xref: /linux/Documentation/filesystems/ramfs-rootfs-initramfs.rst (revision 90d0d6009c0f6b0693ac58096c655a2df61e0d50)
1.. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0
2
3===========================
4Ramfs, rootfs and initramfs
5===========================
6
7October 17, 2005
8
9:Author: Rob Landley <rob@landley.net>
10
11What is ramfs?
12--------------
13
14Ramfs is a very simple filesystem that exports Linux's disk caching
15mechanisms (the page cache and dentry cache) as a dynamically resizable
16RAM-based filesystem.
17
18Normally all files are cached in memory by Linux.  Pages of data read from
19backing store (usually the block device the filesystem is mounted on) are kept
20around in case it's needed again, but marked as clean (freeable) in case the
21Virtual Memory system needs the memory for something else.  Similarly, data
22written to files is marked clean as soon as it has been written to backing
23store, but kept around for caching purposes until the VM reallocates the
24memory.  A similar mechanism (the dentry cache) greatly speeds up access to
25directories.
26
27With ramfs, there is no backing store.  Files written into ramfs allocate
28dentries and page cache as usual, but there's nowhere to write them to.
29This means the pages are never marked clean, so they can't be freed by the
30VM when it's looking to recycle memory.
31
32The amount of code required to implement ramfs is tiny, because all the
33work is done by the existing Linux caching infrastructure.  Basically,
34you're mounting the disk cache as a filesystem.  Because of this, ramfs is not
35an optional component removable via menuconfig, since there would be negligible
36space savings.
37
38ramfs and ramdisk:
39------------------
40
41The older "ram disk" mechanism created a synthetic block device out of
42an area of RAM and used it as backing store for a filesystem.  This block
43device was of fixed size, so the filesystem mounted on it was of fixed
44size.  Using a ram disk also required unnecessarily copying memory from the
45fake block device into the page cache (and copying changes back out), as well
46as creating and destroying dentries.  Plus it needed a filesystem driver
47(such as ext2) to format and interpret this data.
48
49Compared to ramfs, this wastes memory (and memory bus bandwidth), creates
50unnecessary work for the CPU, and pollutes the CPU caches.  (There are tricks
51to avoid this copying by playing with the page tables, but they're unpleasantly
52complicated and turn out to be about as expensive as the copying anyway.)
53More to the point, all the work ramfs is doing has to happen _anyway_,
54since all file access goes through the page and dentry caches.  The RAM
55disk is simply unnecessary; ramfs is internally much simpler.
56
57Another reason ramdisks are semi-obsolete is that the introduction of
58loopback devices offered a more flexible and convenient way to create
59synthetic block devices, now from files instead of from chunks of memory.
60See losetup (8) for details.
61
62ramfs and tmpfs:
63----------------
64
65One downside of ramfs is you can keep writing data into it until you fill
66up all memory, and the VM can't free it because the VM thinks that files
67should get written to backing store (rather than swap space), but ramfs hasn't
68got any backing store.  Because of this, only root (or a trusted user) should
69be allowed write access to a ramfs mount.
70
71A ramfs derivative called tmpfs was created to add size limits, and the ability
72to write the data to swap space.  Normal users can be allowed write access to
73tmpfs mounts.  See Documentation/filesystems/tmpfs.rst for more information.
74
75What is rootfs?
76---------------
77
78Rootfs is a special instance of ramfs (or tmpfs, if that's enabled), which is
79always present in 2.6 systems.  You can't unmount rootfs for approximately the
80same reason you can't kill the init process; rather than having special code
81to check for and handle an empty list, it's smaller and simpler for the kernel
82to just make sure certain lists can't become empty.
83
84Most systems just mount another filesystem over rootfs and ignore it.  The
85amount of space an empty instance of ramfs takes up is tiny.
86
87If CONFIG_TMPFS is enabled, rootfs will use tmpfs instead of ramfs by
88default.  To force ramfs, add "rootfstype=ramfs" to the kernel command
89line.
