|  | ramfs, rootfs and initramfs | 
|  | October 17, 2005 | 
|  | Rob Landley <rob@landley.net> | 
|  | ============================= | 
|  |  | 
|  | What is ramfs? | 
|  | -------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | Ramfs is a very simple filesystem that exports Linux's disk caching | 
|  | mechanisms (the page cache and dentry cache) as a dynamically resizable | 
|  | RAM-based filesystem. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Normally all files are cached in memory by Linux.  Pages of data read from | 
|  | backing store (usually the block device the filesystem is mounted on) are kept | 
|  | around in case it's needed again, but marked as clean (freeable) in case the | 
|  | Virtual Memory system needs the memory for something else.  Similarly, data | 
|  | written to files is marked clean as soon as it has been written to backing | 
|  | store, but kept around for caching purposes until the VM reallocates the | 
|  | memory.  A similar mechanism (the dentry cache) greatly speeds up access to | 
|  | directories. | 
|  |  | 
|  | With ramfs, there is no backing store.  Files written into ramfs allocate | 
|  | dentries and page cache as usual, but there's nowhere to write them to. | 
|  | This means the pages are never marked clean, so they can't be freed by the | 
|  | VM when it's looking to recycle memory. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The amount of code required to implement ramfs is tiny, because all the | 
|  | work is done by the existing Linux caching infrastructure.  Basically, | 
|  | you're mounting the disk cache as a filesystem.  Because of this, ramfs is not | 
|  | an optional component removable via menuconfig, since there would be negligible | 
|  | space savings. | 
|  |  | 
|  | ramfs and ramdisk: | 
|  | ------------------ | 
|  |  | 
|  | The older "ram disk" mechanism created a synthetic block device out of | 
|  | an area of RAM and used it as backing store for a filesystem.  This block | 
|  | device was of fixed size, so the filesystem mounted on it was of fixed | 
|  | size.  Using a ram disk also required unnecessarily copying memory from the | 
|  | fake block device into the page cache (and copying changes back out), as well | 
|  | as creating and destroying dentries.  Plus it needed a filesystem driver | 
|  | (such as ext2) to format and interpret this data. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Compared to ramfs, this wastes memory (and memory bus bandwidth), creates | 
|  | unnecessary work for the CPU, and pollutes the CPU caches.  (There are tricks | 
|  | to avoid this copying by playing with the page tables, but they're unpleasantly | 
|  | complicated and turn out to be about as expensive as the copying anyway.) | 
|  | More to the point, all the work ramfs is doing has to happen _anyway_, | 
|  | since all file access goes through the page and dentry caches.  The RAM | 
|  | disk is simply unnecessary; ramfs is internally much simpler. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Another reason ramdisks are semi-obsolete is that the introduction of | 
|  | loopback devices offered a more flexible and convenient way to create | 
|  | synthetic block devices, now from files instead of from chunks of memory. | 
|  | See losetup (8) for details. | 
|  |  | 
|  | ramfs and tmpfs: | 
|  | ---------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | One downside of ramfs is you can keep writing data into it until you fill | 
|  | up all memory, and the VM can't free it because the VM thinks that files | 
|  | should get written to backing store (rather than swap space), but ramfs hasn't | 
|  | got any backing store.  Because of this, only root (or a trusted user) should | 
|  | be allowed write access to a ramfs mount. | 
|  |  | 
|  | A ramfs derivative called tmpfs was created to add size limits, and the ability | 
|  | to write the data to swap space.  Normal users can be allowed write access to | 
|  | tmpfs mounts.  See Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.txt for more information. | 
|  |  | 
|  | What is rootfs? | 
|  | --------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | Rootfs is a special instance of ramfs (or tmpfs, if that's enabled), which is | 
|  | always present in 2.6 systems.  You can't unmount rootfs for approximately the | 
|  | same reason you can't kill the init process; rather than having special code | 
|  | to check for and handle an empty list, it's smaller and simpler for the kernel | 
|  | to just make sure certain lists can't become empty. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Most systems just mount another filesystem over rootfs and ignore it.  The | 
|  | amount of space an empty instance of ramfs takes up is tiny. | 
|  |  | 
|  | What is initramfs? | 
|  | ------------------ | 
|  |  | 
|  | All 2.6 Linux kernels contain a gzipped "cpio" format archive, which is | 
