On Friday 16 April 2004 21:50, Domenico Di Tullio wrote:
> Hi,
>
> I want know how many RAM is used for to store the structure for YAFFS.
>
> Thanks,
> Domenico
The following is reposted from a mail of a few months back:
Calculating an exact footprint is no easy task. There are many dependencies.
What OS? I assume Linux.
Assuming the standard block size of 512bytes per page and 16kB per block.
1) Code size. This is dependent on various factors including CPU choice,
optiomisation options etc. As a rough guide, the yaffs.o Linux module for x86
is around 55kBytes. This could be made smaller by stripping the debug text
and ECC code if you don't need that.
2) Run-time data structures. Some of these are fixed size and others are
generated in runtime and change as your file structures change. As a rough
guide though I will give the following:
a) Each yaffs partition needs a device structure of less than 1kB + approx
2-4kB stack with the current implementation.
b) If shortOpCaches are enabled, then 524 bytes per cache entry (5 to 10 is a
good number).
c) About 120 bytes per file. (With short name caching enabled)
d) About 4 bytes per block of NAND (ie. about 128 bytes per MB of NAND).
e) About 4kBytes of RAM per MB of NAND for building the file TNode trees that
are used to locate the data chunks.
Thus for a system using a 64MByte NAND and say 500 files you can budget on
approx:
1) 55kBytes
2a) 5kB
2b) 3kB (5 cache entries).
2c) 60kB
2d) 16kB
2e) 256kB
Total 410kBytes
The last item, the tnodes, is the biggest expense in YAFFS. This can be
reduced significantly by using a larger page size.
There are some opportunities to tune some of these numbers so please feel
free to discusss further if required.
-- CHarles
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