90
91What is initramfs?
92------------------
93
94All 2.6 Linux kernels contain a gzipped "cpio" format archive, which is
95extracted into rootfs when the kernel boots up.  After extracting, the kernel
96checks to see if rootfs contains a file "init", and if so it executes it as PID
971.  If found, this init process is responsible for bringing the system the
98rest of the way up, including locating and mounting the real root device (if
99any).  If rootfs does not contain an init program after the embedded cpio
100archive is extracted into it, the kernel will fall through to the older code
101to locate and mount a root partition, then exec some variant of /sbin/init
102out of that.
103
104All this differs from the old initrd in several ways:
105
106  - The old initrd was always a separate file, while the initramfs archive is
107    linked into the linux kernel image.  (The directory ``linux-*/usr`` is
108    devoted to generating this archive during the build.)
109
110  - The old initrd file was a gzipped filesystem image (in some file format,
111    such as ext2, that needed a driver built into the kernel), while the new
112    initramfs archive is a gzipped cpio archive (like tar only simpler,
113    see cpio(1) and Documentation/driver-api/early-userspace/buffer-format.rst).
114    The kernel's cpio extraction code is not only extremely small, it's also
115    __init text and data that can be discarded during the boot process.
116
117  - The program run by the old initrd (which was called /initrd, not /init) did
118    some setup and then returned to the kernel, while the init program from
119    initramfs is not expected to return to the kernel.  (If /init needs to hand
120    off control it can overmount / with a new root device and exec another init
121    program.  See the switch_root utility, below.)
122
123  - When switching another root device, initrd would pivot_root and then
124    umount the ramdisk.  But initramfs is rootfs: you can neither pivot_root
125    rootfs, nor unmount it.  Instead delete everything out of rootfs to
126    free up the space (find -xdev / -exec rm '{}' ';'), overmount rootfs
127    with the new root (cd /newmount; mount --move . /; chroot .), attach
128    stdin/stdout/stderr to the new /dev/console, and exec the new init.
129
130    Since this is a remarkably persnickety process (and involves deleting
131    commands before you can run them), the klibc package introduced a helper
132    program (utils/run_init.c) to do all this for you.  Most other packages
133    (such as busybox) have named this command "switch_root".
134
135Populating initramfs:
136---------------------
137
138The 2.6 kernel build process always creates a gzipped cpio format initramfs
139archive and links it into the resulting kernel binary.  By default, this
140archive is empty (consuming 134 bytes on x86).
141
142The config option CONFIG_INITRAMFS_SOURCE (in General Setup in menuconfig,
143and living in usr/Kconfig) can be used to specify a source for the
144initramfs archive, which will automatically be incorporated into the
145resulting binary.  This option can point to an existing gzipped cpio
146archive, a directory containing files to be archived, or a text file
147specification such as the following example::
148
149  dir /dev 755 0 0
150  nod /dev/console 644 0 0 c 5 1
151  nod /dev/loop0 644 0 0 b 7 0
152  dir /bin 755 1000 1000
153  slink /bin/sh busybox 777 0 0
154  file /bin/busybox initramfs/busybox 755 0 0
155  dir /proc 755 0 0
156  dir /sys 755 0 0
157  dir /mnt 755 0 0
158  file /init initramfs/init.sh 755 0 0
159
160Run "usr/gen_init_cpio" (after the kernel build) to get a usage message
161documenting the above file format.
162
163One advantage of the configuration file is that root access is not required to
164set permissions or create device nodes in the new archive.  (Note that those
165two example "file" entries expect to find files named "init.sh" and "busybox" in
166a directory called "initramfs", under the linux-2.6.* directory.  See
167Documentation/driver-api/early-userspace/early_userspace_support.rst for more details.)
