File Allocation Table
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
File Allocation Table (FAT) is a partially patented file system developed by Microsoft for MS-DOS and was the primary file system for consumer versions of Microsoft Windows up to and including Windows Me. FAT as it applies to flexible/floppy and optical disk cartridges (FAT12 and FAT16 without LFN support) has been standardized as ECMA-107 and ISO/IEC 9293.
The FAT file system is relatively uncomplicated, and is supported by virtually all existing operating systems for personal computers. This ubiquity makes it an ideal format for floppy disks and solid-state memory cards, and a convenient way of sharing data between disparate operating systems installed on the same computer (a dual boot environment).
The most common implementations have a serious drawback in that when files are deleted and new files written to the media, their fragments tend to become scattered over the entire media, making reading and writing a slow process. Defragmentation is one solution to this, but is often a lengthy process in itself and has to be performed regularly to keep the FAT file system clean.
FAT12 | FAT16 | FAT32 | |
---|---|---|---|
Developer | Microsoft | ||
Full Name | File Allocation Table | ||
(12-bit version) | (16-bit version) | (32-bit version) | |
Introduced | 1977 (Microsoft Disk BASIC) | July 1988 (MS-DOS 4.0) | August 1996 (Windows 95 OSR2) |
Partition identifier | 0x01 (MBR) | 0x04, 0x06, 0x0E (MBR) | 0x0B, 0x0C (MBR) EBD0A0A2-B9E5-4433 -87C0-68B6B72699C7 (GPT) |
Structures | |||
Directory contents | Table | ||
File allocation | Linked List | ||
Bad blocks | Cluster tagging | ||
Limits | |||
Max file size | 32 MiB | 2 GiB | 4 GiB |
Max number of files | 4,077 | 65,517 | 268,435,437 |
Max filename size | 8.3 filename, or 255 characters when using LFNs | ||
Max volume size | 32 MiB | 2 GiB 4 GiB with some implementations |
8 TiB |
Features | |||
Dates recorded | Creation, modified, access | ||
Date range | January 1, 1980 - December 31, 2107 | ||
Forks | Not natively | ||
Attributes | Read-only, hidden, system, volume label, subdirectory, archive | ||
Permissions | No | ||
Transparent compression | Per-volume, Stacker, DoubleSpace, DriveSpace | No | |
Transparent encryption | Per-volume only with DR-DOS | No |
Contents |
History
The FAT filesystem was created by Bill Gates and Marc McDonald in 1977 for managing disks in Microsoft Disk BASIC. In August 1980 Tim Paterson incorporated FAT into his 86-DOS operating system for the S-100 8086 CPU boards; the filesystem was the main difference between 86-DOS and CP/M, of which 86-DOS was otherwise mostly a clone.[1]
The name originates from the usage of a table which centralizes the information about which areas belong to files, are free or possibly unusable, and where each file is stored on the disk. To reduce the management complexity, disk space is allocated to files in contiguous groups of hardware sectors called clusters. The maximum possible number of clusters has dramatically increased over time, and the number of bits required to identify a cluster is used to name the successive major versions of the format. The FAT standard has also evolved in several ways where backward compatibility with existing software has been preserved.
FAT12
This initial version of FAT is now referred to as FAT12. As a filesystem for disks, it had a number of limitations: no support for hierarchical directories, cluster addresses were "only" 12 bits long (which limited cluster count to 4096 and made the FAT code manipulating a bit tricky) and the disk size was stored as a 16-bit count of sectors, which limited the size to 32 MiB. An entry-level floppy diskette at the time was 5.25", single-sided, 40 tracks, with 8 sectors per track, resulting in a capacity of slightly less than 160 KiB. The above limits exceeded this capacity by one or more orders of magnitude and at the same time allowed all the control structures to fit inside the first track, thus avoiding head movement during read and write operations. The limits were successively lifted in the following years, which improved wait-loss dramatically.
Since the entire root directory had to fit inside the first track as well, the maximum possible number of files was limited to a few dozen.
A limitation which was not addressed until much later was that any bad sector in the control structures area, track 0, could prevent the diskette from being usable. The DOS formatting tool rejected such diskettes completely. Bad sectors were only allowed in the file area, where they made the entire holding cluster unusable as well.
Directories
In March 1983, IBM launched the PC XT computer, which featured a 10 MB hard disk. MS-DOS/PC-DOS 2.0 was released simultaneously, and introduced hierarchical directories to properly support the "massive" capacity the new medium provided. Apart from allowing for better organization of files, directories allowed it to store many more files on the hard disk, as the maximum number of files was no longer constrained by the (still fixed) root directory size. This number could now be equal to the number of clusters (or even greater, given that zero-sized files do not use any clusters on FAT).
The format of the FAT itself did not change. The 10 MB hard disk on the PC XT had 4 KB clusters. If a 20 MiB hard disk was later installed, and formatted with MS-DOS 2.0, the resultant cluster size would be 8 KB, the boundary at 15.9 MiB.
Initial FAT16
In 1984 IBM released the PC AT, which featured a 20 MB hard disk. Microsoft introduced MS-DOS 3.0 in parallel. Cluster addresses were increased to 16-bit, allowing for a greater number of clusters (up to 65,517) and consequently much greater file-system sizes. However, the maximum possible number of sectors and the maximum (partition, rather than disk) size of 32 MB did not change. Therefore, although technically already "FAT16", this format was not yet what today is commonly understood under this name. A 20 MB hard disk formatted under MS-DOS 3.0 was not accessible by the older MS-DOS 2.0. Of course, MS-DOS 3.0 could still access MS-DOS 2.0 style 8 KB cluster partitions.
