I am currently working on an embedded Linux device for data logging. The Linux device is plugged into a CANbus and writes the traffic to an SD card.
From time to time the SD card corrupts and is mounted read-only. This behavior needs to be avoided.
The file system is FAT (the SD card should stay be readable by windows systems).
The embedded device can power fail any time, so I need a safe way to write to the SD card from my C program.
As I am not really into C, I rely on a program called "candump" which basically prints the canmessages to stdout in this format:
<0x006> [8] 77 00 00 00 00 00 00 00
My C program basically opens the candump program, reads from stdout, adds a timestamp and removes unnecessary chars:
1345836055.520 6 7700000000000000
while(running)
{
if (filename != NULL)
{
fp_log = fopen(filename, "a");
if (!fp_log)
{
perror("fopen");
exit (EXIT_FAILURE);
}
}
fgets(line, sizeof(line)-1, fp);
/* reset the row_values so they are always correctly initialized */
row_identifier = 0;
if (strchr(line,'<') != NULL)
{
/* creating a buffer char to store values for casting char to int*/
buffer_ident[0] = line[4];
buffer_ident[1] = line[5];
/* cast buffer e.g. {'1','0','\0'} to int: 10 */
row_identifier = strtol(buffer_ident,NULL,10);
/* heartbeat of the CANBUS PLC */
if(row_identifier == 80)
{
/* return pong on identifier 81 to the PLC */
//system("cansend can0 -i 81 1 > /dev/null");
}
else
{
gettimeofday(&tv,NULL);
fprintf(fp_log,"%d.%03d ", tv.tv_sec, tv.tv_usec/1000);
fprintf(fp_log,"%d ",row_identifier);
/* rowlenght > 11 = data part is not empty */
row_lenght = strlen(line);
if (row_lenght>11)
{
int i=0;
for (i=11;i<row_lenght;i++)
/* remove spaces between the data to save space and copy data into new array */
if (isspace(line[i]) == 0)
fprintf(fp_log,"%c",line[i]);
fprintf(fp_log,"\n");
}
}
}
fclose(fp_log);
}
The code snippet above works fine, its just that I get SD card corruption.
Solution
I ended up using ext3 as the file system with standard mount options. No problems any more
fsync(fp_log)before you close it and mount the sd card with-o flush– J-16 SDiZ Sep 17 '12 at 11:54