[PATCH v2] MTD: at91: atmel_nand: return bit flips for the PMECC read_page()

Mike Dunn mikedunn at newsguy.com
Thu Nov 29 12:20:57 EST 2012


On 11/28/2012 11:45 PM, Josh Wu wrote:
> Hi, Mike
> 
> On 11/28/2012 3:35 AM, Mike Dunn wrote:
>>
>> BTW, with such a wide range for ecc strength - up to 24 bits, according to the
>> commit message for the pmecc patch - you may want to think about setting an
>> appropriate bitflip_threshold in the driver.  I'm not a nand expert, and I don't
>> know much about the atmel_nand specifically, but I would think that if 23 bits
>> are corrected on a page of size 2k (or less), maybe a return code of -EUCLEAN
>> from mtd_read() might be appropriate.
> 
> After checking the nand_base.c, I saw it will set the mtd.bitflip_threshold to
> mtd->ecc.strength during nand_scan_tail().
> in the atmel_nand code, the ecc strength will be set correctly, that means
> bitflip_threashold should be set up correctly by default.
> so I think I don't need set up the the bitflip_threshold anymore if I set ecc
> strength correctly. Am I missing any point here?


No, you are correct; bitflip_threshold is set to ecc.strength by default if the
driver has not assigned it a value already.  I just wondered if the default
value is too liberal given the possibility of such high ecc strength in your
case.  With bitflip_threshold == 24 (default for the greatest possible
ecc.strength on atmel_nand with pmecc) mtd_read() will not return -EUCLEAN until
24 bitflips are corrected on a page that is no greater than 2k in size, and may
be as small as 512 bytes (if I read the code correctly).

The -EUCLEAN return code is used by higher layers as an indication that a block
may be going bad.  I don't know whether or not a block bears scrutiny when 23
bitflips are corrected on a page.  I guess it depends on the particular flash
device.  It was just a thought.

Hope this makes sense.
Mike



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