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- About this document
- ===================
- Some notes about Marvell's NAND controller available in PXA and Armada 370/XP
- SoC (aka NFCv1 and NFCv2), with an emphasis on the latter.
- NFCv2 controller background
- ===========================
- The controller has a 2176 bytes FIFO buffer. Therefore, in order to support
- larger pages, I/O operations on 4 KiB and 8 KiB pages is done with a set of
- chunked transfers.
- For instance, if we choose a 2048 data chunk and set "BCH" ECC (see below)
- we'll have this layout in the pages:
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- | 2048B data | 32B spare | 30B ECC || 2048B data | 32B spare | 30B ECC | ... |
- ------------------------------------------------------------------------------
- The driver reads the data and spare portions independently and builds an internal
- buffer with this layout (in the 4 KiB page case):
- ------------------------------------------
- | 4096B data | 64B spare |
- ------------------------------------------
- Also, for the READOOB command the driver disables the ECC and reads a 'spare + ECC'
- OOB, one per chunk read.
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- | 4096B data | 32B spare | 30B ECC | 32B spare | 30B ECC |
- -------------------------------------------------------------------
- So, in order to achieve reading (for instance), we issue several READ0 commands
- (with some additional controller-specific magic) and read two chunks of 2080B
- (2048 data + 32 spare) each.
- The driver accommodates this data to expose the NAND core a contiguous buffer
- (4096 data + spare) or (4096 + spare + ECC + spare + ECC).
- ECC
- ===
- The controller has built-in hardware ECC capabilities. In addition it is
- configurable between two modes: 1) Hamming, 2) BCH.
- Note that the actual BCH mode: BCH-4 or BCH-8 will depend on the way
- the controller is configured to transfer the data.
- In the BCH mode the ECC code will be calculated for each transferred chunk
- and expected to be located (when reading/programming) right after the spare
- bytes as the figure above shows.
- So, repeating the above scheme, a 2048B data chunk will be followed by 32B
- spare, and then the ECC controller will read/write the ECC code (30B in
- this case):
- ------------------------------------
- | 2048B data | 32B spare | 30B ECC |
- ------------------------------------
- If the ECC mode is 'BCH' then the ECC is *always* 30 bytes long.
- If the ECC mode is 'Hamming' the ECC is 6 bytes long, for each 512B block.
- So in Hamming mode, a 2048B page will have a 24B ECC.
- Despite all of the above, the controller requires the driver to only read or
- write in multiples of 8-bytes, because the data buffer is 64-bits.
- OOB
- ===
- Because of the above scheme, and because the "spare" OOB is really located in
- the middle of a page, spare OOB cannot be read or write independently of the
- data area. In other words, in order to read the OOB (aka READOOB), the entire
- page (aka READ0) has to be read.
- In the same sense, in order to write to the spare OOB the driver has to write
- an *entire* page.
- Factory bad blocks handling
- ===========================
- Given the ECC BCH requires to layout the device's pages in a split
- data/OOB/data/OOB way, the controller has a view of the flash page that's
- different from the specified (aka the manufacturer's) view. In other words,
- Factory view:
- -----------------------------------------------
- | Data |x OOB |
- -----------------------------------------------
- Driver's view:
- -----------------------------------------------
- | Data | OOB | Data x | OOB |
- -----------------------------------------------
- It can be seen from the above, that the factory bad block marker must be
- searched within the 'data' region, and not in the usual OOB region.
- In addition, this means under regular usage the driver will write such
- position (since it belongs to the data region) and every used block is
- likely to be marked as bad.
- For this reason, marking the block as bad in the OOB is explicitly
- disabled by using the NAND_BBT_NO_OOB_BBM option in the driver. The rationale
- for this is that there's no point in marking a block as bad, because good
- blocks are also 'marked as bad' (in the OOB BBM sense) under normal usage.
- Instead, the driver relies on the bad block table alone, and should only perform
- the bad block scan on the very first time (when the device hasn't been used).
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