9dba07f143
SquashFS supports sprase blocks in files - that is, if a given block is composed only of zeros, it's not written to the output file to save space and it's on-disk length field is set to zero to indicate that. Previously the squashfs driver did not recognise that, and would attempt to read and decompress a zero-sized block, which obviously failed. The following command may be used to create a file for testing: cat <(dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/stdout bs=1M count=1) \ <(dd if=/dev/zero of=/dev/stdout bs=1M count=1) \ <(dd if=/dev/urandom of=/dev/stdout bs=1k count=200) >test_file Signed-off-by: Campbell Suter <campbell@snapit.group> |
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.. | ||
btrfs | ||
cbfs | ||
cramfs | ||
ext4 | ||
fat | ||
jffs2 | ||
reiserfs | ||
sandbox | ||
squashfs | ||
ubifs | ||
yaffs2 | ||
zfs | ||
fs_internal.c | ||
fs.c | ||
Kconfig | ||
Makefile |