MS-DOS 3.0 also introduced support for high-density 1.2 MB 5.25" diskettes, which notably had 15 sectors per track, hence more space for FAT. This probably prompted a dubious optimization of the cluster size, which went down from 2 sectors to just 1. The net effect was that high density diskettes were significantly slower than older double density ones.
Extended partition and logical drives
Apart from improving the structure of the FAT filesystem itself, a parallel development allowing an increase in the maximum possible FAT storage space was the introduction of multiple FAT partitions. Originally partitions were supposed to be used only for sharing the disk between operating systems, typically DOS and Xenix at the time, so DOS was only prepared to handle one FAT partition. It was not possible to create multiple DOS partitions using DOS tools, and third party tools would warn that such a scheme would not be compatible with DOS. Simply allowing several identical-looking DOS partitions could lead to naming problems: should C: be the first FAT partition on disk, for simplicity, or rather the partition marked as active in the partition table, so that several DOS versions can co-exist? Which partition should be C: if the system was booted from a diskette?
To allow the use of more FAT partitions in a compatible way a new partition type was introduced (in MS-DOS 3.2, January 1986), the extended partition, which was actually just a container for additional partitions called logical drives. Originally only 1 logical drive was possible, allowing the use of hard-disks up to 64 MB. In MS-DOS 3.3 (August 1987) this limit was increased to 24 drives; it probably came from the compulsory letter-based disk naming (A and B being reserved for the two floppy drives). The logical drives were described by on-disk structures which closely resemble the master boot record (MBR) of the disk (which describes the primary partitions), probably to simplify coding, and they were chained/nested in a way analogous to Russian matryoshka dolls. Only one extended partition was allowed. Logical drives were not bootable, and the extended partition could only be created after the primary FAT partition (except with third party formatting tools), which removed all ambiguity, but also the possibility of booting several DOS versions from the same hard disk.
A useful side-effect of the extended partition scheme was to significantly increase the maximum number of partitions possible on a PC hard disk, beyond the 4 which could be described by the MBR alone.
Prior to the introduction of extended partitions, some hard disk controllers (which at that time were separate option boards, since the IDE standard did not yet exist) could make large hard disks appear as two separate disks.
Final FAT16
Finally in November 1987, Compaq DOS 3.31 introduced what is today called the FAT16 format, with the expansion of the 16-bit disk sector index to 32 bits. The result was initially called the DOS 3.31 Large File System. Although the on-disk changes were apparently minor, the entire DOS disk code had to be converted to use 32-bit sector numbers, a task complicated by the fact that it was written in 16-bit assembly language.
In 1988 the improvement became more generally available through MS-DOS 4.0. The limit on partition size was now dictated by the 8-bit signed count of sectors-per-cluster, which had a maximum power-of-two value of 64. With the usual hard disk sector size of 512 bytes, this gives 32 KiB clusters, thereby fixing the "definitive" limit for the FAT16 partition size at 2 gibibytes. On magneto-optical media, which can have 1 or 2 KiB sectors, the limit is proportionally greater.
Much later, Windows NT increased the maximum cluster size to 64 KiB by considering the sectors-per-cluster count as unsigned. However, the resulting format was not compatible with any other FAT implementation of the time, and it generated massive internal fragmentation. Windows 98 also supported reading and writing this variant, but its disk utilities didn't work with it.
The number of root directory entries available is set at formatting time, the number is stored in a 16 bit signed field setting an absolute limit of 32767 entries (32736, a multiple of 32, in practice). For historical reasons, FAT12 and FAT16 media generally use 512 root directory entries on non-floppy media, and other sizes may be incompatible with some software or devices (entries being file and/or folder names in the old 8.3 format).[2] Some third party tools like mkdosfs allow the user to set this parameter[3].
Long File Names (VFAT, LFNs)
One of the "user experience" goals for the designers of Windows 95 was the ability to use long filenames (LFNs - up to 255 characters long), in addition to classic 8.3 filename. LFNs were implemented using a work-around in the way directory entries are laid out (see below). The version of the file system with this extension is usually known as VFAT after the Windows 95 VxD device driver.
Interestingly, the VFAT driver actually appeared before Windows 95, in Windows for Workgroups 3.11, but was only used for implementing 32-bit File Access, a higher performance protected mode file access method, bypassing DOS and directly using either the BIOS, or, better, the Windows-native protected mode disk drivers.
In Windows NT, support for long filenames on FAT started from version 3.5.
FAT32
In order to overcome the volume size limit of FAT16, while still allowing DOS real-mode code to handle the format without unnecessarily reducing the available conventional memory, Microsoft decided to implement a newer generation of FAT, known as FAT32, with cluster counts held in a 32-bit field, of which 28 bits are currently used.
In theory, this should support a total of approximately 268,435,456 (228) clusters, allowing for drive sizes in the range of 8 tebibytes with 32K clusters. On Windows 95/98/ME, due to the version of Microsoft's ScanDisk utility included with these operating systems being a 16-bit application, the FAT structure is not allowed to grow beyond 4,177,920 (< 222) clusters, placing the volume limit at 127.53 gigabytes.[4]. A limitation in original versions of Windows 98/98SE's Fdisk causes it to incorrectly report disk sizes over 64GB.[5] A corrected version is available from Microsoft. These limitations do not apply to Windows XP except during Setup, in which there is a 32GB limit.[6]
FAT32 was introduced with Windows 95 OSR2, although reformatting was needed to use it, and DriveSpace 3 (the version that came with Windows 95 OSR2 and Windows 98) never supported it. Windows 98 introduced a utility to convert existing hard disks from FAT16 to FAT32 without loss of data. In the NT line, native support for FAT32 arrived in Windows 2000. Windows NT 4 supported FAT32 with free driver by Winternals company, later acquired by Microsoft.
