+ * ubifs_reported_space - calculate reported free space.
+ * @c: the UBIFS file-system description object
+ * @free: amount of free space
+ *
+ * This function calculates amount of free space which will be reported to
+ * user-space. User-space application tend to expect that if the file-system
+ * (e.g., via the 'statfs()' call) reports that it has N bytes available, they
+ * are able to write a file of size N. UBIFS attaches node headers to each data
+ * node and it has to write indexing nodes as well. This introduces additional
+ * overhead, and UBIFS has to report slightly less free space to meet the above
+ * expectations.
+ *
+ * This function assumes free space is made up of uncompressed data nodes and
+ * full index nodes (one per data node, tripled because we always allow enough
+ * space to write the index thrice).
+ *
+ * Note, the calculation is pessimistic, which means that most of the time
+ * UBIFS reports less space than it actually has.
+ */
+long long ubifs_reported_space(const struct ubifs_info *c, long long free)
+{
+ int divisor, factor, f;
+
+ /*
+ * Reported space size is @free * X, where X is UBIFS block size
+ * divided by UBIFS block size + all overhead one data block
+ * introduces. The overhead is the node header + indexing overhead.
+ *
+ * Indexing overhead calculations are based on the following formula:
+ * I = N/(f - 1) + 1, where I - number of indexing nodes, N - number
+ * of data nodes, f - fanout. Because effective UBIFS fanout is twice
+ * as less than maximum fanout, we assume that each data node
+ * introduces 3 * @c->max_idx_node_sz / (@c->fanout/2 - 1) bytes.
+ * Note, the multiplier 3 is because UBIFS reserves thrice as more space
+ * for the index.
+ */
+ f = c->fanout > 3 ? c->fanout >> 1 : 2;
+ factor = UBIFS_BLOCK_SIZE;
+ divisor = UBIFS_MAX_DATA_NODE_SZ;
+ divisor += (c->max_idx_node_sz * 3) / (f - 1);
+ free *= factor;
+ return div_u64(free, divisor);
+}
+
+/**
+ * ubifs_get_free_space_nolock - return amount of free space.