I'm working on implementing a log based file system for a file as a class project. I have a good amount of it working on my 64 bit OS X laptop, but when I try to run the code on the CS department's 32 bit linux machines, I get a seg fault.
The API we're given allows writing DISK_SECTOR_SIZE (512) bytes at a time. Our log record consists of the 512 bytes the user wants to write as well as some metadata (which sector he wants to write to, the type of operation, etc).
All in all, the size of the "record" object is 528 bytes, which means each log record spans 2 sectors on the disk.
The first record writes 0-512 on sector 0, and 0-15 on sector 1.
The second record writes 16-512 on sector 1, and 0-31 on sector 2.
The third record writes 32-512 on sector 2, and 0-47 on sector 3.
ETC.
So what I do is read the two sectors I'll be modifying into 2 freshly allocated buffers, copy starting at record into buf1+the calculated offset for 512-offset bytes. This works correctly on both machines.
However, the second memcpy fails. Specifically, "record+DISK_SECTOR_SIZE-offset" in the below code segfaults, but only on the linux machine. Running some random tests, it gets more curious. The linux machine reports sizeof(Record) to be 528. Therefore, if I tried to memcpy from record+500 into buf for 1 byte, it shouldn't have a problem.
In fact, the biggest offset I can get from record is 254. That is, memcpy(buf1, record+254, 1) works, but memcpy(buf1, record+255, 1) segfaults.
Does anyone know what I'm missing?
Record *record = malloc(sizeof(Record));
record->tid = tid;
record->opType = OP_WRITE;
record->opArg = sector;
int i;
for (i = 0; i < DISK_SECTOR_SIZE; i++) {
record->data[i] = buf[i]; // *buf is passed into this function
}
char* buf1 = malloc(DISK_SECTOR_SIZE);
char* buf2 = malloc(DISK_SECTOR_SIZE);
d_read(ad->disk, ad->curLogSector, buf1);
d_read(ad->disk, ad->curLogSector+1, buf2);
memcpy(buf1+offset, record, DISK_SECTOR_SIZE-offset);
memcpy(buf2, record+DISK_SECTOR_SIZE-offset, offset+sizeof(Record)-sizeof(record->data));