Windows 2000 and Windows XP can read and write to FAT32 filesystems of any size, but the format program on these platforms can only create FAT32 filesystems up to 32 GiB. Third party utilities are available which can format larger FAT32 filesystems. Thompson and Thompson (2003) write[7] that “Bizarrely, Microsoft states that this behavior is by design.” A Microsoft knowledge base article[4] indeed confirms the limitation and the "by design" statement, but gives no rationale or explanation. However, a Microsoft TechNet article states that the 32 GiB limit was an arbitrary limit imposed because many tasks on a very large FAT32 filesystem become slow and inefficient.[8] Peter Norton's opinion[9] is that “Microsoft has intentionally crippled the FAT32 file system.”
The maximum possible size for a file on a FAT32 volume is 4 GiB minus 1 Byte (232−1 bytes). For most users, this has become the most nagging limit of FAT32 as of 2007, since video capture and editing applications and some other software can easily exceed this limit. Most new Windows machines now ship with NTFS and thus avoid these problems, but those who run dual boot systems or who move external data drives between computers with different operating systems have little choice but to stick with FAT32, or to install the FUSE library (on Linux) together with the NTFS-3G application. (although between Windows and Linux it is possible to use ext2 or ext3 through the use of external drivers such as ext2 IFS).
Fragmentation
The FAT filesystem does not contain mechanisms which prevent newly written files from becoming scattered across the partition. [10] Other filesystems, like HPFS, use free space bitmaps that indicate used and available clusters, which could then be quickly looked up in order to find free contiguous areas (improved in exFAT). Another solution is the linkage of all free clusters into one or more lists (as is done in Unix filesystems). Instead, the FAT has to be scanned like an array in order to find free clusters, which can lead to performance penalties with today's large hard disks and consequently their large FAT sizes.
In fact, computing free disk space on FAT is one of the most resource intensive operations, as it requires reading the entire FAT linearly. A justification Microsoft offered for limiting the maximum size of FAT32 partitions created on Windows was the time required to perform a simple "DIR" operation, which always displays the free disk space as the last line.[8] Displaying this line took longer and longer as the number of clusters increased.
The High Performance File System (HPFS) divides disk space into bands, which have their own free space bitmap, where multiple files opened for simultaneous write could be expanded separately.[10]
Some of the perceived problems with fragmentation resulted from operating system and hardware limitations.
The single-tasking DOS and the traditionally single-tasking PC hard disk architecture (only 1 outstanding input/output request at a time, no DMA transfers) did not contain mechanisms which could alleviate fragmentation by asynchronously prefetching next data while the application was processing the previous chunks.
Similarly, write-behind caching was often not enabled by default with Microsoft software (if present) given the problem of data loss in case of a crash, made easier by the lack of hardware protection between applications and the system.
MS-DOS also did not offer a system call which would allow applications to make sure a particular file has been completely written to disk in the presence of deferred writes (cf. fsync in Unix or DosBufReset in OS/2). Disk caches on MS-DOS were operating on disk block level and were not aware of higher-level structures of the file system. In this situation, cheating with regard to the real progress of a disk operation was most dangerous.
Modern operating systems have introduced these optimizations to FAT partitions, but optimizations can still produce unwanted artifacts in case of a system crash. A Windows NT system will allocate space to files on FAT in advance, selecting large contiguous areas, but in case of a crash, files which were being appended will appear larger than they were ever written into, with dozens of random kilobytes at the end.
It should be noted that with the large cluster sizes, 16 or 32K, forced by larger FAT16 partitions, the external fragmentation does not play a great role, and internal fragmentation, ie. disk space waste starts to be a problem instead.
Third party support
The alternative IBM PC operating systems — such as Linux, FreeBSD, and BeOS — have all supported FAT, and most added support for VFAT and FAT32 shortly after the corresponding Windows versions were released. Early Linux distributions also supported a format known as UMSDOS, which was FAT with Unix file attributes (such as long file name and access permissions) stored in a separate file called --linux-.---. UMSDOS fell into disuse after VFAT was released and is not enabled by default in Linux kernels from version 2.5.7 onwards [11]. The Mac OS X operating system also supports the FAT filesystems on volumes other than the boot disk. The Amiga supports FAT through the CrossDOS filesystem.
FAT and Alternate Data Streams
The FAT filesystem itself is not designed for supporting ADS, but some operating systems that heavily depend on them have devised various methods for handling them in FAT drives. Such methods either store the additional information in extra files and directories (Mac OS), or give new semantics to previously unused fields of the FAT on-disk data structures (OS/2 and Windows NT). The second design, while presumably more efficient, prevents any copying or backing-up of those volumes using non-aware tools; manipulating such volumes using non-aware disk utilities (e.g. defragmenters or CHKDSK) will probably lose the information.
Mac OS using PC Exchange stores its various dates, file attributes and long filenames in a hidden file called FINDER.DAT, and Resource Forks (a common Mac OS ADS) in a subdirectory called RESOURCE.FRK, in every directory where they are used. From PC Exchange 2.1 onwards, they store the Mac OS long filenames as standard FAT long filenames and convert FAT filenames longer than 31 characters to unique 31-character filenames, which can then be made visible to Macintosh applications.
