Why do inode numbers start from 1 and not 0?
The C language convention counts array indices from 0. Why do inode numbers 开发者_StackOverflow中文版start from 1 and not 0?
If inode 0 is reserved is for some special use, then what is the significance of inode 0?
0 is used as a sentinel value to indicate null or no inode. similar to how pointers can be NULL in C. without a sentinel, you'd need an extra bit to test if an inode in a struct was set or not.
more info here:
All block and inode addresses start at 1. The first block on the disk is block 1. 0 is used to indicate no block. (Sparse files can have these inside them)
http://uranus.chrysocome.net/explore2fs/es2fs.htm
for instance, in old filesystems where directories were represented as a fixed array of file entries, deleting a file would result in setting that entry's inode val to 0. when traversing the directory, any entry with an inode of 0 would be ignored.
Usually, the inode 0 is reserved because a return value of 0 usually signals an error. Multiple method in the Linux kernel -- especially in the VFS layer shared by all file systems -- return an ino_t, e.g. find_inode_number.
There are more reserved inode numbers. For example in ext2:
#define EXT2_BAD_INO 1 /* Bad blocks inode */
#define EXT2_ROOT_INO 2 /* Root inode */
#define EXT2_BOOT_LOADER_INO 5 /* Boot loader inode */
#define EXT2_UNDEL_DIR_INO 6 /* Undelete directory inode */
and ext3 has:
#define EXT3_BAD_INO 1 /* Bad blocks inode */
#define EXT3_ROOT_INO 2 /* Root inode */
#define EXT3_BOOT_LOADER_INO 5 /* Boot loader inode */
#define EXT3_UNDEL_DIR_INO 6 /* Undelete directory inode */
#define EXT3_RESIZE_INO 7 /* Reserved group descriptors inode */
#define EXT3_JOURNAL_INO 8 /* Journal inode */
and ext4 has:
#define EXT4_BAD_INO 1 /* Bad blocks inode */
#define EXT4_ROOT_INO 2 /* Root inode */
#define EXT4_USR_QUOTA_INO 3 /* User quota inode */
#define EXT4_GRP_QUOTA_INO 4 /* Group quota inode */
#define EXT4_BOOT_LOADER_INO 5 /* Boot loader inode */
#define EXT4_UNDEL_DIR_INO 6 /* Undelete directory inode */
#define EXT4_RESIZE_INO 7 /* Reserved group descriptors inode */
#define EXT4_JOURNAL_INO 8 /* Journal inode */
Other fileystems use the ino 1 as root inode number. In general, a file system is free to choose its inode numbers and its reserved ino values (with the exception of 0).
OSX specifies that inode 0 signifies a deleted file that has not yet been deleted; this may have also been used in other filesystems, as OSX is BSD-derived, although at least NetBSD seems to have now removed this usage.
See the OSX manpage for getdirentries http://developer.apple.com/library/ios/#documentation/System/Conceptual/ManPages_iPhoneOS/man2/getdirentries.2.html
When I wrote a filesystem ages ago, I used inode 0 for the .badblocks
pseudo-file.
On some filesystems .badblocks
is actually present in the root directory as a regular file owned by root and mode 0. root can open it but reading or writing it is undefined.
There is some ancient tradition that inodes start from 1, #1 is .badblocks
, and #2 is the root directory. Even though .badblocks
is not particularly well-guaranteed, many filesystems go out of their way to make root #2.
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