|  | extracted into rootfs when the kernel boots up.  After extracting, the kernel | 
|  | checks to see if rootfs contains a file "init", and if so it executes it as PID | 
|  | 1.  If found, this init process is responsible for bringing the system the | 
|  | rest of the way up, including locating and mounting the real root device (if | 
|  | any).  If rootfs does not contain an init program after the embedded cpio | 
|  | archive is extracted into it, the kernel will fall through to the older code | 
|  | to locate and mount a root partition, then exec some variant of /sbin/init | 
|  | out of that. | 
|  |  | 
|  | All this differs from the old initrd in several ways: | 
|  |  | 
|  | - The old initrd was always a separate file, while the initramfs archive is | 
|  | linked into the linux kernel image.  (The directory linux-*/usr is devoted | 
|  | to generating this archive during the build.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | - The old initrd file was a gzipped filesystem image (in some file format, | 
|  | such as ext2, that needed a driver built into the kernel), while the new | 
|  | initramfs archive is a gzipped cpio archive (like tar only simpler, | 
|  | see cpio(1) and Documentation/early-userspace/buffer-format.txt).  The | 
|  | kernel's cpio extraction code is not only extremely small, it's also | 
|  | __init text and data that can be discarded during the boot process. | 
|  |  | 
|  | - The program run by the old initrd (which was called /initrd, not /init) did | 
|  | some setup and then returned to the kernel, while the init program from | 
|  | initramfs is not expected to return to the kernel.  (If /init needs to hand | 
|  | off control it can overmount / with a new root device and exec another init | 
|  | program.  See the switch_root utility, below.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | - When switching another root device, initrd would pivot_root and then | 
|  | umount the ramdisk.  But initramfs is rootfs: you can neither pivot_root | 
|  | rootfs, nor unmount it.  Instead delete everything out of rootfs to | 
|  | free up the space (find -xdev / -exec rm '{}' ';'), overmount rootfs | 
|  | with the new root (cd /newmount; mount --move . /; chroot .), attach | 
|  | stdin/stdout/stderr to the new /dev/console, and exec the new init. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Since this is a remarkably persnickety process (and involves deleting | 
|  | commands before you can run them), the klibc package introduced a helper | 
|  | program (utils/run_init.c) to do all this for you.  Most other packages | 
|  | (such as busybox) have named this command "switch_root". | 
|  |  | 
|  | Populating initramfs: | 
|  | --------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | The 2.6 kernel build process always creates a gzipped cpio format initramfs | 
|  | archive and links it into the resulting kernel binary.  By default, this | 
|  | archive is empty (consuming 134 bytes on x86). | 
|  |  | 
|  | The config option CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE (for some reason buried under | 
|  | devices->block devices in menuconfig, and living in usr/Kconfig) can be used | 
|  | to specify a source for the initramfs archive, which will automatically be | 
|  | incorporated into the resulting binary.  This option can point to an existing | 
|  | gzipped cpio archive, a directory containing files to be archived, or a text | 
|  | file specification such as the following example: | 
|  |  | 
|  | dir /dev 755 0 0 | 
|  | nod /dev/console 644 0 0 c 5 1 | 
|  | nod /dev/loop0 644 0 0 b 7 0 | 
|  | dir /bin 755 1000 1000 | 
|  | slink /bin/sh busybox 777 0 0 | 
|  | file /bin/busybox initramfs/busybox 755 0 0 | 
|  | dir /proc 755 0 0 | 
|  | dir /sys 755 0 0 | 
|  | dir /mnt 755 0 0 | 
|  | file /init initramfs/init.sh 755 0 0 | 
|  |  | 
|  | Run "usr/gen_init_cpio" (after the kernel build) to get a usage message | 
|  | documenting the above file format. | 
|  |  | 
|  | One advantage of the configuration file is that root access is not required to | 
|  | set permissions or create device nodes in the new archive.  (Note that those | 
|  | two example "file" entries expect to find files named "init.sh" and "busybox" in | 
|  | a directory called "initramfs", under the linux-2.6.* directory.  See | 
|  | Documentation/early-userspace/README for more details.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | The kernel does not depend on external cpio tools.  If you specify a | 
|  | directory instead of a configuration file, the kernel's build infrastructure | 
|  | creates a configuration file from that directory (usr/Makefile calls | 
|  | scripts/gen_initramfs_list.sh), and proceeds to package up that directory | 
|  | using the config file (by feeding it to usr/gen_init_cpio, which is created | 
