| ===================================== |
| MTD NAND Driver Programming Interface |
| ===================================== |
| |
| :Author: Thomas Gleixner |
| |
| Introduction |
| ============ |
| |
| The generic NAND driver supports almost all NAND and AG-AND based chips |
| and connects them to the Memory Technology Devices (MTD) subsystem of |
| the Linux Kernel. |
| |
| This documentation is provided for developers who want to implement |
| board drivers or filesystem drivers suitable for NAND devices. |
| |
| Known Bugs And Assumptions |
| ========================== |
| |
| None. |
| |
| Documentation hints |
| =================== |
| |
| The function and structure docs are autogenerated. Each function and |
| struct member has a short description which is marked with an [XXX] |
| identifier. The following chapters explain the meaning of those |
| identifiers. |
| |
| Function identifiers [XXX] |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| The functions are marked with [XXX] identifiers in the short comment. |
| The identifiers explain the usage and scope of the functions. Following |
| identifiers are used: |
| |
| - [MTD Interface] |
| |
| These functions provide the interface to the MTD kernel API. They are |
| not replaceable and provide functionality which is complete hardware |
| independent. |
| |
| - [NAND Interface] |
| |
| These functions are exported and provide the interface to the NAND |
| kernel API. |
| |
| - [GENERIC] |
| |
| Generic functions are not replaceable and provide functionality which |
| is complete hardware independent. |
| |
| - [DEFAULT] |
| |
| Default functions provide hardware related functionality which is |
| suitable for most of the implementations. These functions can be |
| replaced by the board driver if necessary. Those functions are called |
| via pointers in the NAND chip description structure. The board driver |
| can set the functions which should be replaced by board dependent |
| functions before calling nand_scan(). If the function pointer is |
| NULL on entry to nand_scan() then the pointer is set to the default |
| function which is suitable for the detected chip type. |
| |
| Struct member identifiers [XXX] |
| ------------------------------- |
| |
| The struct members are marked with [XXX] identifiers in the comment. The |
| identifiers explain the usage and scope of the members. Following |
| identifiers are used: |
| |
| - [INTERN] |
| |
| These members are for NAND driver internal use only and must not be |
| modified. Most of these values are calculated from the chip geometry |
| information which is evaluated during nand_scan(). |
| |
| - [REPLACEABLE] |
| |
| Replaceable members hold hardware related functions which can be |
| provided by the board driver. The board driver can set the functions |
| which should be replaced by board dependent functions before calling |
| nand_scan(). If the function pointer is NULL on entry to |
| nand_scan() then the pointer is set to the default function which is |
| suitable for the detected chip type. |
| |
| - [BOARDSPECIFIC] |
| |
| Board specific members hold hardware related information which must |
| be provided by the board driver. The board driver must set the |
| function pointers and datafields before calling nand_scan(). |
| |
| - [OPTIONAL] |
| |
| Optional members can hold information relevant for the board driver. |
| The generic NAND driver code does not use this information. |
| |
| Basic board driver |
| ================== |
| |
| For most boards it will be sufficient to provide just the basic |
| functions and fill out some really board dependent members in the nand |
| chip description structure. |
| |
| Basic defines |
| ------------- |
| |
| At least you have to provide a nand_chip structure and a storage for |
| the ioremap'ed chip address. You can allocate the nand_chip structure |
| using kmalloc or you can allocate it statically. The NAND chip structure |
| embeds an mtd structure which will be registered to the MTD subsystem. |
| You can extract a pointer to the mtd structure from a nand_chip pointer |
| using the nand_to_mtd() helper. |
| |
| Kmalloc based example |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static struct mtd_info *board_mtd; |
| static void __iomem *baseaddr; |
| |
| |
| Static example |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static struct nand_chip board_chip; |
| static void __iomem *baseaddr; |
| |
| |
| Partition defines |
| ----------------- |
| |
| If you want to divide your device into partitions, then define a |
| partitioning scheme suitable to your board. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| #define NUM_PARTITIONS 2 |
| static struct mtd_partition partition_info[] = { |
| { .name = "Flash partition 1", |
| .offset = 0, |