168
169The kernel does not depend on external cpio tools.  If you specify a
170directory instead of a configuration file, the kernel's build infrastructure
171creates a configuration file from that directory (usr/Makefile calls
172usr/gen_initramfs.sh), and proceeds to package up that directory
173using the config file (by feeding it to usr/gen_init_cpio, which is created
174from usr/gen_init_cpio.c).  The kernel's build-time cpio creation code is
175entirely self-contained, and the kernel's boot-time extractor is also
176(obviously) self-contained.
177
178The one thing you might need external cpio utilities installed for is creating
179or extracting your own preprepared cpio files to feed to the kernel build
180(instead of a config file or directory).
181
182The following command line can extract a cpio image (either by the above script
183or by the kernel build) back into its component files::
184
185  cpio -i -d -H newc -F initramfs_data.cpio --no-absolute-filenames
186
187The following shell script can create a prebuilt cpio archive you can
188use in place of the above config file::
189
190  #!/bin/sh
191
192  # Copyright 2006 Rob Landley <rob@landley.net> and TimeSys Corporation.
193  # Licensed under GPL version 2
194
195  if [ $# -ne 2 ]
196  then
197    echo "usage: mkinitramfs directory imagename.cpio.gz"
198    exit 1
199  fi
200
201  if [ -d "$1" ]
202  then
203    echo "creating $2 from $1"
204    (cd "$1"; find . | cpio -o -H newc | gzip) > "$2"
205  else
206    echo "First argument must be a directory"
207    exit 1
208  fi
209
210.. Note::
211
212   The cpio man page contains some bad advice that will break your initramfs
213   archive if you follow it.  It says "A typical way to generate the list
214   of filenames is with the find command; you should give find the -depth
215   option to minimize problems with permissions on directories that are
216   unwritable or not searchable."  Don't do this when creating
217   initramfs.cpio.gz images, it won't work.  The Linux kernel cpio extractor
218   won't create files in a directory that doesn't exist, so the directory
219   entries must go before the files that go in those directories.
220   The above script gets them in the right order.
221
222External initramfs images:
223--------------------------
224
225If the kernel has initrd support enabled, an external cpio.gz archive can also
226be passed into a 2.6 kernel in place of an initrd.  In this case, the kernel
227will autodetect the type (initramfs, not initrd) and extract the external cpio
228archive into rootfs before trying to run /init.
229
230This has the memory efficiency advantages of initramfs (no ramdisk block
231device) but the separate packaging of initrd (which is nice if you have
232non-GPL code you'd like to run from initramfs, without conflating it with
233the GPL licensed Linux kernel binary).
234
235It can also be used to supplement the kernel's built-in initramfs image.  The
236files in the external archive will overwrite any conflicting files in
237the built-in initramfs archive.  Some distributors also prefer to customize
238a single kernel image with task-specific initramfs images, without recompiling.
239
240Contents of initramfs:
241----------------------
242
243An initramfs archive is a complete self-contained root filesystem for Linux.
244If you don't already understand what shared libraries, devices, and paths
245you need to get a minimal root filesystem up and running, here are some
246references:
247
248- https://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/Bootdisk-HOWTO/
249- https://www.tldp.org/HOWTO/From-PowerUp-To-Bash-Prompt-HOWTO.html
250- http://www.linuxfromscratch.org/lfs/view/stable/
251
252The "klibc" package (https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/libs/klibc) is
253designed to be a tiny C library to statically link early userspace
254code against, along with some related utilities.  It is BSD licensed.
255
256I use uClibc (https://www.uclibc.org) and busybox (https://www.busybox.net)
257myself.  These are LGPL and GPL, respectively.  (A self-contained initramfs
258package is planned for the busybox 1.3 release.)
259
260In theory you could use glibc, but that's not well suited for small embedded
261uses like this.  (A "hello world" program statically linked against glibc is
262over 400k.  With uClibc it's 7k.  Also note that glibc dlopens libnss to do
263name lookups, even when otherwise statically linked.)
