Extent (file systems)
In computing, an extent is a contiguous area of storage reserved for a file in a file system, represented as a range of block numbers, or tracks on count key data devices. A file can consist of zero or more extents; one file fragment requires one extent. The direct benefit is in storing each range compactly as two numbers, instead of canonically storing every block number in the range. Also, extent allocation results in less file fragmentation.
Extent-based file systems can also eliminate most of the metadata overhead of large files that would traditionally be taken up by the block-allocation tree. But because the savings are small compared to the amount of stored data but make up a large portion of the metadata, the overall benefits in storage efficiency and performance are slight.
In order to resist fragmentation, several extent-based file systems do allocate-on-flush. Many modern fault-tolerant file systems also do copy-on-write, although that increases fragmentation. As a similar design, the CP/M file system uses extents as well, but those do not correspond to the definition given above. CP/M's extents appear contiguously as a single block in the combined directory/allocation table, and they do not necessarily correspond to a contiguous data area on disk.
IBM OS/360 and successors allocate files in multiples of disk tracks or cylinders. Files could originally have up to 16 extents, but this restriction has since been lifted. The initial allocation size, and the size of additional extents to be allocated if required, are specified by the user via Job Control Language. The system attempts to allocate the initial size as a contiguous area, although this may be split if contiguous space is not available.
Adoption
The systems supporting file system extents include the following:- APFS Apple File System
- ASM Automatic Storage Management Oracle's database-oriented file system
- BFS BeOS, Zeta and Haiku operating systems
- Btrfs Extent-based copy-on-write file system for Linux
- EFS Extent File System SGI's first-generation file system for IRIX
- ext4 Linux file system
- Files-11 OpenVMS file system
- HFS and HFS Plus Hierarchical File System Apple Macintosh file systems
- High Performance File System on OS/2, eComStation and ArcaOS
- IceFS IceFileSystem optional file system for MorphOS
- JFS Journaled File System used by AIX, OS/2/eComStation/ArcaOS and Linux operating systems
- ISO 9660 Extent-based file system for optical disc media
- MPE File System the file system of the Multi-Programming Executive operating system.
- NTFS used by Windows
- OCFS2 Oracle Cluster File System a shared-disk file system for Linux
- Reiser4 Linux file system
- SINTRAN III file system used by early computer company Norsk Data
- UDF Universal Disk Format standard for optical media
- VERITAS File System enabled via the pre-allocation API and CLI
- XFS SGI's second-generation file system for IRIX and Linux
- Microsoft SQL Server versions support 64 KB extents consisting of eight 8 KB pages.
- Oracle Database groups blocks into extents and extents into segments.