Mac OS X stores metadata (Resource Forks, file attributes, other ADS) in a hidden file with a name constructed from the owner filename prefixed with "._", and Finder stores some folder and file metadata in a hidden file called ".DS Store".
OS/2 heavily depends on extended attributes (EAs) and stores them in a hidden file called "EA DATA. SF" in the root directory of the FAT12 or FAT16 volume. This file is indexed by 2 previously reserved bytes in the file's (or directory's) directory entry. In the FAT32 format, these bytes hold the upper 16 bits of the starting cluster number of the file or directory, hence making it difficult to store EAs on FAT32. Extended attributes are accessible via the Workplace Shell desktop, through REXX scripts, and many system GUI and command-line utilities (such as 4OS2).[12]
Windows NT supports the handling of extended attributes in HPFS, NTFS, and FAT. It stores EAs on FAT using exactly the same scheme as OS/2, but does not support any other kind of ADS as held on NTFS volumes. Trying to copy a file with any ADS other than EAs from an NTFS volume to a FAT volume gives a warning message with the names of the ADSs that will be lost.
Windows 2000 onward acts exactly as Windows NT, except that it ignores EAs when copying to FAT32 without any warning (but shows the warning for other ADSs, like "Macintosh Finder Info" and "Macintosh Resource Fork").
Future
Microsoft has recently secured patents for VFAT and FAT32 (but not the original FAT), which is causing concern that the company might later seek royalties from Linux distributions and from media vendors that pre-format their products (see FAT Licensing below). Despite two earlier rulings against them, Microsoft prevailed and was awarded the patents.
Since Microsoft has announced the discontinuation of its MS-DOS-based consumer operating systems with Windows Me, it remains unlikely that any new versions of FAT will appear. For most purposes, the NTFS file system that was developed for the Windows NT line is superior to FAT from the points of view of efficiency, performance, and reliability; its main drawbacks are the size overhead for small volumes and the very limited support by anything other than the NT-based versions of Windows, since the exact specification is a trade secret of Microsoft, which in turn makes it difficult to use a DOS floppy for recovery purposes. Microsoft provided a recovery console to work around this issue, but for security reasons it severely limited what could be done through the Recovery Console by default. The movement of recovery utilities to boot CDs based on BartPE or Linux is finally eroding this drawback.
FAT is still the normal filesystem for removable media (with the exception of CDs and DVDs), with FAT12 used on floppies, and FAT16 on most other removable media (such as flash memory cards for digital cameras and USB flash drives). Most removable media are not yet large enough to benefit from FAT32, although some larger flash drives do make use of it. FAT16 is used on these drives for reasons of compatibility and size overhead.
The FAT32 formatting support in Windows 2000 and XP is limited to volumes of 32 GiB, which effectively forces users of modern hard drives either to use NTFS, to partition the drive into smaller volumes (below 32 GiB), or to format the drive using third party tools.
exFAT
exFAT is an incompatible replacement for FAT filesystems that is expected to be introduced with Windows CE 6.0. It is intended to be used on flash drives, where FAT is used today. Windows XP and Vista file system drivers will be offered by Microsoft shortly after the release of Windows CE 6.0. exFAT introduces a free space bitmap allowing faster space allocation and faster deletes, support for files up to 2^64 bytes, larger cluster sizes (up to 32 MB in the first implementation), an extensible directory structure and name hashes for filenames for faster comparisons. It does not have short 8.3 filenames anymore. It does not appear to have security access control lists or file system journaling like NTFS, though device manufacturers can choose to implement simplified support for transactions (backup file allocation table used for the write operations, primary FAT for storing last known good allocation table).
Design
The following is an overview of the order of structures in a FAT partition or disk:
Boot sector |
More reserved sectors (optional) |
File Allocation Table #1 |
File Allocation Table #2 |
Root Directory (FAT12/16 only) |
Data Region (for files and directories) ... (To end of partition or disk) |
A FAT file system is composed of four different sections.
- The Reserved sectors, located at the very beginning. The first reserved sector is the Boot Sector (aka Partition Boot Record). It includes an area called the BIOS Parameter Block (with some basic file system information, in particular its type, and pointers to the location of the other sections) and usually contains the operating system's boot loader code. The total count of reserved sectors is indicated by a field inside the Boot Sector. Important information from the Boot Sector is accessible through an operating system structure called the Drive Parameter Block in DOS and OS/2.
- The FAT Region. This contains two copies of the File Allocation Table for the sake of redundancy, although the extra copy is rarely used, even by disk repair utilities. These are maps of the Data Region, indicating which clusters are used by files and directories.
- The Root Directory Region. This is a Directory Table that stores information about the files and directories located in the root directory. It is only used with FAT12 and FAT16 and means that the root directory has a fixed maximum size which is pre-allocated at creation of this volume. FAT32 stores the root directory in the Data Region along with files and other directories instead, allowing it to grow without such a restraint.
- The Data Region. This is where the actual file and directory data is stored and takes up most of the partition. The size of files and subdirectories can be increased arbitrarily (as long as there are free clusters) by simply adding more links to the file's chain in the FAT. Note however, that clusters are allocated in their entirety, and so if a 1 KiB file resides in a 32 KiB cluster, 31 KiB are wasted.
FAT uses little endian format for entries in the header and the FAT(s).