| .size = 8 * 1024 * 1024 }, |
| { .name = "Flash partition 2", |
| .offset = MTDPART_OFS_NEXT, |
| .size = MTDPART_SIZ_FULL }, |
| }; |
| |
| |
| Hardware control function |
| ------------------------- |
| |
| The hardware control function provides access to the control pins of the |
| NAND chip(s). The access can be done by GPIO pins or by address lines. |
| If you use address lines, make sure that the timing requirements are |
| met. |
| |
| *GPIO based example* |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static void board_hwcontrol(struct mtd_info *mtd, int cmd) |
| { |
| switch(cmd){ |
| case NAND_CTL_SETCLE: /* Set CLE pin high */ break; |
| case NAND_CTL_CLRCLE: /* Set CLE pin low */ break; |
| case NAND_CTL_SETALE: /* Set ALE pin high */ break; |
| case NAND_CTL_CLRALE: /* Set ALE pin low */ break; |
| case NAND_CTL_SETNCE: /* Set nCE pin low */ break; |
| case NAND_CTL_CLRNCE: /* Set nCE pin high */ break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| *Address lines based example.* It's assumed that the nCE pin is driven |
| by a chip select decoder. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static void board_hwcontrol(struct mtd_info *mtd, int cmd) |
| { |
| struct nand_chip *this = mtd_to_nand(mtd); |
| switch(cmd){ |
| case NAND_CTL_SETCLE: this->IO_ADDR_W |= CLE_ADRR_BIT; break; |
| case NAND_CTL_CLRCLE: this->IO_ADDR_W &= ~CLE_ADRR_BIT; break; |
| case NAND_CTL_SETALE: this->IO_ADDR_W |= ALE_ADRR_BIT; break; |
| case NAND_CTL_CLRALE: this->IO_ADDR_W &= ~ALE_ADRR_BIT; break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| Device ready function |
| --------------------- |
| |
| If the hardware interface has the ready busy pin of the NAND chip |
| connected to a GPIO or other accessible I/O pin, this function is used |
| to read back the state of the pin. The function has no arguments and |
| should return 0, if the device is busy (R/B pin is low) and 1, if the |
| device is ready (R/B pin is high). If the hardware interface does not |
| give access to the ready busy pin, then the function must not be defined |
| and the function pointer this->dev_ready is set to NULL. |
| |
| Init function |
| ------------- |
| |
| The init function allocates memory and sets up all the board specific |
| parameters and function pointers. When everything is set up nand_scan() |
| is called. This function tries to detect and identify then chip. If a |
| chip is found all the internal data fields are initialized accordingly. |
| The structure(s) have to be zeroed out first and then filled with the |
| necessary information about the device. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static int __init board_init (void) |
| { |
| struct nand_chip *this; |
| int err = 0; |
| |
| /* Allocate memory for MTD device structure and private data */ |
| this = kzalloc(sizeof(struct nand_chip), GFP_KERNEL); |
| if (!this) { |
| printk ("Unable to allocate NAND MTD device structure.\n"); |
| err = -ENOMEM; |
| goto out; |
| } |
| |
| board_mtd = nand_to_mtd(this); |
| |
| /* map physical address */ |
| baseaddr = ioremap(CHIP_PHYSICAL_ADDRESS, 1024); |
| if (!baseaddr) { |
| printk("Ioremap to access NAND chip failed\n"); |
| err = -EIO; |
| goto out_mtd; |
| } |
| |
| /* Set address of NAND IO lines */ |
| this->IO_ADDR_R = baseaddr; |
| this->IO_ADDR_W = baseaddr; |
| /* Reference hardware control function */ |
| this->hwcontrol = board_hwcontrol; |
| /* Set command delay time, see datasheet for correct value */ |
| this->chip_delay = CHIP_DEPENDEND_COMMAND_DELAY; |
| /* Assign the device ready function, if available */ |
| this->dev_ready = board_dev_ready; |
| this->eccmode = NAND_ECC_SOFT; |
| |
| /* Scan to find existence of the device */ |
| if (nand_scan (board_mtd, 1)) { |
| err = -ENXIO; |
| goto out_ior; |
| } |
| |
| add_mtd_partitions(board_mtd, partition_info, NUM_PARTITIONS); |
| goto out; |
| |
| out_ior: |
| iounmap(baseaddr); |
| out_mtd: |
| kfree (this); |
| out: |
| return err; |
| } |
| module_init(board_init); |
| |
| |
| Exit function |
| ------------- |
| |
| The exit function is only necessary if the driver is compiled as a |
| module. It releases all resources which are held by the chip driver and |
| unregisters the partitions in the MTD layer. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| #ifdef MODULE |
| static void __exit board_cleanup (void) |
| { |
| /* Release resources, unregister device */ |
| nand_release (board_mtd); |
| |
| /* unmap physical address */ |
| iounmap(baseaddr); |
| |
| /* Free the MTD device structure */ |
| kfree (mtd_to_nand(board_mtd)); |
| } |
| module_exit(board_cleanup); |
| #endif |
| |
| |
| Advanced board driver functions |
| =============================== |
| |
| This chapter describes the advanced functionality of the NAND driver. |
