| Bluejay Filesystem |
| ================== |
| |
| Filesystem drivers are still a work in progress. To test a file system you will |
| want to create and mount a virtual block device. The makefile in ``src/kernel`` |
| will generate an ``hd0_ext2.img`` EXT2 disk image for you automatically. The |
| default size is 32 megabytes, but you can create your own of any size if you |
| want. Once the image has been created it will be loaded by QEMU automatically. |
| |
| In order to write to the virtual hard disk from your host operating system you |
| should mount it. The ``make mount`` command in ``src/kernel`` mount the image to |
| ``$(BLUEJAY_ROOT)/mnt``. If you are using an EXT2 filesystem you should probably |
| change the owner of that directory once it is mounted so that you can write to |
| it. |
| |
| Virtual Filesystem |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The Bluejay VFS is heavily inspired by UNIX. It relies on inodes and a tree of |
| file nodes. The source can be found in ``src/kernel/vfs.c``. This also exports a |
| very low-level API for dealing with files -- including the usual read(), |
| write(), readdir(), etc -- but this should not be used for much longer. A high |
| level API utilizing file descriptors will be implemented to make this simpler. |
| |
| Filesystem Drivers |
| ------------------ |
| |
| The current filesystem driver(s) available in Bluejay are: |
| |
| - ``ext2`` |
| - Read-only support, write support is in progress |
| |
| Creating a Virtual Drive in QEMU |
| -------------------------------- |
| |
| By default ``make qemu`` will load ``hd0_$(FS).img`` as the virtual hard drive |
| for Bluejay. ``FS`` defaults to ``ext2`` but can be set in your ``Jmk.options`` |
| to any value. If this file does not exist it will be created using |
| ``mkfs.$(FS)``, ie ``mkfs.ext2`` by default. The default size of the file system |
| is 35 megabytes, although you can create one of any size manually if you want. |
| 35 megabytes is plenty for testing though. |
| |
| The ``make mount`` command will mount the current virtual hard drive in |
| ``$(ROOT)/mnt`` (where ``$(ROOT)`` is the root directory of the Bluejay sources, |
| not ``/``). This command requires superuser privileges. If you want to give your |
| (host) user account write permissions use ``chown -R user:group /path/to/mnt`` |
| where ``user`` and ``group`` are the user and group you want to own the files. |
| |
| Currently Bluejay ignores file permissions so it doesn't matter who you set the |
| owner to. |