Lines Matching full:which
45 resuid=n The user ID which may use the reserved blocks.
46 resgid=n The group ID which may use the reserved blocks.
85 which is decided when the filesystem is created. Smaller blocks mean
97 bitmap and the inode usage bitmap which show which blocks and inodes
104 in the same block group as the inode which contains them.
126 and which OS created it.
141 structure contains pointers to the filesystem blocks which contain the
148 There are some reserved fields which are currently unused in the inode
149 structure and several which are overloaded. One field is reserved for the
153 by the HURD to reference the inode of a program which will be used to
159 There are pointers to the first 12 blocks which contain the file's data
160 in the inode. There is a pointer to an indirect block (which contains
162 block (which contains pointers to indirect blocks) and a pointer to a
163 trebly-indirect block (which contains pointers to doubly-indirect blocks).
165 The flags field contains some ext2-specific flags which aren't catered
177 It is a specially formatted file containing records which associate
184 The inode allocation code tries to assign inodes which are in the same
185 block group as the directory in which they are first created.
200 which would normally be used to store the pointers to data blocks.
206 the fields which would be used to point to the data blocks.
215 quotas). It also keeps the filesystem from filling up entirely which
223 fields which indicate whether fsck should actually run (since checking
245 a kernel which didn't know anything about this feature could read/write
247 making it inconsistent). This is essentially just a flag which says
261 which would leading to inconsistent bitmaps. An old kernel would also
262 get an error if it tried to free a series of blocks which crossed a group
269 than 256 characters, which would lead to corrupt directory listings.
273 RECOVER flag is needed to prevent a kernel which does not understand the
313 No tools currently exist which can change the ratio of inodes to blocks.
328 which support larger pages).
353 file which stores whole metadata (and optionally data) blocks that have
365 the blocks in that transaction so they are discarded (which means any