diff options
author | Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com> | 2012-05-17 17:12:26 +0400 |
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committer | Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com> | 2012-05-20 21:26:04 +0400 |
commit | fbd0107f4d33be01c9fb2c630036bd66b7e3d4dc (patch) | |
tree | d8ebd19a5cba548daea0c33f774ff7847b9cc523 /drivers/mtd/ubi | |
parent | 1fc2e3e59d78999fc4be7349af769cf6621b9e61 (diff) | |
download | linux-fbd0107f4d33be01c9fb2c630036bd66b7e3d4dc.tar.xz |
UBI: amend comments after all the renamings
This patch amends commentaries in scan.[ch] to match the new logic. Reminder -
we did the restructuring to prepare the code for adding the fastmap. This patch
also renames a couple of functions - it was too difficult to separate out that
change and I decided that it is not too bad to have it in the same patch with
commentaries changes.
Signed-off-by: Artem Bityutskiy <artem.bityutskiy@linux.intel.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/mtd/ubi')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/build.c | 12 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/io.c | 3 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.c | 111 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.h | 2 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h | 4 | ||||
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/vtbl.c | 22 |
6 files changed, 73 insertions, 81 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/build.c b/drivers/mtd/ubi/build.c index 2a8f26b560f6..7f293b284ddb 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/build.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/build.c @@ -27,10 +27,6 @@ * module load parameters or the kernel boot parameters. If MTD devices were * specified, UBI does not attach any MTD device, but it is possible to do * later using the "UBI control device". - * - * At the moment we only attach UBI devices by scanning, which will become a - * bottleneck when flashes reach certain large size. Then one may improve UBI - * and add other methods, although it does not seem to be easy to do. */ #include <linux/err.h> @@ -790,11 +786,11 @@ static int io_init(struct ubi_device *ubi) ubi_msg("data offset: %d", ubi->leb_start); /* - * Note, ideally, we have to initialize ubi->bad_peb_count here. But + * Note, ideally, we have to initialize @ubi->bad_peb_count here. But * unfortunately, MTD does not provide this information. We should loop * over all physical eraseblocks and invoke mtd->block_is_bad() for - * each physical eraseblock. So, we skip ubi->bad_peb_count - * uninitialized and initialize it after scanning. + * each physical eraseblock. So, we leave @ubi->bad_peb_count + * uninitialized so far. */ return 0; @@ -805,7 +801,7 @@ static int io_init(struct ubi_device *ubi) * @ubi: UBI device description object * @vol_id: ID of the volume to re-size * - * This function re-sizes the volume marked by the @UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG in + * This function re-sizes the volume marked by the %UBI_VTBL_AUTORESIZE_FLG in * the volume table to the largest possible size. See comments in ubi-header.h * for more description of the flag. Returns zero in case of success and a * negative error code in case of failure. diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/io.c b/drivers/mtd/ubi/io.c index c37298577789..a8d523794b52 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/io.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/io.c @@ -513,8 +513,7 @@ static int nor_erase_prepare(struct ubi_device *ubi, int pnum) * It is important to first invalidate the EC header, and then the VID * header. Otherwise a power cut may lead to valid EC header and * invalid VID header, in which case UBI will treat this PEB as - * corrupted and will try to preserve it, and print scary warnings (see - * the header comment in scan.c for more information). + * corrupted and will try to preserve it, and print scary warnings. */ addr = (loff_t)pnum * ubi->peb_size; err = mtd_write(ubi->mtd, addr, 4, &written, (void *)&data); diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.c b/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.c index 06a2d7062136..93257f3c25d0 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.c @@ -19,21 +19,21 @@ */ /* - * UBI scanning sub-system. + * UBI attaching sub-system. * - * This sub-system is responsible for scanning the flash media, checking UBI - * headers and providing complete information about the UBI flash image. + * This sub-system is responsible for attaching MTD devices and it also + * implements flash media scanning. * * The attaching information is represented by a &struct ubi_attach_info' - * object. Information about found volumes is represented by - * &struct ubi_ainf_volume objects which are kept in volume RB-tree with root - * at the @volumes field. The RB-tree is indexed by the volume ID. + * object. Information about volumes is represented by &struct ubi_ainf_volume + * objects which are kept in volume RB-tree with root at the @volumes field. + * The RB-tree is indexed by the volume ID. * - * Scanned logical eraseblocks are represented by &struct ubi_ainf_peb objects. - * These objects are kept in per-volume RB-trees with the root at the - * corresponding &struct ubi_ainf_volume object. To put it differently, we keep - * an RB-tree of per-volume