264
265A good first step is to get initramfs to run a statically linked "hello world"
266program as init, and test it under an emulator like qemu (www.qemu.org) or
267User Mode Linux, like so::
268
269  cat > hello.c << EOF
270  #include <stdio.h>
271  #include <unistd.h>
272
273  int main(int argc, char *argv[])
274  {
275    printf("Hello world!\n");
276    sleep(999999999);
277  }
278  EOF
279  gcc -static hello.c -o init
280  echo init | cpio -o -H newc | gzip > test.cpio.gz
281  # Testing external initramfs using the initrd loading mechanism.
282  qemu -kernel /boot/vmlinuz -initrd test.cpio.gz /dev/zero
283
284When debugging a normal root filesystem, it's nice to be able to boot with
285"init=/bin/sh".  The initramfs equivalent is "rdinit=/bin/sh", and it's
286just as useful.
287
288Why cpio rather than tar?
289-------------------------
290
291This decision was made back in December, 2001.  The discussion started here:
292
293  http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1538.html
294
295And spawned a second thread (specifically on tar vs cpio), starting here:
296
297  http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1587.html
298
299The quick and dirty summary version (which is no substitute for reading
300the above threads) is:
301
3021) cpio is a standard.  It's decades old (from the AT&T days), and already
303   widely used on Linux (inside RPM, Red Hat's device driver disks).  Here's
304   a Linux Journal article about it from 1996:
305
306      http://www.linuxjournal.com/article/1213
307
308   It's not as popular as tar because the traditional cpio command line tools
309   require _truly_hideous_ command line arguments.  But that says nothing
310   either way about the archive format, and there are alternative tools,
311   such as:
312
313     http://freecode.com/projects/afio
314
3152) The cpio archive format chosen by the kernel is simpler and cleaner (and
316   thus easier to create and parse) than any of the (literally dozens of)
317   various tar archive formats.  The complete initramfs archive format is
318   explained in buffer-format.txt, created in usr/gen_init_cpio.c, and
319   extracted in init/initramfs.c.  All three together come to less than 26k
320   total of human-readable text.
321
3223) The GNU project standardizing on tar is approximately as relevant as
323   Windows standardizing on zip.  Linux is not part of either, and is free
324   to make its own technical decisions.
325
3264) Since this is a kernel internal format, it could easily have been
327   something brand new.  The kernel provides its own tools to create and
328   extract this format anyway.  Using an existing standard was preferable,
329   but not essential.
330
3315) Al Viro made the decision (quote: "tar is ugly as hell and not going to be
332   supported on the kernel side"):
333
334      http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1540.html
335
336   explained his reasoning:
337
338     - http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1550.html
339     - http://www.uwsg.iu.edu/hypermail/linux/kernel/0112.2/1638.html
340
341   and, most importantly, designed and implemented the initramfs code.
342
343Future directions:
344------------------
345
346Today (2.6.16), initramfs is always compiled in, but not always used.  The
347kernel falls back to legacy boot code that is reached only if initramfs does
348not contain an /init program.  The fallback is legacy code, there to ensure a
349smooth transition and allowing early boot functionality to gradually move to
350"early userspace" (I.E. initramfs).
351
352The move to early userspace is necessary because finding and mounting the real
353root device is complex.  Root partitions can span multiple devices (raid or
354separate journal).  They can be out on the network (requiring dhcp, setting a
355specific MAC address, logging into a server, etc).  They can live on removable
356media, with dynamically allocated major/minor numbers and persistent naming
357issues requiring a full udev implementation to sort out.  They can be
358compressed, encrypted, copy-on-write, loopback mounted, strangely partitioned,
359and so on.
360
361This kind of complexity (which inevitably includes policy) is rightly handled
362in userspace.  Both klibc and busybox/uClibc are working on simple initramfs
363packages to drop into a kernel build.
364
365The klibc package has now been accepted into Andrew Morton's 2.6.17-mm tree.
366The kernel's current early boot code (partition detection, etc) will probably
367be migrated into a default initramfs, automatically created and used by the
368kernel build.
369