| .. SPDX-License-Identifier: GPL-2.0 | 
 |  | 
 | Inline Data | 
 | ----------- | 
 |  | 
 | The inline data feature was designed to handle the case that a file's | 
 | data is so tiny that it readily fits inside the inode, which | 
 | (theoretically) reduces disk block consumption and reduces seeks. If the | 
 | file is smaller than 60 bytes, then the data are stored inline in | 
 | ``inode.i_block``. If the rest of the file would fit inside the extended | 
 | attribute space, then it might be found as an extended attribute | 
 | “system.data” within the inode body (“ibody EA”). This of course | 
 | constrains the amount of extended attributes one can attach to an inode. | 
 | If the data size increases beyond i_block + ibody EA, a regular block | 
 | is allocated and the contents moved to that block. | 
 |  | 
 | Pending a change to compact the extended attribute key used to store | 
 | inline data, one ought to be able to store 160 bytes of data in a | 
 | 256-byte inode (as of June 2015, when i_extra_isize is 28). Prior to | 
 | that, the limit was 156 bytes due to inefficient use of inode space. | 
 |  | 
 | The inline data feature requires the presence of an extended attribute | 
 | for “system.data”, even if the attribute value is zero length. | 
 |  | 
 | Inline Directories | 
 | ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ | 
 |  | 
 | The first four bytes of i_block are the inode number of the parent | 
 | directory. Following that is a 56-byte space for an array of directory | 
 | entries; see ``struct ext4_dir_entry``. If there is a “system.data” | 
 | attribute in the inode body, the EA value is an array of | 
 | ``struct ext4_dir_entry`` as well. Note that for inline directories, the | 
 | i_block and EA space are treated as separate dirent blocks; directory | 
 | entries cannot span the two. | 
 |  | 
 | Inline directory entries are not checksummed, as the inode checksum | 
 | should protect all inline data contents. |