mbed-os/features/filesystem/littlefs
Christopher Haster b7cabdde04 littlefs: Fixed positive seek bounds checking
This bug was a result of an annoying corner case around intermingling
signed and unsigned offsets. The boundary check that prevents seeking
a file to a position before the file was preventing valid seeks with
positive offsets.

This corner case is a bit more complicated than it looks because the
offset is signed, while the size of the file is unsigned. Simply
casting both to signed or unsigned offsets won't handle large files.
2018-01-12 15:01:48 +00:00
..
TESTS Added test config for simulated block devices 2017-11-27 19:48:56 -06:00
TESTS_COMMON littlefs: Moved test block devices into general block devices 2017-11-22 16:02:54 -06:00
littlefs littlefs: Fixed positive seek bounds checking 2018-01-12 15:01:48 +00:00
.mbedignore Add 'features/filesystem/littlefs/' from commit 'd02b3122f006aa201bca4efc699bae40971e5a00' 2017-11-22 16:02:21 -06:00
.travis.yml Add 'features/filesystem/littlefs/' from commit 'd02b3122f006aa201bca4efc699bae40971e5a00' 2017-11-22 16:02:21 -06:00
LICENSE.md Add 'features/filesystem/littlefs/' from commit 'd02b3122f006aa201bca4efc699bae40971e5a00' 2017-11-22 16:02:21 -06:00
LittleFileSystem.cpp Add 'features/filesystem/littlefs/' from commit 'd02b3122f006aa201bca4efc699bae40971e5a00' 2017-11-22 16:02:21 -06:00
LittleFileSystem.h littlefs: Removed mbed namespace leaks 2017-11-22 16:02:54 -06:00
README.md littlefs: Removed links to previous repository locations 2017-11-30 11:46:00 -06:00
mbed_lib.json Add 'features/filesystem/littlefs/' from commit 'd02b3122f006aa201bca4efc699bae40971e5a00' 2017-11-22 16:02:21 -06:00

README.md

Mbed OS API for the little filesystem

This is the Mbed OS API for littlefs, a little fail-safe filesystem designed for embedded systems.

   | | |     .---._____
  .-----.   |          |
--|o    |---| littlefs |
--|     |---|          |
  '-----'   '----------'
   | | |

Bounded RAM/ROM - The littlefs is designed to work with a limited amount of memory. Recursion is avoided, and dynamic memory is limited to configurable buffers that can be provided statically.

Power-loss resilient - The littlefs is designed for systems that may have random power failures. The littlefs has strong copy-on-write guarantees, and storage on disk is always kept in a valid state.

Wear leveling - Because the most common form of embedded storage is erodible flash memories, littlefs provides a form of dynamic wear leveling for systems that cannot fit a full flash translation layer.

Usage

If you are already using a filesystem in Mbed, adopting the littlefs should just require a name change to use the LittleFileSystem class.

Here is a simple example that updates a file named "boot_count" every time the application runs:

#include "LittleFileSystem.h"
#include "SPIFBlockDevice.h"

// Physical block device, can be any device that supports the BlockDevice API
SPIFBlockDevice bd(PTE2, PTE4, PTE1, PTE5);

// Storage for the littlefs
LittleFileSystem fs("fs");

// Entry point
int main() {
    // Mount the filesystem
    int err = fs.mount(&bd);
    if (err) {
        // Reformat if we can't mount the filesystem,
        // this should only happen on the first boot
        LittleFileSystem::format(&bd);
        fs.mount(&bd);
    }

    // Read the boot count
    uint32_t boot_count = 0;
    FILE *f = fopen("/fs/boot_count", "r+");
    if (!f) {
        // Create the file if it doesn't exist
        f = fopen("/fs/boot_count", "w+");
    }
    fread(&boot_count, sizeof(boot_count), 1, f);

    // Update the boot count
    boot_count += 1;
    rewind(f);
    fwrite(&boot_count, sizeof(boot_count), 1, f);

    // Remember that storage may not be updated until the file
    // is closed successfully
    fclose(f);

    // Release any resources we were using
    fs.unmount();

    // Print the boot count
    printf("boot_count: %ld\n", boot_count);
}

Reference material

DESIGN.md - DESIGN.md contains a fully detailed dive into how littlefs actually works. We encourage you to read it because the solutions and tradeoffs at work here are quite interesting.

SPEC.md - SPEC.md contains the on-disk specification of littlefs with all the nitty-gritty details. This can be useful for developing tooling.

littlefs - Where the core of littlefs currently lives.

littlefs-fuse - A FUSE wrapper for littlefs. The project allows you to mount littlefs directly in a Linux machine. This can be useful for debugging littlefs if you have an SD card handy.

littlefs-js - A JavaScript wrapper for littlefs. I'm not sure why you would want this, but it is handy for demos. You can see it in action here.