On Mon, 2011-08-15 at 11:11 -0500, Scott Wood wrote: > On 08/15/2011 10:59 AM, Artem Bityutskiy wrote: > > On Tue, 2011-07-12 at 12:48 +0800, b35...@freescale.com wrote: > >> + /* > >> + * Hack for supporting the flash chip whose writesize is > >> + * larger than 2K bytes. > >> + */ > >> + if (mtd->writesize > 2048) { > >> + elbc_fcm_ctrl->subpage_shift = ffs(mtd->writesize >> 11) - 1; > >> + elbc_fcm_ctrl->subpage_mask = > >> + (1 << elbc_fcm_ctrl->subpage_shift) - 1; > >> + /* > >> + * Rewrite mtd->writesize, mtd->oobsize, chip->page_shift > >> + * and chip->pagemask. > >> + */ > >> + mtd->writesize = 2048; > >> + mtd->oobsize = 64; > >> + chip->page_shift = ffs(mtd->writesize) - 1; > >> + chip->pagemask = (chip->chipsize >> chip->page_shift) - 1; > >> + } > > > > So basically if the flash has 4KiB NAND pages, you are considering it as > > a flash with 2KiB NAND pages. But surely this will work only if the > > underlying flash has NOP 2 at least. Or even, if you consider that JFFS2 > > and YAFFS want to write to OOB, you need NOP 4 (2 ECC writes and 2 > > writes from YAFFS/JFFS2) ? So this won't work for NOP1 flashes? > > Right. The set of chips that work with this controller is still larger > with this than without this. > > It looks like NOP1 tends to be MLC -- you probably wouldn't want to use > MLC with this controller anyway as it only does 1-bit ECC. > > > Isn't it an ugly hack? > > Less ugly than some other approaches that were considered. :-) > > But yes, it's a hack (even says so in the comment). The other option is > "it doesn't work".
Could there be at least a fat comment that NANDs with 4KiB pages have to be at least NOP4? And probably NANDs with 8KiB pages and larger should simply be rejected? -- Best Regards, Artem Bityutskiy _______________________________________________ Linuxppc-dev mailing list Linuxppc-dev@lists.ozlabs.org https://lists.ozlabs.org/listinfo/linuxppc-dev