| For a list of functions which can be overridden by the board driver see |
| the documentation of the nand_chip structure. |
| |
| Multiple chip control |
| --------------------- |
| |
| The nand driver can control chip arrays. Therefore the board driver must |
| provide an own select_chip function. This function must (de)select the |
| requested chip. The function pointer in the nand_chip structure must be |
| set before calling nand_scan(). The maxchip parameter of nand_scan() |
| defines the maximum number of chips to scan for. Make sure that the |
| select_chip function can handle the requested number of chips. |
| |
| The nand driver concatenates the chips to one virtual chip and provides |
| this virtual chip to the MTD layer. |
| |
| *Note: The driver can only handle linear chip arrays of equally sized |
| chips. There is no support for parallel arrays which extend the |
| buswidth.* |
| |
| *GPIO based example* |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static void board_select_chip (struct mtd_info *mtd, int chip) |
| { |
| /* Deselect all chips, set all nCE pins high */ |
| GPIO(BOARD_NAND_NCE) |= 0xff; |
| if (chip >= 0) |
| GPIO(BOARD_NAND_NCE) &= ~ (1 << chip); |
| } |
| |
| |
| *Address lines based example.* Its assumed that the nCE pins are |
| connected to an address decoder. |
| |
| :: |
| |
| static void board_select_chip (struct mtd_info *mtd, int chip) |
| { |
| struct nand_chip *this = mtd_to_nand(mtd); |
| |
| /* Deselect all chips */ |
| this->IO_ADDR_R &= ~BOARD_NAND_ADDR_MASK; |
| this->IO_ADDR_W &= ~BOARD_NAND_ADDR_MASK; |
| switch (chip) { |
| case 0: |
| this->IO_ADDR_R |= BOARD_NAND_ADDR_CHIP0; |
| this->IO_ADDR_W |= BOARD_NAND_ADDR_CHIP0; |
| break; |
| .... |
| case n: |
| this->IO_ADDR_R |= BOARD_NAND_ADDR_CHIPn; |
| this->IO_ADDR_W |= BOARD_NAND_ADDR_CHIPn; |
| break; |
| } |
| } |
| |
| |
| Hardware ECC support |
| -------------------- |
| |
| Functions and constants |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The nand driver supports three different types of hardware ECC. |
| |
| - NAND_ECC_HW3_256 |
| |
| Hardware ECC generator providing 3 bytes ECC per 256 byte. |
| |
| - NAND_ECC_HW3_512 |
| |
| Hardware ECC generator providing 3 bytes ECC per 512 byte. |
| |
| - NAND_ECC_HW6_512 |
| |
| Hardware ECC generator providing 6 bytes ECC per 512 byte. |
| |
| - NAND_ECC_HW8_512 |
| |
| Hardware ECC generator providing 8 bytes ECC per 512 byte. |
| |
| If your hardware generator has a different functionality add it at the |
| appropriate place in nand_base.c |
| |
| The board driver must provide following functions: |
| |
| - enable_hwecc |
| |
| This function is called before reading / writing to the chip. Reset |
| or initialize the hardware generator in this function. The function |
| is called with an argument which let you distinguish between read and |
| write operations. |
| |
| - calculate_ecc |
| |
| This function is called after read / write from / to the chip. |
| Transfer the ECC from the hardware to the buffer. If the option |
| NAND_HWECC_SYNDROME is set then the function is only called on |
| write. See below. |
| |
| - correct_data |
| |
| In case of an ECC error this function is called for error detection |
| and correction. Return 1 respectively 2 in case the error can be |
| corrected. If the error is not correctable return -1. If your |
| hardware generator matches the default algorithm of the nand_ecc |
| software generator then use the correction function provided by |
| nand_ecc instead of implementing duplicated code. |
| |
| Hardware ECC with syndrome calculation |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Many hardware ECC implementations provide Reed-Solomon codes and |
| calculate an error syndrome on read. The syndrome must be converted to a |
| standard Reed-Solomon syndrome before calling the error correction code |
| in the generic Reed-Solomon library. |
| |
| The ECC bytes must be placed immediately after the data bytes in order |
| to make the syndrome generator work. This is contrary to the usual |
| layout used by software ECC. The separation of data and out of band area |
| is not longer possible. The nand driver code handles this layout and the |
| remaining free bytes in the oob area are managed by the autoplacement |
| code. Provide a matching oob-layout in this case. See rts_from4.c and |
| diskonchip.c for implementation reference. In those cases we must also |
| use bad block tables on FLASH, because the ECC layout is interfering |
| with the bad block marker positions. See bad block table support for |
| details. |
| |
| Bad block table support |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Most NAND chips mark the bad blocks at a defined position in the spare |
