On Mon, Jun 7, 2021 at 2:32 AM Andrej Picej <andrej.picej@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Some NAND update tools/flashers do not take the full advantage of NAND's > entire page area for ECC purposes. For example, they might only use 2112 > bytes of available 2176 bytes. In this case, ECC parameters have to be > read from the FCB table and taken into account in GPMI NAND xloader to > properly calculate page data length so DMA chain can be executed > correctly. > > Tested on PHYTEC phyCARD i.MX6Q board with following NANDs: > - Samsung K9K8G08U0E (pagesize: 0x800, oobsize: 0x40) > - Winbond W29N08GVSIAA (pagesize: 0x800, oobsize: 0x40) and > - Spansion S34ML08G201FI00 (pagesize: 0x800, oobsize: 0x80). > > All NANDs having set ECC strength to 4 (13 bytes) despite Spansion NAND > chip supporting ECC strength of 9 (29 bytes). There is a bug in NXP's latest imx kernel, lf-5.10.y-1.0.0, that results in the kernel driver incorrectly using the minimum ECC specified in the ONFI nand specs instead of calculating a maximal ecc value and using that, which is what prior kernels and the upstream kernel use. It was caused by incorrectly resolving a conflict when they rebased one of their old patches to 5.10. The common pagesize 0x800, oobsize 0x40 should use 8-bit ECC. That's what the uboot, barebox, and linux drivers would do since the first mxs nand support years ago. It's only the recent kernel bug in nxp's kernel that will choose 4. So rather than switch to 4-bit, it would be better to fix these boards to use 8-bit like they should. More reliable ECC, and it will work correctly on barebox, u-boot, old imx kernels, current upstream kernels, and hopefully future imx kernels. Using the FCB data here might not be such a good idea. While it seems like the right thing, there are some issues: The barebox main gpmi nand driver doesn't use the FCB U-boot doesn't use the FCB No Linux kernel uses the FCB If you try to read/write nand from any of those places, it won't work. The only way to make it work, is to have the FCB match what those drivers do. I think it would have been better if the original design had been for the bootloader to read the FCB, use that to load the kernel, and then fixup the ECC config into the device tree for the kernel to use too. One source, the FCB, which is propagated to all users. Everyone will agree on the ECC and there are no independent settings to keep in sync. But they didn't do that. Each driver figures it out on it's own and hopefully they use matching algorithms that arrive at the same answer. But of course this fails, like with nxp's lf-5.10.y-1.0.0 kernel. This isn't the first time, this same type of bug appeared back in 2013 in 2febcdf84b and was fixed in 031e2777e. So while your commit will allow these boards using poorly chosen FCB values to work with the xloader, they will be corrupted if nand is written to from barebox non-xload or from linux. _______________________________________________ barebox mailing list barebox@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.infradead.org/mailman/listinfo/barebox