Commit 9f249162 authored by Thadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo's avatar Thadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo Committed by Boaz Harrosh

trivial: some small fixes in exofs documentation

Add exofs.txt to filesystems Documentation index and fix some typos,
identation and grammar.
Signed-off-by: default avatarThadeu Lima de Souza Cascardo <cascardo@holoscopio.com>
Signed-off-by: default avatarBoaz Harrosh <bharrosh@panasas.com>
parent 3067e02f
......@@ -36,6 +36,8 @@ dnotify.txt
- info about directory notification in Linux.
ecryptfs.txt
- docs on eCryptfs: stacked cryptographic filesystem for Linux.
exofs.txt
- info, usage, mount options, design about EXOFS.
ext2.txt
- info, mount options and specifications for the Ext2 filesystem.
ext3.txt
......
......@@ -60,13 +60,13 @@ USAGE
mkfs.exofs --pid=65536 --format /dev/osd0
The --format is optional if not specified no OSD_FORMAT will be
preformed and a clean file system will be created in the specified pid,
The --format is optional. If not specified, no OSD_FORMAT will be
performed and a clean file system will be created in the specified pid,
in the available space of the target. (Use --format=size_in_meg to limit
the total LUN space available)
If pid already exist it will be deleted and a new one will be created in it's
place. Be careful.
If pid already exists, it will be deleted and a new one will be created in
its place. Be careful.
An exofs lives inside a single OSD partition. You can create multiple exofs
filesystems on the same device using multiple pids.
......@@ -81,7 +81,7 @@ USAGE
7. For reference (See do-exofs example script):
do-exofs start - an example of how to perform the above steps.
do-exofs stop - an example of how to unmount the file system.
do-exofs stop - an example of how to unmount the file system.
do-exofs format - an example of how to format and mkfs a new exofs.
8. Extra compilation flags (uncomment in fs/exofs/Kbuild):
......@@ -104,8 +104,8 @@ Where:
exofs specific options: Options are separated by commas (,)
pid=<integer> - The partition number to mount/create as
container of the filesystem.
This option is mandatory
to=<integer> - Timeout in ticks for a single command
This option is mandatory.
to=<integer> - Timeout in ticks for a single command.
default is (60 * HZ) [for debugging only]
===============================================================================
......@@ -116,7 +116,7 @@ DESIGN
with a special ID (defined in common.h).
Information included in the file system control block is used to fill the
in-memory superblock structure at mount time. This object is created before
the file system is used by mkexofs.c It contains information such as:
the file system is used by mkexofs.c. It contains information such as:
- The file system's magic number
- The next inode number to be allocated
......@@ -134,8 +134,8 @@ DESIGN
attributes. This applies to both regular files and other types (directories,
device files, symlinks, etc.).
* Credentials are generated per object (inode and superblock) when they is
created in memory (read off disk or created). The credential works for all
* Credentials are generated per object (inode and superblock) when they are
created in memory (read from disk or created). The credential works for all
operations and is used as long as the object remains in memory.
* Async OSD operations are used whenever possible, but the target may execute
......@@ -145,7 +145,8 @@ DESIGN
from executing in reverse order:
- The following are handled with the OBJ_CREATED and OBJ_2BCREATED
flags. OBJ_CREATED is set when we know the object exists on the OSD -
in create's callback function, and when we successfully do a read_inode.
in create's callback function, and when we successfully do a
read_inode.
OBJ_2BCREATED is set in the beginning of the create function, so we
know that we should wait.
- create/delete: delete should wait until the object is created
......
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