| area. Those blocks must not be erased under any circumstances as the bad |
| block information would be lost. It is possible to check the bad block |
| mark each time when the blocks are accessed by reading the spare area of |
| the first page in the block. This is time consuming so a bad block table |
| is used. |
| |
| The nand driver supports various types of bad block tables. |
| |
| - Per device |
| |
| The bad block table contains all bad block information of the device |
| which can consist of multiple chips. |
| |
| - Per chip |
| |
| A bad block table is used per chip and contains the bad block |
| information for this particular chip. |
| |
| - Fixed offset |
| |
| The bad block table is located at a fixed offset in the chip |
| (device). This applies to various DiskOnChip devices. |
| |
| - Automatic placed |
| |
| The bad block table is automatically placed and detected either at |
| the end or at the beginning of a chip (device) |
| |
| - Mirrored tables |
| |
| The bad block table is mirrored on the chip (device) to allow updates |
| of the bad block table without data loss. |
| |
| nand_scan() calls the function nand_default_bbt(). |
| nand_default_bbt() selects appropriate default bad block table |
| descriptors depending on the chip information which was retrieved by |
| nand_scan(). |
| |
| The standard policy is scanning the device for bad blocks and build a |
| ram based bad block table which allows faster access than always |
| checking the bad block information on the flash chip itself. |
| |
| Flash based tables |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| It may be desired or necessary to keep a bad block table in FLASH. For |
| AG-AND chips this is mandatory, as they have no factory marked bad |
| blocks. They have factory marked good blocks. The marker pattern is |
| erased when the block is erased to be reused. So in case of powerloss |
| before writing the pattern back to the chip this block would be lost and |
| added to the bad blocks. Therefore we scan the chip(s) when we detect |
| them the first time for good blocks and store this information in a bad |
| block table before erasing any of the blocks. |
| |
| The blocks in which the tables are stored are protected against |
| accidental access by marking them bad in the memory bad block table. The |
| bad block table management functions are allowed to circumvent this |
| protection. |
| |
| The simplest way to activate the FLASH based bad block table support is |
| to set the option NAND_BBT_USE_FLASH in the bbt_option field of the |
| nand chip structure before calling nand_scan(). For AG-AND chips is |
| this done by default. This activates the default FLASH based bad block |
| table functionality of the NAND driver. The default bad block table |
| options are |
| |
| - Store bad block table per chip |
| |
| - Use 2 bits per block |
| |
| - Automatic placement at the end of the chip |
| |
| - Use mirrored tables with version numbers |
| |
| - Reserve 4 blocks at the end of the chip |
| |
| User defined tables |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| User defined tables are created by filling out a nand_bbt_descr |
| structure and storing the pointer in the nand_chip structure member |
| bbt_td before calling nand_scan(). If a mirror table is necessary a |
| second structure must be created and a pointer to this structure must be |
| stored in bbt_md inside the nand_chip structure. If the bbt_md member |
| is set to NULL then only the main table is used and no scan for the |
| mirrored table is performed. |
| |
| The most important field in the nand_bbt_descr structure is the |
| options field. The options define most of the table properties. Use the |
| predefined constants from rawnand.h to define the options. |
| |
| - Number of bits per block |
| |
| The supported number of bits is 1, 2, 4, 8. |
| |
| - Table per chip |
| |
| Setting the constant NAND_BBT_PERCHIP selects that a bad block |
| table is managed for each chip in a chip array. If this option is not |
| set then a per device bad block table is used. |
| |
| - Table location is absolute |
| |
| Use the option constant NAND_BBT_ABSPAGE and define the absolute |
| page number where the bad block table starts in the field pages. If |
| you have selected bad block tables per chip and you have a multi chip |
| array then the start page must be given for each chip in the chip |
| array. Note: there is no scan for a table ident pattern performed, so |
| the fields pattern, veroffs, offs, len can be left uninitialized |
| |
| - Table location is automatically detected |
| |
| The table can either be located in the first or the last good blocks |
| of the chip (device). Set NAND_BBT_LASTBLOCK to place the bad block |
| table at the end of the chip (device). The bad block tables are |