Boot Sector
Common structure of the first 36 bytes used by all FAT versions:
Byte Offset | Length (bytes) | Description | ||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0x00 | 3 | Jump instruction. This instruction will be executed and will skip past the rest of the (non-executable) header if the partition is booted from. See Volume Boot Record. | ||||||||||||||||
0x03 | 8 | OEM Name (padded with spaces). MS-DOS checks this field to determine which other parts of the boot record can be relied on [13][14]. Common values are IBM 3.3 (with two spaces between the "IBM" and the "3.3") and MSDOS5.0 . |
||||||||||||||||
0x0b | 2 | Bytes per sector. A common value is 512, especially for filesystems on IDE (or compatible) disks. The BIOS Parameter Block starts here. | ||||||||||||||||
0x0d | 1 | Sectors per cluster. Allowed values are powers of two from 1 to 128. However, the value must not be such that the number of bytes per cluster becomes greater than 32 KiB. | ||||||||||||||||
0x0e | 2 | Reserved sector count. The number of sectors before the first FAT in the filesystem image. Should be 1 for FAT12/FAT16. Usually 32 for FAT32. | ||||||||||||||||
0x10 | 1 | Number of file allocation tables. Almost always 2. | ||||||||||||||||
0x11 | 2 | Maximum number of root directory entries. Only used on FAT12 and FAT16, where the root directory is handled specially. Should be 0 for FAT32. This value should always be such that the root directory ends on a sector boundary (i.e. such that its size becomes a multiple of the sector size). | ||||||||||||||||
0x13 | 2 | Total sectors (if zero, use 4 byte value at offset 0x20) | ||||||||||||||||
0x15 | 1 | Media descriptor
Same value of media descriptor should be repeated as first byte of each copy of FAT. Certain operating systems (MSX-DOS version 1.0) ignore boot sector parameters altogether and use media descriptor value from the first byte of FAT to determine filesystem parameters. |
||||||||||||||||
0x16 | 2 | Sectors per File Allocation Table | ||||||||||||||||
0x18 | 2 | Sectors per track | ||||||||||||||||
0x1a | 2 | Number of heads | ||||||||||||||||
0x1c | 4 | Hidden sectors | ||||||||||||||||
0x20 | 4 | Total sectors (if greater than 65535; see offset 0x13) |
Further structure used by FAT12 and FAT16, also known as Extended BIOS Parameter Block:
Byte Offset | Length (bytes) | Description |
---|---|---|
0x24 | 1 | Physical drive number |
0x25 | 1 | Reserved ("current head") |
0x26 | 1 | Signature |
0x27 | 4 | ID (serial number) |
0x2b | 11 | Volume Label |
0x36 | 8 | FAT file system type, padded with blanks (0x20), e.g.: "FAT12 ", "FAT16 " |
0x3e | 448 | Operating system boot code |
0x1FE | 2 | End of sector marker (0x55 0xAA) |
Further structure used by FAT32:
Byte Offset | Length (bytes) | Description |
---|---|---|
0x24 | 4 | Sectors per file allocation table |
0x28 | 2 | FAT Flags |
0x2a | 2 | Version |
0x2c | 4 | Cluster number of root directory start |
0x30 | 2 | Sector number of FS Information Sector |
0x32 | 2 | Sector number of a copy of this boot sector |
0x34 | 12 | Reserved |
0x40 | 1 | Physical Drive Number |
0x41 | 1 | Reserved |
0x42 | 1 | Signature |
0x43 | 4 | ID (serial number) |
0x47 | 11 | Volume Label |
0x52 | 8 | FAT file system type: "FAT32 " |
0x5a | 420 | Operating system boot code |
0x1FE | 2 | End of sector marker (0x55 0xAA) |
The boot sector is portrayed here as found on e.g. an OS/2 1.3 boot diskette. Earlier versions used a shorter BIOS Parameter Block and their boot code would start earlier (for example at offset 0x2b in OS/2 1.1).
Exceptions
The implementation of FAT used in MS-DOS for the Apricot PC had a different boot sector layout, to accommodate that computer's non-IBM compatible BIOS. The jump instruction and OEM name were omitted, and the MS-DOS filesystem parameters (offsets 0x0B - 0x17 in the standard sector) were located at offset 0x50. Later versions of Apricot MS-DOS gained the ability to read and write disks with the standard boot sector in addition to those with the Apricot one.
DOS Plus on the BBC Master 512 did not use conventional boot sectors at all. Data disks omitted the boot sector and began with a single copy of the FAT (the first byte of the FAT was used to determine disk capacity) while boot disks began with a miniature ADFS filesystem containing the boot loader, followed by a single FAT. It could also access standard PC disks formatted to 180 KB or 360 KB, again using the first byte of the FAT to determine capacity.
File Allocation Table
A partition is divided up into identically sized clusters, small blocks of contiguous space. Cluster sizes vary depending on the type of FAT file system being used and the size of the partition, typically cluster sizes lie somewhere between 2 KiB and 32 KiB. Each file may occupy one or more of these clusters depending on its size; thus, a file is represented by a chain of these clusters (referred to as a singly linked list). However these chains are not necessarily stored adjacent to one another on the disk's surface but are often instead fragmented throughout the Data Region.
The File Allocation Table (FAT) is a list of entries that map to each cluster on the partition. Each entry records one of five things:
- the address of the next cluster in a chain
- a special end of file (EOF) character that indicates the end of a chain
- a special character to mark a bad cluster
- a special character to mark a reserved cluster
- a zero to note that the cluster is unused
Each version of the FAT file system uses a different size for FAT entries. The size is indicated by the name, for example the FAT16 file system uses 16 bits for each entry while the FAT32 file system uses 32 bits. This difference means that the File Allocation Table of a FAT32 system can map a greater number of clusters than FAT16, allowing for larger partition sizes with FAT32. This also allows for more efficient use of space than FAT16, because on the same hard drive a FAT32 table can address smaller clusters which means less wasted space.