|  | from usr/gen_init_cpio.c).  The kernel's build-time cpio creation code is | 
|  | entirely self-contained, and the kernel's boot-time extractor is also | 
|  | (obviously) self-contained. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The one thing you might need external cpio utilities installed for is creating | 
|  | or extracting your own preprepared cpio files to feed to the kernel build | 
|  | (instead of a config file or directory). | 
|  |  | 
|  | The following command line can extract a cpio image (either by the above script | 
|  | or by the kernel build) back into its component files: | 
|  |  | 
|  | cpio -i -d -H newc -F initramfs_data.cpio --no-absolute-filenames | 
|  |  | 
|  | The following shell script can create a prebuilt cpio archive you can | 
|  | use in place of the above config file: | 
|  |  | 
|  | #!/bin/sh | 
|  |  | 
|  | # Copyright 2006 Rob Landley <rob@landley.net> and TimeSys Corporation. | 
|  | # Licensed under GPL version 2 | 
|  |  | 
|  | if [ $# -ne 2 ] | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "usage: mkinitramfs directory imagename.cpio.gz" | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | if [ -d "$1" ] | 
|  | then | 
|  | echo "creating $2 from $1" | 
|  | (cd "$1"; find . | cpio -o -H newc | gzip) > "$2" | 
|  | else | 
|  | echo "First argument must be a directory" | 
|  | exit 1 | 
|  | fi | 
|  |  | 
|  | Note: The cpio man page contains some bad advice that will break your initramfs | 
|  | archive if you follow it.  It says "A typical way to generate the list | 
|  | of filenames is with the find command; you should give find the -depth option | 
|  | to minimize problems with permissions on directories that are unwritable or not | 
|  | searchable."  Don't do this when creating initramfs.cpio.gz images, it won't | 
|  | work.  The Linux kernel cpio extractor won't create files in a directory that | 
|  | doesn't exist, so the directory entries must go before the files that go in | 
|  | those directories.  The above script gets them in the right order. | 
|  |  | 
|  | External initramfs images: | 
|  | -------------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | If the kernel has initrd support enabled, an external cpio.gz archive can also | 
|  | be passed into a 2.6 kernel in place of an initrd.  In this case, the kernel | 
|  | will autodetect the type (initramfs, not initrd) and extract the external cpio | 
|  | archive into rootfs before trying to run /init. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This has the memory efficiency advantages of initramfs (no ramdisk block | 
|  | device) but the separate packaging of initrd (which is nice if you have | 
|  | non-GPL code you'd like to run from initramfs, without conflating it with | 
|  | the GPL licensed Linux kernel binary). | 
|  |  | 
|  | It can also be used to supplement the kernel's built-in initramfs image.  The | 
|  | files in the external archive will overwrite any conflicting files in | 
|  | the built-in initramfs archive.  Some distributors also prefer to customize | 
|  | a single kernel image with task-specific initramfs images, without recompiling. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Contents of initramfs: | 
|  | ---------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | An initramfs archive is a complete self-contained root filesystem for Linux. | 
|  | If you don't already understand what shared libraries, devices, and paths | 
|  | you need to get a minimal root filesystem up and running, here are some | 
|  | references: | 
|  | http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Bootdisk-HOWTO/ | 
|  | http://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/From-PowerUp-To-Bash-Prompt-HOWTO.html | 
|  | http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/stable/ | 
|  |  | 
|  | The "klibc" package (http://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/klibc) is | 
|  | designed to be a tiny C library to statically link early userspace | 
|  | code against, along with some related utilities.  It is BSD licensed. | 
|  |  | 
|  | I use uClibc (http://www.uclibc.org) and busybox (http://www.busybox.net) | 
|  | myself.  These are LGPL and GPL, respectively.  (A self-contained initramfs | 
|  | package is planned for the busybox 1.3 release.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | In theory you could use glibc, but that's not well suited for small embedded | 
|  | uses like this.  (A "hello world" program statically linked against glibc is | 
|  | over 400k.  With uClibc it's 7k.  Also note that glibc dlopens libnss to do | 
|  | name lookups, even when otherwise statically linked.) | 
|  |  | 
|  | A good first step is to get initramfs to run a statically linked "hello world" | 
|  | program as init, and test it under an emulator like qemu (www.qemu.org) or | 
|  | User Mode Linux, like so: | 
|  |  | 
|  | cat > hello.c << EOF | 
