On Fri, 31 May 2002 20:35, Thomas Gleixner wrote: > On Friday, 31. May 2002 10:04, Charles Manning wrote: > > For my continuing education: Which NANDs only support a single page > > write? All the stuff I've looked at allows at least 3 writes to the page. > > I had some offlist discussion with a Samsung engineer. He told me that they > will restrict consecutive writes to 1 write to page and 2 writes to oob due > to some modifications in the silicon. They decreased the number of > consecutives writes from 10 to 4 to 3 and will decrease it to 2. I think > the preliminary datasheet of the 256MB chip, tells this already. > He told me further, that data security may be affected by consecutive > writes even on chips, which allow more consecutive writes. If you have a > look at the chip structure, it is obvious, that there can be a influence on > cells. So we decided to do only 1 write to a page and 2 writes to oob. I > think, you did the same. > > The other point is, that you must not do > write 0xf7 0xaa > and then > write 0xf6 0xaa > This will fail on some chips. We have done a lot of tests, when we > implemented JFFS2 on top of NAND. You can only do: > write 0xff 0xaa > and then > write 0xf6 0xaa Thanx Thomas I have a spare byte in the yaffs OOB area that is designated "status". This was originally earmarked for the purpose of identifying status, but then I just changed to stomping the tags. I will change this back to be used to indicate status. That will make everyone happy (incl. Samsung's engineers). -- Charles --------------------------------------------------------------------------------------- This mailing list is hosted by Toby Churchill open software (www.toby-churchill.org). If mailing list membership is no longer wanted you can remove yourself from the list by sending an email to yaffs-request@toby-churchill.org with the text "unsubscribe" (without the quotes) as the subject.