FAT entry values:
FAT12 | FAT16 | FAT32 | Description |
---|---|---|---|
0x000 | 0x0000 | 0x?0000000 | Free Cluster |
0x001 | 0x0001 | 0x?0000001 | Reserved Cluster |
0x002 - 0xFEF | 0x0002 - 0xFFEF | 0x?0000002 - 0x?FFFFFEF | Used cluster; value points to next cluster |
0xFF0 - 0xFF6 | 0xFFF0 - 0xFFF6 | 0x?FFFFFF0 - 0x?FFFFFF6 | Reserved values |
0xFF7 | 0xFFF7 | 0x?FFFFFF7 | Bad cluster |
0xFF8 - 0xFFF | 0xFFF8 - 0xFFFF | 0x?FFFFFF8 - 0x?FFFFFFF | Last cluster in file |
Note that FAT32 uses only 28 bits of the 32 possible bits. The upper 4 bits are usually zero but are reserved and should be left untouched. In the table above these are denoted by a question mark.
The first cluster of the data area is cluster #2. That leaves the first two entries of the FAT unused. In the first byte of the first entry a copy of the media descriptor is stored. The remaining bits of this entry are 1. In the second entry the end-of-file marker is stored. The high order two bits of the second entry are sometimes, in the case of FAT16 and FAT32, used for dirty volume management: high order bit 1: last shutdown was clean; next highest bit 1: during the previous mount no disk I/O errors were detected.[15]
Directory table
A directory table is a special type of file that represents a directory (nowadays commonly known as a folder). Each file or directory stored within it is represented by a 32-byte entry in the table. Each entry records the name, extension, attributes (archive, directory, hidden, read-only, system and volume), the date and time of creation, the address of the first cluster of the file/directory's data and finally the size of the file/directory. Aside from the Root Directory Table in FAT12 and FAT16 file systems which occupies the special Root Directory Region location, all Directory Tables are stored in the Data Region. Entries with the subdirectory flag set should have a size of 0. The actual number of entries in a directory can grow by adding another cluster to the chain in the FAT.
Legal characters for DOS file names include the following:
- Upper case letters A–Z
- Numbers 0–9
- Space (though trailing spaces are considered to be padding and not a part of the file name, also filenames with space in could not be used on the DOS command line because of the lack of a suitable escaping system)
- ! # $ % & ' ( ) - @ ^ _ ` { } ~
- (FAT-32 only) + , . ; = [ ]
- Values 128–255
This excludes the following ASCII characters:
- " * / : < > ? \ |
Windows/MSDOS has no shell escape character - Lower case letters a–z
stored as A–Z on FAT-12/16 - Control characters 0–31
- Value 127 (DEL)
The DOS file names are in the OEM character set.
Directory entries, both in the Root Directory Region and in subdirectories, are of the following format:
Byte Offset | Length | Description | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0x00 | 8 | DOS file name (padded with spaces)
The first byte can have the following special values:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x08 | 3 | DOS file extension (padded with spaces) | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0b | 1 | File Attributes
The first byte can have the following special values:
An attribute value of 0x0F is used to designate a long file name entry. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0c | 1 | Reserved; two bits are used by NT and later versions to encode case information (see below); otherwise 0[16] | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0d | 1 | Create time, fine resolution: 10ms units, values from 0 to 199. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0e | 2 | Create time. The hour, minute and second are encoded according to the following bitmap:
Note that the seconds is recorded only to a 2 second resolution. Finer resolution for file creation is found at offset 0x0d. |
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x10 | 2 | Create date. The year, month and day are encoded according to the following bitmap:
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x12 | 2 | Last access date; see offset 0x10 for description. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x14 | 2 | EA-Index (used by OS/2 and NT) in FAT12 and FAT16, High 2 bytes of first cluster number in FAT32 | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x16 | 2 | Last modified time; see offset 0x0e for description. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x18 | 2 | Last modified date; see offset 0x10 for description. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x1a | 2 | First cluster in FAT12 and FAT16. Low 2 bytes of first cluster in FAT32. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x1c | 4 | File size |
Long File Names (LFN) are stored on a FAT file system using a trick—adding phoney entries into the Directory Tables. The entries are marked with a Volume Label attribute which is impossible for a regular file and because of that they are ignored by most old MS-DOS programs. Notably, a directory containing only volume labels is considered as empty and is allowed to be deleted; such a situation appears if files created with long names are deleted from plain DOS.
A checksum also allows verification of whether a long file name matches the 8.3 name; such a mismatch could occur if a file was deleted and re-created using DOS in the same directory position. The checksum is calculated using the algorithm below. (Note that pFcbName is a pointer to the name as it appears in a regular directory entry, i.e. the first eight characters are the filename, and the last three are the extension. The dot is implicit. Any unused space in the filename is padded with spaces (ASCII 0x20) char. For example, "Readme.txt" would be "README TXT".)
unsigned char lfn_checksum(const unsigned char *pFcbName) { int i; unsigned char sum=0; for (i=11; i; i--) sum = ((sum & 1) ? 0x80 : 0) + (sum >> 1) + *pFcbName++; return sum; }
Older versions of PC-DOS mistake LFN names in the root directory for the volume label, and are likely to display an incorrect label.
