Also fixed a bug in dir splitting when there's a large number of open
files, which was the main reason I was trying to make it easier to debug
disk images.
One part of the recent test changes was to move away from the
file-per-block emubd and instead simulate storage with a single
contiguous file. The file-per-block format was marginally useful
at the beginning, but as the remaining bugs get more subtle, it
becomes more useful to inspect littlefs through scripts that
make the underlying metadata more human-readable.
The key benefit of switching to a contiguous file is these same
scripts can be reused for real disk images and can even read through
/dev/sdb or similar.
- ./scripts/readblock.py disk block_size block
off data
00000000: 71 01 00 00 f0 0f ff f7 6c 69 74 74 6c 65 66 73 q.......littlefs
00000010: 2f e0 00 10 00 00 02 00 00 02 00 00 00 04 00 00 /...............
00000020: ff 00 00 00 ff ff ff 7f fe 03 00 00 20 00 04 19 ...............
00000030: 61 00 00 0c 00 62 20 30 0c 09 a0 01 00 00 64 00 a....b 0......d.
...
readblock.py prints a hex dump of a given block on disk. It's basically
just "dd if=disk bs=block_size count=1 skip=block | xxd -g1 -" but with
less typing.
- ./scripts/readmdir.py disk block_size block1 block2
off tag type id len data (truncated)
0000003b: 0020000a dir 0 10 63 6f 6c 64 63 6f 66 66 coldcoff
00000049: 20000008 dirstruct 0 8 02 02 00 00 03 02 00 00 ........
00000008: 00200409 dir 1 9 68 6f 74 63 6f 66 66 65 hotcoffe
00000015: 20000408 dirstruct 1 8 fe 01 00 00 ff 01 00 00 ........
readmdir.py prints info about the tags in a metadata pair on disk. It
can print the currently active tags as well as the raw log of the
metadata pair.
- ./scripts/readtree.py disk block_size
superblock "littlefs"
version v2.0
block_size 512
block_count 1024
name_max 255
file_max 2147483647
attr_max 1022
gstate 0x000000000000000000000000
dir "/"
mdir {0x0, 0x1} rev 3
v id 0 superblock "littlefs" inline size 24
mdir {0x77, 0x78} rev 1
id 0 dir "coffee" dir {0x1fc, 0x1fd}
dir "/coffee"
mdir {0x1fd, 0x1fc} rev 2
id 0 dir "coldcoffee" dir {0x202, 0x203}
id 1 dir "hotcoffee" dir {0x1fe, 0x1ff}
dir "/coffee/coldcoffee"
mdir {0x202, 0x203} rev 1
dir "/coffee/warmcoffee"
mdir {0x200, 0x201} rev 1
readtree.py parses the littlefs tree and prints info about the
semantics of what's on disk. This includes the superblock,
global-state, and directories/metadata-pairs. It doesn't print
the filesystem tree though, that could be a different tool.