| marked and identified by a pattern which is stored in the spare area |
| of the first page in the block which holds the bad block table. Store |
| a pointer to the pattern in the pattern field. Further the length of |
| the pattern has to be stored in len and the offset in the spare area |
| must be given in the offs member of the nand_bbt_descr structure. |
| For mirrored bad block tables different patterns are mandatory. |
| |
| - Table creation |
| |
| Set the option NAND_BBT_CREATE to enable the table creation if no |
| table can be found during the scan. Usually this is done only once if |
| a new chip is found. |
| |
| - Table write support |
| |
| Set the option NAND_BBT_WRITE to enable the table write support. |
| This allows the update of the bad block table(s) in case a block has |
| to be marked bad due to wear. The MTD interface function |
| block_markbad is calling the update function of the bad block table. |
| If the write support is enabled then the table is updated on FLASH. |
| |
| Note: Write support should only be enabled for mirrored tables with |
| version control. |
| |
| - Table version control |
| |
| Set the option NAND_BBT_VERSION to enable the table version |
| control. It's highly recommended to enable this for mirrored tables |
| with write support. It makes sure that the risk of losing the bad |
| block table information is reduced to the loss of the information |
| about the one worn out block which should be marked bad. The version |
| is stored in 4 consecutive bytes in the spare area of the device. The |
| position of the version number is defined by the member veroffs in |
| the bad block table descriptor. |
| |
| - Save block contents on write |
| |
| In case that the block which holds the bad block table does contain |
| other useful information, set the option NAND_BBT_SAVECONTENT. When |
| the bad block table is written then the whole block is read the bad |
| block table is updated and the block is erased and everything is |
| written back. If this option is not set only the bad block table is |
| written and everything else in the block is ignored and erased. |
| |
| - Number of reserved blocks |
| |
| For automatic placement some blocks must be reserved for bad block |
| table storage. The number of reserved blocks is defined in the |
| maxblocks member of the bad block table description structure. |
| Reserving 4 blocks for mirrored tables should be a reasonable number. |
| This also limits the number of blocks which are scanned for the bad |
| block table ident pattern. |
| |
| Spare area (auto)placement |
| -------------------------- |
| |
| The nand driver implements different possibilities for placement of |
| filesystem data in the spare area, |
| |
| - Placement defined by fs driver |
| |
| - Automatic placement |
| |
| The default placement function is automatic placement. The nand driver |
| has built in default placement schemes for the various chiptypes. If due |
| to hardware ECC functionality the default placement does not fit then |
| the board driver can provide a own placement scheme. |
| |
| File system drivers can provide a own placement scheme which is used |
| instead of the default placement scheme. |
| |
| Placement schemes are defined by a nand_oobinfo structure |
| |
| :: |
| |
| struct nand_oobinfo { |
| int useecc; |
| int eccbytes; |
| int eccpos[24]; |
| int oobfree[8][2]; |
| }; |
| |
| |
| - useecc |
| |
| The useecc member controls the ecc and placement function. The header |
| file include/mtd/mtd-abi.h contains constants to select ecc and |
| placement. MTD_NANDECC_OFF switches off the ecc complete. This is |
| not recommended and available for testing and diagnosis only. |
| MTD_NANDECC_PLACE selects caller defined placement, |
| MTD_NANDECC_AUTOPLACE selects automatic placement. |
| |
| - eccbytes |
| |
| The eccbytes member defines the number of ecc bytes per page. |
| |
| - eccpos |
| |
| The eccpos array holds the byte offsets in the spare area where the |
| ecc codes are placed. |
| |
| - oobfree |
| |
| The oobfree array defines the areas in the spare area which can be |
| used for automatic placement. The information is given in the format |
| {offset, size}. offset defines the start of the usable area, size the |
| length in bytes. More than one area can be defined. The list is |
| terminated by an {0, 0} entry. |
| |
| Placement defined by fs driver |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| The calling function provides a pointer to a nand_oobinfo structure |
| which defines the ecc placement. For writes the caller must provide a |
| spare area buffer along with the data buffer. The spare area buffer size |
| is (number of pages) \* (size of spare area). For reads the buffer size |
