File System

Most connected applications require the ability to store configuration information or cache local data. Gecko OS provides a reliable read/write filesystem and access to extended flash storage to satisfy application storage requirements.

Silabs Wi-Fi modules contain a microprocessor with internal flash and an extended (on module) serial flash. See Flash Storage . For third-party devices running Gecko OS, an extended serial flash must be provided to store temporary files and to enable wireless OTA updates.

Commands are available to create, delete and open files , and file contents can be easily accessed using one or more stream commands .

Here's a quick example showing how to create, manipulate then delete a file:

Gecko OS Commands Description

> file_create     hello.txt 12
Hello World!

Success
> file_open       hello.txt
0
> stream_read     0 3
Hel
> stream_read     0 50
lo World!
> file_delete     hello.txt
Success

<- Create file, length 12 bytes
<- Enter file contents
  (echoed if system.cmd.echo = 1)

<- Open file for reading
(Gecko OS returns file stream handle = 0)
<- Read no more than 3 bytes

<- Read no more than 50 bytes
  (close file if EOF reached)
<- Delete file

When a file is open, Gecko OS creates a file stream and returns a file stream handle to be used as an argument of the stream_read command. See Network Connections and Streams . The stream type is FILE .

File System Limits

Gecko OS supports a maximum of 32 files on extended serial flash.

When creating files via the file_create command, or via the Web App, which uses file_create in the background, file size is limited by available RAM at file creation. Typically, it is not possible to create files larger than 30000 bytes, and depending on available RAM, the maximum file size may be smaller.

Listing Files

To list files, use the ls command .

To obtain a verbose listing of all files on the MCU-internal flash and extended serial flash, use the ls command with the -v option. Users are only permitted to write files to serial flash.

> ls -v
!  # Type  Flags  Hnd    Size    Version  Filename
#  0 e-FE   0001   73    1853   2.0.0.11  /favicon.ico.gz
#  1 e-FE   0001   68   18067   2.0.0.11  webapp/images.png
#  2 e-FE   0001   52   10525   2.0.0.11  webapp/index.css.gz
#  3 e-FE   0001   65   10155   2.0.0.11  webapp/index.html
#  4 e-FE   0001   55   39247   2.0.0.11  webapp/index.js.gz
#  5 e-FB   0001   74   36511    2.0.1.8  command_help.csv
#  6 e-FD   0001   51     135   2.0.0.11  default_setup.script
#  7 e-03   0001   50    1236   2.0.0.11  geotrust_ca.pem
#  8 e-FE   0021   84    2074    1.0.0.0  my_ca.pem
#  9 i-00   001B    0  212736    2.0.1.8  sys/kernel.bin
# 10 i-81   001B   52  178252    2.0.1.8  sys/services.bin
# 11 e-01   0009    0  203261  5.26.230.3  sys/wifi_fw.bin
# 12 b-FE   0021   25 1995261    2.1.0.0  DSC20564.JPEG

File Types

In the ls file listing, Type column, a prefix indicates the location of the file in internal, or extended flash:

See Flash Storage below.

For example, e-FE indicates a file in extended serial flash with a file type of 0xFE .

File types are used internally by Gecko OS for file management.

Gecko OS file types are enumerated in the following table.

File type ID (hex) ID (dec)
KERNEL 0x00 0
WIFI_FW 0x01 1
SHARED_LIB 0x02 2
TLS_CERT 0x03 3
TXT_LOG 0x04 4
NVM 0x05 5
MISC_APP 0x80 128
SERVICES 0x81 129
SAFEMODE_APP 0x84 132
Custom type 0x96 - 0xC7 150 - 199
TEMPORARY 0xF9 249
GPIO_CONFIG 0xFA 250
COMMAND_HELP 0xFB 251
SDC_CAPS 0xFC 252
SETUP_SCRIPT 0xFD 253
MISC_FIX_LEN 0xFE 254
TYPE_INVALID 0xFF 255

Custom User Types

The type range from 0x96 (decimal 150) to 0xC7 (decimal 199) is set aside for custom types. Use types in this range for file management specific to your application.

File Flags

Flags are displayed in the file listing in hex format, without a 0x prefix.

The flags correspond to bits as follows:

Flag Bit Notes
Valid 0
Executable 1
Internal 3
Bootable 4
User 5
Essential 6 This flag can be explicitly set with the -e flag for file_create , http_download
Backup 7
Unprotected 8 This flag can be explicitly set with the -u flag for file_create , http_download
Log 9

Only the Essential and the Unprotected flags can be explicitly set using a command.

The file_create and http_download commands provide -e and -u options to set the Essential and Unprotected flags.

Examples:

Flags column Flags Set
001B Valid Executable Internal Bootable
0021 Valid User
0061 Valid User Essential
0121 Valid User Unprotected
0161 Valid User Essential Unprotected

File Version

For files that form part of the Gecko OS system, such as services.bin and kernel.bin , the file version follows the scheme:

<major>.<minor>.<patch>.<release_candidate>

When creating a user file, the user can choose the versioning scheme. The file_create and http_download commands provide a version option to set the version.

File Checksum

The checksum used on individual files is calculated using a CCITT CRC-16 algorithm with polynomial 0x1021. The full set of CRC parameters is as follows:

Parameter Value
CRC Order 16
CRC Polynomial 0x1021
Initial Value FFFF (direct)
Final XOR 0x0
Reverse data bytes Yes
Reverse CRC No

See the crc_gecko_os.py python script and the crccitt_test.c C source for demonstrations of calculating the CRC.

The file_create and http_download commands provide an option to set the CRC.

You can view a file CRC with the file_stat command. The CRC is the second item in the comma-separated list.

See also the File System application note.