|  | #include <stdio.h> | 
|  | #include <unistd.h> | 
|  |  | 
|  | int main(int argc, char *argv[]) | 
|  | { | 
|  | printf("Hello world!\n"); | 
|  | sleep(999999999); | 
|  | } | 
|  | EOF | 
|  | gcc -static hello2.c -o init | 
|  | echo init | cpio -o -H newc | gzip > test.cpio.gz | 
|  | # Testing external initramfs using the initrd loading mechanism. | 
|  | qemu -kernel /boot/vmlinuz -initrd test.cpio.gz /dev/zero | 
|  |  | 
|  | When debugging a normal root filesystem, it's nice to be able to boot with | 
|  | "init=/bin/sh".  The initramfs equivalent is "rdinit=/bin/sh", and it's | 
|  | just as useful. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Why cpio rather than tar? | 
|  | ------------------------- | 
|  |  | 
|  | This decision was made back in December, 2001.  The discussion started here: | 
|  |  | 
|  | http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1538.html | 
|  |  | 
|  | And spawned a second thread (specifically on tar vs cpio), starting here: | 
|  |  | 
|  | http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1587.html | 
|  |  | 
|  | The quick and dirty summary version (which is no substitute for reading | 
|  | the above threads) is: | 
|  |  | 
|  | 1) cpio is a standard.  It's decades old (from the AT&T days), and already | 
|  | widely used on Linux (inside RPM, Red Hat's device driver disks).  Here's | 
|  | a Linux Journal article about it from 1996: | 
|  |  | 
|  | http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/1213 | 
|  |  | 
|  | It's not as popular as tar because the traditional cpio command line tools | 
|  | require _truly_hideous_ command line arguments.  But that says nothing | 
|  | either way about the archive format, and there are alternative tools, | 
|  | such as: | 
|  |  | 
|  | http://freshmeat.net/projects/afio/ | 
|  |  | 
|  | 2) The cpio archive format chosen by the kernel is simpler and cleaner (and | 
|  | thus easier to create and parse) than any of the (literally dozens of) | 
|  | various tar archive formats.  The complete initramfs archive format is | 
|  | explained in buffer-format.txt, created in usr/gen_init_cpio.c, and | 
|  | extracted in init/initramfs.c.  All three together come to less than 26k | 
|  | total of human-readable text. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 3) The GNU project standardizing on tar is approximately as relevant as | 
|  | Windows standardizing on zip.  Linux is not part of either, and is free | 
|  | to make its own technical decisions. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 4) Since this is a kernel internal format, it could easily have been | 
|  | something brand new.  The kernel provides its own tools to create and | 
|  | extract this format anyway.  Using an existing standard was preferable, | 
|  | but not essential. | 
|  |  | 
|  | 5) Al Viro made the decision (quote: "tar is ugly as hell and not going to be | 
|  | supported on the kernel side"): | 
|  |  | 
|  | http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1540.html | 
|  |  | 
|  | explained his reasoning: | 
|  |  | 
|  | http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1550.html | 
|  | http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1638.html | 
|  |  | 
|  | and, most importantly, designed and implemented the initramfs code. | 
|  |  | 
|  | Future directions: | 
|  | ------------------ | 
|  |  | 
|  | Today (2.6.16), initramfs is always compiled in, but not always used.  The | 
|  | kernel falls back to legacy boot code that is reached only if initramfs does | 
|  | not contain an /init program.  The fallback is legacy code, there to ensure a | 
|  | smooth transition and allowing early boot functionality to gradually move to | 
|  | "early userspace" (I.E. initramfs). | 
|  |  | 
|  | The move to early userspace is necessary because finding and mounting the real | 
|  | root device is complex.  Root partitions can span multiple devices (raid or | 
|  | separate journal).  They can be out on the network (requiring dhcp, setting a | 
|  | specific MAC address, logging into a server, etc).  They can live on removable | 
|  | media, with dynamically allocated major/minor numbers and persistent naming | 
|  | issues requiring a full udev implementation to sort out.  They can be | 
|  | compressed, encrypted, copy-on-write, loopback mounted, strangely partitioned, | 
|  | and so on. | 
|  |  | 
|  | This kind of complexity (which inevitably includes policy) is rightly handled | 
|  | in userspace.  Both klibc and busybox/uClibc are working on simple initramfs | 
|  | packages to drop into a kernel build. | 
|  |  | 
|  | The klibc package has now been accepted into Andrew Morton's 2.6.17-mm tree. | 
|  | The kernel's current early boot code (partition detection, etc) will probably | 
|  | be migrated into a default initramfs, automatically created and used by the | 
|  | kernel build. |