| is (number of pages) \* ((size of spare area) + (number of ecc steps per |
| page) \* sizeof (int)). The driver stores the result of the ecc check |
| for each tuple in the spare buffer. The storage sequence is:: |
| |
| <spare data page 0><ecc result 0>...<ecc result n> |
| |
| ... |
| |
| <spare data page n><ecc result 0>...<ecc result n> |
| |
| This is a legacy mode used by YAFFS1. |
| |
| If the spare area buffer is NULL then only the ECC placement is done |
| according to the given scheme in the nand_oobinfo structure. |
| |
| Automatic placement |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| Automatic placement uses the built in defaults to place the ecc bytes in |
| the spare area. If filesystem data have to be stored / read into the |
| spare area then the calling function must provide a buffer. The buffer |
| size per page is determined by the oobfree array in the nand_oobinfo |
| structure. |
| |
| If the spare area buffer is NULL then only the ECC placement is done |
| according to the default builtin scheme. |
| |
| Spare area autoplacement default schemes |
| ---------------------------------------- |
| |
| 256 byte pagesize |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| ======== ================== =================================================== |
| Offset Content Comment |
| ======== ================== =================================================== |
| 0x00 ECC byte 0 Error correction code byte 0 |
| 0x01 ECC byte 1 Error correction code byte 1 |
| 0x02 ECC byte 2 Error correction code byte 2 |
| 0x03 Autoplace 0 |
| 0x04 Autoplace 1 |
| 0x05 Bad block marker If any bit in this byte is zero, then this |
| block is bad. This applies only to the first |
| page in a block. In the remaining pages this |
| byte is reserved |
| 0x06 Autoplace 2 |
| 0x07 Autoplace 3 |
| ======== ================== =================================================== |
| |
| 512 byte pagesize |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| |
| ============= ================== ============================================== |
| Offset Content Comment |
| ============= ================== ============================================== |
| 0x00 ECC byte 0 Error correction code byte 0 of the lower |
| 256 Byte data in this page |
| 0x01 ECC byte 1 Error correction code byte 1 of the lower |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x02 ECC byte 2 Error correction code byte 2 of the lower |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x03 ECC byte 3 Error correction code byte 0 of the upper |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x04 reserved reserved |
| 0x05 Bad block marker If any bit in this byte is zero, then this |
| block is bad. This applies only to the first |
| page in a block. In the remaining pages this |
| byte is reserved |
| 0x06 ECC byte 4 Error correction code byte 1 of the upper |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x07 ECC byte 5 Error correction code byte 2 of the upper |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x08 - 0x0F Autoplace 0 - 7 |
| ============= ================== ============================================== |
| |
| 2048 byte pagesize |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| =========== ================== ================================================ |
| Offset Content Comment |
| =========== ================== ================================================ |
| 0x00 Bad block marker If any bit in this byte is zero, then this block |
| is bad. This applies only to the first page in a |
| block. In the remaining pages this byte is |
| reserved |
| 0x01 Reserved Reserved |
| 0x02-0x27 Autoplace 0 - 37 |
| 0x28 ECC byte 0 Error correction code byte 0 of the first |
| 256 Byte data in this page |
| 0x29 ECC byte 1 Error correction code byte 1 of the first |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x2A ECC byte 2 Error correction code byte 2 of the first |
| 256 Bytes data in this page |
| 0x2B ECC byte 3 Error correction code byte 0 of the second |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x2C ECC byte 4 Error correction code byte 1 of the second |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x2D ECC byte 5 Error correction code byte 2 of the second |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x2E ECC byte 6 Error correction code byte 0 of the third |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x2F ECC byte 7 Error correction code byte 1 of the third |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x30 ECC byte 8 Error correction code byte 2 of the third |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x31 ECC byte 9 Error correction code byte 0 of the fourth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x32 ECC byte 10 Error correction code byte 1 