Writing Files

There are two Gecko OS commands that can write to the file system:

There are several ways to invoke these commands:

Writing with the Web App File Browser

When you open the Web App in a web browser and select the Files tab , you can load files to the device file system using click and browse, or drag and drop.

In the background, the Web App uses the file_create command to write files to the device file system, using the HTTP Server RESTful API .

There are several ways to activate the Web App. See Web App .

Writing with the Terminal

In the Gecko OS terminal or remote terminal, use the file_create command to create the file. Immediately after issuing the command, type the file contents, or alternatively copy and paste the file contents into the terminal after issuing the fcr command. The length of the file must be supplied. The character count includes any line termination characters.

In the example below we create a script that can be run using the command setup cmd -v test.script . In this case the character count is 35.

> fcr test.script 35
help,setup,\r\n#This is a comment

File created
Success

Writing File Contents in Chunks

You can write the file in chunks by leaving the file open after issuing the file_create with the -o option. Write the file chunks to the stream returned by the file_create command. You must know the total size of the file to be created in advance.

When you open the file, Gecko OS returns a stream handle, to be used as an argument of the stream_write command. See Network Connections and Streams .

In the example below a small file is created in two chunks:

Commands and Responses Description

> file_create -o hello.txt 11
[Opened: 0]
0
> stream_write 0 6
Hello
Success
> stream_write 0 5
World
File created
[Closed: 0]
Success
> file_open hello.txt
[Opened: 0]
0
> stream_read 0 1000
Hello World
[Closed: 0]

Create file; leave stream open; specify total length

Response: open stream and return stream handle
Write first chunk; specify chunk length
Send chunk content (includes trailing space)

Write second chunk; specify chunk length
Send chunk content

Stream closed

Open new file

Response: open stream and return stream handle
Read contents

Stream closed

HTTP Download

You can also provide the file for download from a web server accessible to the device, and use the http_download command. For example:

> http_download http://www.google.com.au/images/srpr/logo11w.png test1.png
Downloading: test1.png to flash file system
Request GET /images/srpr/logo11w.png
Connecting (http): www.google.com.au:80
HTTP response: 200
Success
> ls
!  #   Size   Version  Filename
…
#  4  14022     1.0.0  test1.png
…

OTA

OTA wireless updates allow you to update the Gecko OS system files automatically from Silabs OTA update servers online. Please contact Silabs if you need custom hosting services for your application firmware or files.

Reading Files

The following Gecko OS commands can write to the file system:

There are several ways to invoke these commands:

Reading with the Web App File Browser

When you open the Web App in a web browser and select the Files tab , you can download a file from the device file system by clicking the file name.

In the background, the Web App uses the file_open command to read the files from the device file system, using the HTTP Server RESTful API .

There are several ways to activate the Web App. See Web App .

Reading from a Terminal

You can read text files directly from the Gecko OS Terminal or remote terminal. Read the file, using a file_open followed by a stream_read command, specifying the stream index returned from the file open, e.g.:

> fop default_setup.script
[Opened: 0]
0
> read 0 1000
network_up,-s    ,Configuration network credentials
set wlan.auto_join.enabled,true,Enable network auto-join
save,-,Saving settings

[Closed: 0]

HTTP Upload

You can upload the file to an available web server with file upload capability with the http_upload command.

Flash Storage

A Gecko OS device contains internal flash inside the microprocessor and an extended flash chip for user storage.

Extended flash is serial flash. Internal flash cannot be manipulated by Gecko OS commands.

Encrypting Gecko OS Files

The python script crypto_util.py demonstrates encrypting and decrypting files which can be used by Gecko OS.

Encrypted File Format

A Gecko OS encrypted file has the following format:

So an encrypted file is always 32 bytes longer than a file with same contents unencrypted.

Encryption Sequence

The sequence for encrypting a file is as follows:

  1. Generate Initialization Vector (IV)
  2. Initialize AES-128 context with the user AES key
  3. Calculate the Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) of the entire file, IV=0, and pad with 0s to 16 bytes if necessary, the last 16 bytes of the encrypted output is used as the HMAC
  4. Write the initial IV (the IV from step 1) to the output file/buffer
  5. Using the IV from step 1 and AES-128 context from step 2, using CTR mode encrypt HMAC and write to output file/buffer
  6. Using IV from step 5 and AES-128 context from step 2, using CTR mode encrypt file contents and write to output file/buffer

Decryption Sequence

The sequence for decrypting a file is as follows:

  1. Initialize AES-128 context with the user AES key
  2. Read the 16 byte IV from the beginning of the encrypted file
  3. Read the 16 bytes encrypted HMAC from the file
  4. Using the AES context from Step 1 and the IV from Step 2, decrypt the HMAC using AES CTR mode
  5. Using the AES context and IV from step 4, decrypt the rest of the file using AES CTR mode
  6. Calculate the Cipher Block Chaining (CBC) of the decrypted file data from step 5, IV=0, and pad with 0s to 16 bytes if necessary
  7. The final block from step 6 should match the HMAC from step 4. If the two 16 byte values don't match then either the given user key is invalid or the encrypted file is corrupted.

Preventing File Corruption

The Gecko OS file system is designed to be resistant to file corruption. A file does not appear in the file system until it is marked as valid. See File Flags . A file is marked as valid only after all file data is written and validated. When a file is not valid, it cannot be listed with the ls command or opened with the file_open command. A valid file may not be modified. That is, file size and contents cannot be modified after the file is created.

This ensures the file system does not become populated with corrupt files due to sudden power loss, reset, or interruption of the file stream during writing.

The steps in file creation are as follows:

If the module is reset or power cycled, or the file stream is manually closed before the valid flag is set, the created file and any written contents are lost.

Once the valid flag is set, the file may not be modified.