Each phoney entry can contain up to 13 UTF-16 characters (26 bytes), gaining about 15 bytes in addition to the old 8 + 3 by using fields in the record which contained file size or time stamps (but for security versus disk checking tools the starting cluster field is left unused with a 0 value). See 8.3 filename for additional explanations. Up to 20 of these 13-character entries may be chained, supporting a maximum length of 255 characters.[16]
LFN entries use the following format:
Byte Offset | Length | Description |
---|---|---|
0x00 | 1 | Sequence Number |
0x01 | 10 | Name characters (five UTF-16 characters) |
0x0b | 1 | Attributes (always 0x0F) |
0x0c | 1 | Reserved (always 0x00) |
0x0d | 1 | Checksum of DOS file name |
0x0e | 12 | Name characters (six UTF-16 characters) |
0x1a | 2 | First cluster (always 0x0000) |
0x1c | 4 | Name characters (two UTF-16 characters) |
If a filename contains only lowercase letters, or is a combination of a lowercase basename with an uppercase extension, or vice-versa; and has no special characters, and fits within the 8.3 limits, a VFAT entry is not created on Windows NT and later versions such as XP. Instead, two bits in byte 0x0c of the directory entry are used to indicate that the filename should be considered as entirely or partially lowercase. Specifically, bit 4 means lowercase extension and bit 3 lowercase basename, which allows for combinations such as "example.TXT" or "HELLO.txt" but not "Mixed.txt". Few other operating systems support this. This creates a backwards-compatibility problem with older Windows versions (95, 98, ME) that see all-uppercase filenames if this extension has been used, and therefore can change the name of a file when it is transported, such as on a USB flash drive. Current 2.6.x versions of Linux will recognize this extension when reading (source: kernel 2.6.18 /fs/fat/dir.c and fs/vfat/namei.c); the mount option shortname determines whether this feature is used when writing.[17]
Third-party extensions
Before Microsoft added support for long filenames and creation/access time stamps, bytes 0x0C–0x15 of the directory entry were used by alternative operating systems to store additional metadata. These included:
Byte Offset | Length | System | Description | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|---|
0x0C | 2 | RISC OS | File type, 0x000 - 0xFFF | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0C | 1 | DOS Plus | User-defined file attributes F1-F4
|
|||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0D | 1 | DR-DOS | For a deleted file, the original first character of the filename. | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x0E | 2 | DR-DOS and FlexOS | Encrypted file password | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x10 | 4 | DR-DOS 7 | For a deleted file, its original file time and date; deleted files have their normal time and date fields set to the time of deletion | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x12 | 2 | DR-DOS 6 and FlexOS | File owner ID | |||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||||
0x14 | 2 | DR-DOS and FlexOS | File permissions bitmap (execute permissions are only used by FlexOS):
|
FAT licensing
Microsoft applied for, and was granted, a series of patents for key parts of the FAT file system in the mid-1990s. Being almost universally compatible and well-understood, FAT is frequently chosen as an interchange format for flash media used in digital cameras and PDAs.
On 2003-12-03 Microsoft announced it would be offering licenses for use of its FAT specification and "associated intellectual property", at the cost of a US $0.25 royalty per unit sold, with a $250,000 maximum royalty per license agreement.[18]
To this end, Microsoft cited four patents on the FAT filesystem as the basis of its intellectual property claims. All four pertain to long-filename extensions to FAT first seen in Windows 95:
- U.S. Patent 5,745,902 - Method and system for accessing a file using file names having different file name formats. Filed July 6, 1992. This covered a means of generating and associating a short, 8.3 filename with long one (for example, "Microsoft.txt" with "MICROS~1.TXT") and a means of enumerating conflicting short filenames (for example, "MICROS~2.TXT" and "MICROS~3.TXT"). It is unclear whether this patent would cover an implementation of FAT without explicit long filename capabilities. Hard links in Unix file systems do not appear to be prior art: deleting a FAT file via its long name will also remove its short name. Renaming a file to a "short" name also updates the long file name for coherency; similarly, renaming a file to a "long" name will allocate a new "short" name. In NTFS, hard links and dual names are separate concepts and each hard link has two names. Finally, at the API level, both names are always provided together when a directory lookup is requested from the system; they do not appear as two separate files and do not have to be "matched" to determine unique files.
- U.S. Patent 5,579,517 - Common name space for long and short filenames. Filed for on 1995-04-24. This covers the method of chaining together multiple consecutive 8.3 named directory entries to hold long filenames, with some of the entries specially marked to prevent their confusing older, long filename-unaware FAT implementations.
- The Public Patent Foundation successfully challenged this patent; the claims were rejected[19] on 2004-09-14, due to prior disclosure[20] of the claimed techniques in patents U.S. Patent 5,307,494 and U.S. Patent 5,367,671 . This decision was later overturned by the Patent Office on 2006-01-10.
- U.S. Patent 5,758,352 - Common name space for long and short filenames. Filed on 1996-09-05. This is very similar to 5,579,517.
- U.S. Patent 6,286,013 - Method and system for providing a common name space for long and short file names in an operating system. Filed on 1997-01-28. This makes claims on the methods used when Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows Me expose long filenames to their MS-DOS compatibility layer. It does not appear to affect any non-Microsoft FAT implementations.
Many technical commentators have concluded that these patents only cover FAT implementations that include support for long filenames, and that removable solid state media and consumer devices only using short names would be unaffected.
Additionally, in the document "Microsoft Extensible Firmware Initiative FAT 32 File System Specification, FAT: General Overview of On-Disk Format" published by Microsoft (version 1.03, 2000-12-06), Microsoft specifically grants a number of rights, which many readers have interpreted as permitting operating system vendors to implement FAT.
