From: "Theodore Y. Ts'o" Subject: Re: =?utf-8?B?562U5aSNOiDnrZTlpI06IOetlA==?= =?utf-8?B?5aSNOiDnrZTlpI06IOetlOWkjTog562U5aSNOiDnrZTlpI06IFtQQVRDSF0g?= =?utf-8?Q?ext4=3A_e2fsprogs=3A_fix_inode_bitma?= =?utf-8?Q?p?= num not integer,incompatible for ancient android devices Date: Tue, 3 Jul 2018 12:03:01 -0400 Message-ID: <20180703160301.GB4384@thunk.org> References: <20180628153022.GA8521@thunk.org> <20180629142612.GE1231@thunk.org> <20180630130429.GA26529@thunk.org> <20180702121654.GA15131@thunk.org> <20180703103557.GA27426@thunk.org> Mime-Version: 1.0 Content-Type: text/plain; charset=us-ascii Cc: "linux-ext4@vger.kernel.org" , "linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org" , "Liqingchao (sorp)" , "Shenchen (harry)" , "miaoxie (A)" , "yangfei (D)" , "Renlipeng (OS driver)" To: "Gaoming (ming, consumer BG)" Return-path: Content-Disposition: inline In-Reply-To: Sender: linux-kernel-owner@vger.kernel.org List-Id: linux-ext4.vger.kernel.org On Tue, Jul 03, 2018 at 11:15:21AM +0000, Gaoming (ming, consumer BG) wrote: > > You misunderstand my question. Why was the choice of a blocksize of > 1024 made? > > -----some one choose, not me . I guess they want get more inodes in 20M filesystem. That can't be the explanation. I just checked the sources for make_ext4fs; the blocksize was hard-coded, as was the number of inodes. So in order to use a block_size of 1024 bytes, someone must have hacked the sources directly and modified compute_block_size(). And in fact, it would have been *easier* to simply hack compute_inodes() which is just a few lines below in make_ext4fs.c: static u32 compute_block_size() { return 4096; } static u32 compute_inodes() { return DIV_ROUND_UP(info.len, info.block_size) / 4; } This also means commit 06c35f935a7a which fixed make_ext4fs.c wasn't buggy; it was a valid fix given the complete-non-adjustability of the blocksize in make_ext4fs. Yes, it's not a great fix, since it was fragile --- but that's hardly the smallest problem in make_ext4fs, there was plenty of other super-fragile bits in make_ext4fs. There's a *reason* I was pushing hard to make make_ext4fs go away. That being said, given the block size of make_ext4fs was hard-coded to 4096, it makes it clear that the change to make it create a blocksize of 1024 must have beeen a Huawei-local change, and it was never sent back to the the common AOSP tree. (If it had, I would have gotten an e-mail, and I would have explained to whoever had made this Huawei-local hack why it was such a incredibly bad idea.) In any case, what I would recommend at this point if you need to support Huawei devices that do this, is that you keep your e2fsprogs as a Huawei-specific e2fsprogs repo. > How long has Huawei been using a 1024 byte blocksize? And why? And > for how many devices? Essentially, I'm trying to figure out if this > was a Huawei-specific mistake. > ----- I cannot answer this question. Well, actually, it should be very easy for you to detremine the answer this question --- it should just be a matter of checking git source control history and see which product trees has the change to platforms/system/extras/ext4_utils/make_ext4fs.c --- and you must have platform-specific source trees in order to be compliant with the GNU Public License (GPL). Even if you didn't, it would just be a matter using dumpe2fs or debugfs (they aren't built by default in e2fsprogs by the AOSP build trees, but they should be buildable) to those Huawei devices that you still support, and then run either dumpe2fs or debugfs via adb shell and see what block size is reported. Even if you aren't allowed to answer this question publically, I'd strongly recommend you figure it out, so you know when your local change to e2fsprogs can be dropped. I'd further recommend that you make sure all new Huawei devices use a block size of 4096, preferably using mke2fs and e2fsdroid, as is currently done in AOSP. Failing that, at least please use the stock make_ext4fs which doesn't have the Huawei-specific hack to support 1024 byte block sizes, or have that Huawei-specific hack reverted. Regards, - Ted