of the fourth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x33 ECC byte 11 Error correction code byte 2 of the fourth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x34 ECC byte 12 Error correction code byte 0 of the fifth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x35 ECC byte 13 Error correction code byte 1 of the fifth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x36 ECC byte 14 Error correction code byte 2 of the fifth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x37 ECC byte 15 Error correction code byte 0 of the sixth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x38 ECC byte 16 Error correction code byte 1 of the sixth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x39 ECC byte 17 Error correction code byte 2 of the sixth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x3A ECC byte 18 Error correction code byte 0 of the seventh |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x3B ECC byte 19 Error correction code byte 1 of the seventh |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x3C ECC byte 20 Error correction code byte 2 of the seventh |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x3D ECC byte 21 Error correction code byte 0 of the eighth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x3E ECC byte 22 Error correction code byte 1 of the eighth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| 0x3F ECC byte 23 Error correction code byte 2 of the eighth |
| 256 Bytes of data in this page |
| =========== ================== ================================================ |
| |
| Filesystem support |
| ================== |
| |
| The NAND driver provides all necessary functions for a filesystem via |
| the MTD interface. |
| |
| Filesystems must be aware of the NAND peculiarities and restrictions. |
| One major restrictions of NAND Flash is, that you cannot write as often |
| as you want to a page. The consecutive writes to a page, before erasing |
| it again, are restricted to 1-3 writes, depending on the manufacturers |
| specifications. This applies similar to the spare area. |
| |
| Therefore NAND aware filesystems must either write in page size chunks |
| or hold a writebuffer to collect smaller writes until they sum up to |
| pagesize. Available NAND aware filesystems: JFFS2, YAFFS. |
| |
| The spare area usage to store filesystem data is controlled by the spare |
| area placement functionality which is described in one of the earlier |
| chapters. |
| |
| Tools |
| ===== |
| |
| The MTD project provides a couple of helpful tools to handle NAND Flash. |
| |
| - flasherase, flasheraseall: Erase and format FLASH partitions |
| |
| - nandwrite: write filesystem images to NAND FLASH |
| |
| - nanddump: dump the contents of a NAND FLASH partitions |
| |
| These tools are aware of the NAND restrictions. Please use those tools |
| instead of complaining about errors which are caused by non NAND aware |
| access methods. |
| |
| Constants |
| ========= |
| |
| This chapter describes the constants which might be relevant for a |
| driver developer. |
| |
| Chip option constants |
| --------------------- |
| |
| Constants for chip id table |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| These constants are defined in rawnand.h. They are OR-ed together to |
| describe the chip functionality:: |
| |
| /* Buswitdh is 16 bit */ |
| #define NAND_BUSWIDTH_16 0x00000002 |
| /* Device supports partial programming without padding */ |
| #define NAND_NO_PADDING 0x00000004 |
| /* Chip has cache program function */ |
| #define NAND_CACHEPRG 0x00000008 |
| /* Chip has copy back function */ |
| #define NAND_COPYBACK 0x00000010 |
| /* AND Chip which has 4 banks and a confusing page / block |
| * assignment. See Renesas datasheet for further information */ |
| #define NAND_IS_AND 0x00000020 |
| /* Chip has a array of 4 pages which can be read without |
| * additional ready /busy waits */ |
| #define NAND_4PAGE_ARRAY 0x00000040 |
| |
| |
| Constants for runtime options |
| ~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~~ |
| |
| These constants are defined in rawnand.h. They are OR-ed together to |
| describe the functionality:: |
| |
| /* The hw ecc generator provides a syndrome instead a ecc value on read |
| * This can only work if we have the ecc bytes directly behind the |
| * data bytes. Applies for DOC and AG-AND Renesas HW Reed Solomon generators */ |
| #define NAND_HWECC_SYNDROME 0x00020000 |
| |
| |
| ECC selection constants |
| ----------------------- |
| |
| Use these constants to select the ECC algorithm:: |
| |
| /* No ECC. Usage is not recommended ! */ |
| #define NAND_ECC_NONE 0 |
| /* Software ECC 3 byte ECC per 256 Byte data */ |
| #define NAND_ECC_SOFT 1 |
| /* Hardware ECC 3 byte ECC per 256 Byte data */ |
