On Friday 18 April 2003 05:21, Paul wrote: > Dear All, > > How can I restore the 0xFF in the OOB[5]? i understood the oob[5] is > the bad block indicator. The YAFFS set accidentally the byte to 0x00 . I > want to use JFFS2 but the eraseall command said they are invalid block. I > am > sure that the block is health . So, I want to force set the oob[5] to > oxFF, pls. how can i do? Thank you. > > Paul Generally this is a bad idea to erase bad blocks since destroying factory marked bad blocks can cause problems through the entire chip (not just the bad block). eg. Some blocks are marked because a write to the block could disturb data in another block. More recent chips seem to have some hardware "fuse" blown to prevent bad blocks from being erased. One way to achieve what you want is to hack mkyaffs. mkyaffs erases the blocks in the partition, but first checks for bad block markers. If you comment out the check then it will erase the block regardless. This will set all the bits in the block to 1 (including the bad block marker). BTW: I am curious as to how YAFFS managed to mark your block bad. -- 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.