mkfs.cramfs - make compressed ROM file system
mkfs.cramfs [options] directory file
Files on cramfs file systems are zlib-compressed one page at a time to allow random read access. The metadata is not compressed, but is expressed in a terse representation that is more space-efficient than conventional file systems.
The file system is intentionally read-only to simplify its design; random write access for compressed files is difficult to implement. cramfs ships with a utility (mkcramfs(8)) to pack files into new cramfs images.
File sizes are limited to less than 16 MB.
Maximum file system size is a little under 272 MB. (The last file on the file system must begin before the 256 MB block, but can extend past it.)
The directory
is simply the root of the directory tree that
we want to generate a compressed filesystem out of.
The file
will contain the cram file system, which later can
be mounted.
-v
Enable verbose messaging.
-E
Treat all warnings as errors, which are reflected as command exit status.
-b blocksize
Use defined block size, which has to be divisible by page size.
-e edition
Use defined file system edition number in superblock.
-N big, little, host
Use defined endianness. Value defaults to
host
.
-i file
Insert a
file
to cramfs file system.
-n name
Set name of the cramfs file system.
-p
Pad by 512 bytes for boot code.
-s
This option is ignored. Originally the -s turned on directory entry sorting.
-z
Make explicit holes.
-l[=mode
]
Use exclusive BSD lock for device or file it operates. The optional argument
mode
can beyes
,no
(or 1 and 0) ornonblock
. If themode
argument is omitted, it defaults to"yes"
. This option overwrites environment variable $LOCK_BLOCK_DEVICE. The default is not to use any lock at all, but it’s recommended to avoid collisions with udevd or other tools.
-h, --help
Display help text and exit.
-V, --version
Print version and exit.
0
success
8
operation error, such as unable to allocate memory
fsck.cramfs(8), mount(8)
For bug reports, use the issue tracker at <https://github.com/util-linux/util-linux/issues>.
The mkfs.cramfs command is part of the util-linux
package which can be downloaded from Linux Kernel Archive
<https://www.kernel.org/pub/linux/utils/util-linux/>.