| #define NAND_ECC_HW3_256 2 |
| /* Hardware ECC 3 byte ECC per 512 Byte data */ |
| #define NAND_ECC_HW3_512 3 |
| /* Hardware ECC 6 byte ECC per 512 Byte data */ |
| #define NAND_ECC_HW6_512 4 |
| /* Hardware ECC 8 byte ECC per 512 Byte data */ |
| #define NAND_ECC_HW8_512 6 |
| |
| |
| Hardware control related constants |
| ---------------------------------- |
| |
| These constants describe the requested hardware access function when the |
| boardspecific hardware control function is called:: |
| |
| /* Select the chip by setting nCE to low */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_SETNCE 1 |
| /* Deselect the chip by setting nCE to high */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_CLRNCE 2 |
| /* Select the command latch by setting CLE to high */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_SETCLE 3 |
| /* Deselect the command latch by setting CLE to low */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_CLRCLE 4 |
| /* Select the address latch by setting ALE to high */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_SETALE 5 |
| /* Deselect the address latch by setting ALE to low */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_CLRALE 6 |
| /* Set write protection by setting WP to high. Not used! */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_SETWP 7 |
| /* Clear write protection by setting WP to low. Not used! */ |
| #define NAND_CTL_CLRWP 8 |
| |
| |
| Bad block table related constants |
| --------------------------------- |
| |
| These constants describe the options used for bad block table |
| descriptors:: |
| |
| /* Options for the bad block table descriptors */ |
| |
| /* The number of bits used per block in the bbt on the device */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_NRBITS_MSK 0x0000000F |
| #define NAND_BBT_1BIT 0x00000001 |
| #define NAND_BBT_2BIT 0x00000002 |
| #define NAND_BBT_4BIT 0x00000004 |
| #define NAND_BBT_8BIT 0x00000008 |
| /* The bad block table is in the last good block of the device */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_LASTBLOCK 0x00000010 |
| /* The bbt is at the given page, else we must scan for the bbt */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_ABSPAGE 0x00000020 |
| /* bbt is stored per chip on multichip devices */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_PERCHIP 0x00000080 |
| /* bbt has a version counter at offset veroffs */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_VERSION 0x00000100 |
| /* Create a bbt if none axists */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_CREATE 0x00000200 |
| /* Write bbt if necessary */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_WRITE 0x00001000 |
| /* Read and write back block contents when writing bbt */ |
| #define NAND_BBT_SAVECONTENT 0x00002000 |
| |
| |
| Structures |
| ========== |
| |
| This chapter contains the autogenerated documentation of the structures |
| which are used in the NAND driver and might be relevant for a driver |
| developer. Each struct member has a short description which is marked |
| with an [XXX] identifier. See the chapter "Documentation hints" for an |
| explanation. |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: include/linux/mtd/rawnand.h |
| :internal: |
| |
| Public Functions Provided |
| ========================= |
| |
| This chapter contains the autogenerated documentation of the NAND kernel |
| API functions which are exported. Each function has a short description |
| which is marked with an [XXX] identifier. See the chapter "Documentation |
| hints" for an explanation. |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/mtd/nand/raw/nand_base.c |
| :export: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/mtd/nand/raw/nand_ecc.c |
| :export: |
| |
| Internal Functions Provided |
| =========================== |
| |
| This chapter contains the autogenerated documentation of the NAND driver |
| internal functions. Each function has a short description which is |
| marked with an [XXX] identifier. See the chapter "Documentation hints" |
| for an explanation. The functions marked with [DEFAULT] might be |
| relevant for a board driver developer. |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/mtd/nand/raw/nand_base.c |
| :internal: |
| |
| .. kernel-doc:: drivers/mtd/nand/raw/nand_bbt.c |
| :internal: |
| |
| Credits |
| ======= |
| |
| The following people have contributed to the NAND driver: |
| |
| 1. Steven J. Hill\ sjhill@realitydiluted.com |
| |
| 2. David Woodhouse\ dwmw2@infradead.org |
| |
| 3. Thomas Gleixner\ tglx@linutronix.de |
| |
| A lot of users have provided bugfixes, improvements and helping hands |
| for testing. Thanks a lot. |
| |
| The following people have contributed to this document: |
| |
| 1. Thomas Gleixner\ tglx@linutronix.de |