NAME¶
mkfs.jffs2 - Create a JFFS2 file system image from directory
SYNOPSIS¶
mkfs.jffs2 [
-p,--pad[=SIZE] ] [
-r,-d,--root
directory ] [
-s,--pagesize=SIZE ] [
-e,--eraseblock=SIZE
] [
-c,--cleanmarker=SIZE ] [
-n,--no-cleanmarkers ] [
-o,--output image.jffs2 ] [
-l,--little-endian ] [
-b,--big-endian ] [
-D,--devtable=FILE ] [
-f,--faketime
] [
-q,--squash ] [
-U,--squash-uids ] [
-P,--squash-perms ] [
--with-xattr ] [
--with-selinux ] [
--with-posix-acl ] [
-m,--compression-mode=MODE ] [
-x,--disable-compressor=NAME ] [
-X,--enable-compressor=NAME ] [
-y,--compressor-priority=PRIORITY:NAME ] [
-L,--list-compressors
] [
-t,--test-compression ] [
-h,--help ] [
-v,--verbose
] [
-V,--version ] [
-i,--incremental image.jffs2 ]
DESCRIPTION¶
The program
mkfs.jffs2 creates a JFFS2 (Second Journalling Flash File
System) file system image and writes the resulting image to the file specified
by the
-o option or by default to the standard output, unless the
standard output is a terminal device in which case mkfs.jffs2 will abort.
The file system image is created using the files and directories contained in
the directory specified by the option
-r or the present directory, if
the
-r option is not specified.
Each block of the files to be placed into the file system image are compressed
using one of the avaiable compressors depending on the selected compression
mode.
File systems are created with the same endianness as the host, unless the
-b or
-l options are specified. JFFS2 driver in the 2.4 Linux
kernel only supported images having the same endianness as the CPU. As of
2.5.48, the kernel can be changed with a #define to accept images of the
non-native endianness. Full bi-endian support in the kernel is not planned.
It is unlikely that JFFS2 images are useful except in conjuction with the MTD
(Memory Technology Device) drivers in the Linux kernel, since the JFFS2 file
system driver in the kernel requires MTD devices.
OPTIONS¶
Options that take SIZE arguments can be specified as either decimal (e.g.,
65536), octal (0200000), or hexidecimal (0x1000).
- -p, --pad[=SIZE]
- Pad output to SIZE bytes with 0xFF. If SIZE is not
specified, the output is padded to the end of the final erase block.
- -r, -d, --root=DIR
- Build file system from directory DIR. The default is the
current directory.
- -s, --pagesize=SIZE
- Use page size SIZE. The default is 4 KiB. This size is the
maximum size of a data node. Set according to target system's memory
management page size (NOTE: this is NOT related to NAND page size).
- -e, --eraseblock=SIZE
- Use erase block size SIZE. The default is 64 KiB. If you
use a erase block size different than the erase block size of the target
MTD device, JFFS2 may not perform optimally. If the SIZE specified is
below 4096, the units are assumed to be KiB.
- -c, --cleanmarker=SIZE
- Write ´CLEANMARKER´ nodes with the size
specified. It is not normally appropriate to specify a size other than the
default 12 bytes.
- -n, --no-cleanmarkers
- Do not write ´CLEANMARKER´ nodes to the beginning
of each erase block. This option can be useful for creating JFFS2 images
for use on NAND flash, and for creating images which are to be used on a
variety of hardware with differing eraseblock sizes.
- -o, --output=FILE
- Write JFFS2 image to file FILE. Default is the standard
output.
- -l, --little-endian
- Create a little-endian JFFS2 image. Default is to make an
image with the same endianness as the host.
- -b, --big-endian
- Create a big-endian JFFS2 image. Default is to make an
image with the same endianness as the host.
- -D, --devtable=FILE
- Use the named FILE as a device table file, for including
devices and changing permissions in the created image when the user does
not have appropriate permissions to create them on the file system used as
source.
- -f, --faketime
- Change all file timestamps to ´0´ for regression
testing.
- -q, --squash
- Squash permissions and owners, making all files be owned by
root and removing write permission for ´group´ and
´other´.
- -U, --squash-uids
- Squash owners making all files be owned by root.
- -P, --squash-perms
- Squash permissions, removing write permission for
´group´ and ´other´.
- --with-xattr
- Enables xattr, stuff all xattr entries into jffs2 image
file.
- --with-selinux
- Enables xattr, stuff only SELinux Labels into jffs2 image
file.
- --with-posix-acl
- Enable xattr, stuff only POSIX ACL entries into jffs2 image
file.
- -m, --compression-mode=MODE
- Set the default compression mode. The default mode is
priority which tries the compressors in a predefinied order and
chooses the first successful one. The alternatives are: none (mkfs
will not compress) and size (mkfs will try all compressor and
chooses the one which have the smallest result).
- -x, --disable-compressor=NAME
- Disable a compressor. Use -L to see the list of the
avaiable compressors and their default states.
- -X, --enable-compressor=NAME
- Enable a compressor. Use -L to see the list of the
avaiable compressors and their default states.
- -y, --compressor-priority=PRIORITY:NAME
- Set the priority of a compressor. Use -L to see the
list of the avaiable compressors and their default priority. Priorities
are used by priority compression mode.
- -L, --list-compressors
- Show the list of the avaiable compressors and their
states.
- -t, --test-compression
- Call decompress after every compress - and compare the
result with the original data -, and some other check.
- -h, --help
- Display help text.
- -v, --verbose
- Verbose operation.
- -V, --version
- Display version information.
- -i, --incremental=FILE
- Generate an appendage image for FILE. If FILE is written to
flash and flash is appended with the output, then it seems as if it was
one thing.
LIMITATIONS¶
The format and grammar of the device table file does not allow it to create
symbolic links when the symbolic links are not already present in the root
working directory.
However, symbolic links may be specified in the device table file using the
l type for the purposes of setting their permissions and ownership.
BUGS¶
JFFS2 limits device major and minor numbers to 8 bits each. Some consider this a
bug.
mkfs.jffs2 does not properly handle hard links in the input directory
structure. Currently, hard linked files will be expanded to multiple identical
files in the output image.
AUTHORS¶
David Woodhouse
Manual page written by David Schleef <ds@schleef.org>
SEE ALSO¶
mkfs(8),
mkfs.jffs(1),
fakeroot(1)