Microsoft is not the only company to have applied for patents for parts of the FAT file system. Other patents affecting FAT include:
- U.S. Patent 5,367,671 - System for accessing extended object attribute (EA) data through file name or EA handle linkages in path tables. Filed on 1990-09-25 by Barry A. Feigenbaum and Felix Miro of IBM, this makes claims on the methods used by OS/2, Windows NT, and Linux for storing extended attribute data in the "EA DATA. SF" file.
Appeal
As there was widespread call for these patents to be re-examined, the Public Patent Foundation submitted evidence to the US Patent and Trade Office (USPTO) disputing the validity of these patents, including prior art references from Xerox and IBM. The USPTO acknowledged that the evidence raised "substantial new question[s] of patentability," and opened an investigation into the validity of Microsoft's FAT patents.[23]
On 2004-09-30 the USPTO rejected all claims of U.S. Patent 5,579,517 , based primarily on evidence provided by the Public Patent Foundation. Dan Ravicher, the foundation's executive director, said "The Patent Office has simply confirmed what we already knew for some time now, Microsoft's FAT patent is bogus."
According to the PUBPAT press release, "Microsoft still has the opportunity to respond to the Patent Office's rejection. Typically, third party requests for reexamination, like the one filed by PUBPAT, are successful in having the subject patent either narrowed or completely revoked roughly 70% of the time."
On 2005-10-05 the Patent Office announced that, following the re-examination process, it had again rejected all claims of patent 5,579,517, and it additionally found U.S. Patent 5,758,352 invalid on the grounds that the patent had incorrect assignees.
Finally, on 2006-01-10 the Patent Office ruled that features of Microsoft's implementation of the FAT system were "novel and non-obvious" reversing both earlier non-final decisions[24].
References
- ^ Duncan, Ray (1989). Design goals and implementation of the new High Performance File System. Microsoft Systems Journal 4 (5).
- ^ Errors Creating Files or Folders in the Root Directory. Microsoft Help and Support (December 16, 2004). Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ mkdosfs man page.
- ^ a b Limitations of FAT32 File System. Microsoft Help and Support (December 16, 2004). Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Fdisk Does Not Recognize Full Size of Hard Disks Larger than 64 GB. Microsoft Help and Support (January 27, 2007). Retrieved on 2007-03-08.
- ^ Limitations of the FAT32 File System in Windows XP. Microsoft Help and Support (September 4, 2002). Retrieved on 2007-01-24.
- ^ Thompson, Robert Bruce and Thompson, Barbara Fritchman; PC Hardware in a Nutshell, 3rd Edition,, O'Reilly, ISBN 0-596-00513-X (p. 506: Microsoft “bizarrely” saying the 32 GiB limitation is by design)
- ^ a b Chen, Raymond (2006). Microsoft TechNet: A Brief and Incomplete History of FAT32. TechNet Magazine July 2006.
- ^ Norton, Peter (2002); Peter Norton's New Inside the PC, Sams Publishing, ISBN 0-672-32289-7 (p. 428: “Microsoft has intentionally crippled the FAT32 file system”)
- ^ a b Ray Duncan (1989). "Design goals and implementation of the new High Performance File System" 4 (5).
- ^ Release notes for v2.5.7. The Linux Kernel archives (March 12, 2002). Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Bob Eager (October 28, 2000). Implementation of extended attributes on the FAT file system. Tavi OS/2 pages. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Matthias Paul (February 20, 2002). Need DOS 6.22 (Not OEM). alt.msdos.programmer. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Wally Bass (February 14, 1994). Cluster Size. comp.os.msdos.programmer. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Andries E. Brouwer (September 20, 2002). The FAT filesystem. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ a b vinDaci (January 6, 1998). Long Filename Specification. Retrieved on 2007-03-13.
- ^ http://www.die.net/doc/linux/man/man8/mount.8.html
- ^ http://www.microsoft.com/about/legal/intellectualproperty/search/details.mspx?ip_id=IDAEYWHD&keywords=fat
- ^ At PUBPAT's request, patent office rejects Microsoft's FAT patent: Government Relies Heavily on Evidence Submitted by PUBPAT. Public Patent Foundation (September 30, 2004). Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Ina Fried (September 30, 2004). Microsoft FAT patent falls flat. CNET News. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Andrew Orlowski (October 5, 2005). Microsoft FAT patent rejected - again. The Register. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Patent Office rejects two Microsoft FAT patents. out-law.com (June 10, 2005). Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Andrew Orlowski (June 14, 2004). Microsoft's war on GPL dealt patent setback. The Register. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
- ^ Anne Broache (January 10, 2006). Microsoft's file system patent upheld. CNET News. Retrieved on 2006-10-14.
See also
- Comparison of file systems
- Drive letter assignment
- Software patent
- List of file systems
- Rock Ridge and Joliet — systems for CDs that add long file names similar to what VFAT did for FAT.
External links
- Microsoft Extensible Firmware Initiative FAT 32 File System Specification, FAT: General Overview of On-Disk Format
- Understanding FAT32 Filesystems (explained for embedded firmware developers)
- Detailed Explanation of FAT Boot Sector - Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 140418
- Volume and file size limits of FAT filesystems
- Microsoft TechNet: A Brief and Incomplete History of FAT32 by Raymond Chen
- FAT 32 Formatter: allows formatting volumes larger than 32GB with FAT32 under Windows 2000, Windows XP and Windows Vista
- Fdisk Does Not Recognize Full Size of Hard Disks Larger than 64 GB - Microsoft Knowledge Base Article 263044.