affects rec_len but not the name_len.)</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>The last directory entry in each block is padded up to block size.  If there | 
|  | isn't enough space for another struct ext2_dentry the last </p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p>Question: is the length stored in the inode also padded up to block size?</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <hr /> | 
|  | <p><a name="1" />Footnote 1: On some systems blocks can be larger than 4k, but | 
|  | for implementation reasons not larger than PAGE_SIZE.  So the Alpha can have | 
|  | 8k blocks but most other systems couldn't mount them, thus you don't see this | 
|  | out in the wild much anymore.</p> | 
|  |  | 
|  | <p><a name="2" />Footnote 2: In this case, the first_data_block field in the | 
|  | superblock structure will be set to 1.  Otherwise it's always 0.  How this | 
|  | could POSSIBLY be useful information is an open question, since A) you have to | 
|  | read the superblock before you can get this information, so you know where | 
|  | it came from, B) the first copy of the superblock always starts at offset 1024 | 
|  | no matter what, and if your block size is 1024 you already know you skipped the | 
|  | first block.</p> |