objects and each of these objects is the root of - * RB-tree of per-eraseblock objects. + * Logical eraseblocks are represented by &struct ubi_ainf_peb objects. These + * objects are kept in per-volume RB-trees with the root at the corresponding + * &struct ubi_ainf_volume object. To put it differently, we keep an RB-tree of + * per-volume objects and each of these objects is the root of RB-tree of + * per-LEB objects. * * Corrupted physical eraseblocks are put to the @corr list, free physical * eraseblocks are put to the @free list and the physical eraseblock to be @@ -51,28 +51,29 @@ * * 1. Corruptions caused by power cuts. These are expected corruptions and UBI * tries to handle them gracefully, without printing too many warnings and - * error messages. The idea is that we do not lose important data in these case - * - we may lose only the data which was being written to the media just before - * the power cut happened, and the upper layers (e.g., UBIFS) are supposed to - * handle such data losses (e.g., by using the FS journal). + * error messages. The idea is that we do not lose important data in these + * cases - we may lose only the data which were being written to the media just + * before the power cut happened, and the upper layers (e.g., UBIFS) are + * supposed to handle such data losses (e.g., by using the FS journal). * * When UBI detects a corruption (CRC-32 mismatch) in a PEB, and it looks like * the reason is a power cut, UBI puts this PEB to the @erase list, and all * PEBs in the @erase list are scheduled for erasure later. * * 2. Unexpected corruptions which are not caused by power cuts. During - * scanning, such PEBs are put to the @corr list and UBI preserves them. + * attaching, such PEBs are put to the @corr list and UBI preserves them. * Obviously, this lessens the amount of available PEBs, and if at some point * UBI runs out of free PEBs, it switches to R/O mode. UBI also loudly informs * about such PEBs every time the MTD device is attached. * * However, it is difficult to reliably distinguish between these types of - * corruptions and UBI's strategy is as follows. UBI assumes corruption type 2 - * if the VID header is corrupted and the data area does not contain all 0xFFs, - * and there were no bit-flips or integrity errors while reading the data area. - * Otherwise UBI assumes corruption type 1. So the decision criteria are as - * follows. - * o If the data area contains only 0xFFs, there is no data, and it is safe + * corruptions and UBI's strategy is as follows (in case of attaching by + * scanning). UBI assumes corruption type 2 if the VID header is corrupted and + * the data area does not contain all 0xFFs, and there were no bit-flips or + * integrity errors (e.g., ECC errors in case of NAND) while reading the data + * area. Otherwise UBI assumes corruption type 1. So the decision criteria + * are as follows. + * o If the data area contains only 0xFFs, there are no data, and it is safe * to just erase this PEB - this is corruption type 1. * o If the data area has bit-flips or data integrity errors (ECC errors on * NAND), it is probably a PEB which was being erased when power cut @@ -102,7 +103,8 @@ static struct ubi_vid_hdr *vidh; * @to_head: if not zero, add to the head of the list * @list: the list to add to * - * This function adds physical eraseblock @pnum to free, erase, or alien lists. + * This function allocates a 'struct ubi_ainf_peb' object for physical + * eraseblock @pnum and adds it to the "free", "erase", or "alien" lists. * If @to_head is not zero, PEB will be added to the head of the list, which * basically means it will be processed first later. E.g., we add corrupted * PEBs (corrupted due to power cuts) to the head of the erase list to make @@ -144,9 +146,10 @@ static int add_to_list(struct ubi_attach_info *ai, int pnum, int ec, * @pnum: physical eraseblock number to add * @ec: erase counter of the physical eraseblock * - * This function adds corrupted physical eraseblock @pnum to the 'corr' list. - * The corruption was presumably not caused by a power cut. Returns zero in - * case of success and a negative error code in case of failure. + * This function allocates a 'struct ubi_ainf_peb' object for a corrupted + * physical eraseblock @pnum and adds it to the 'corr' list. The corruption + * was presumably not caused by a power cut. Returns zero in case of success + * and a negative error code in case of failure. */ static int add_corrupted(struct ubi_attach_info *ai, int pnum, int ec) { @@ -241,8 +244,8 @@ bad: * If the volume corresponding to the @vid_hdr logical eraseblock is already * present in the attaching information, this function does nothing. Otherwise * it adds corresponding volume to the attaching information. Returns a pointer - * to the scanning volume object in case of success and a negative error code - * in case of failure. + * to the allocated "av" object in case of success and a negative error code in + * case of failure. */ static struct ubi_ainf_volume *add_volume(struct ubi_attach_info *ai, int vol_id, int pnum, @@ -425,7 +428,7 @@ out_free_vidh: } /** - * ubi_add_to_av - add physical eraseblock to the attaching information. + * ubi_add_to_av - add used physical eraseblock to the attaching information. * @ubi: UBI device description object * @ai: attaching information * @pnum: the physical eraseblock number @@ -692,8 +695,8 @@ out_free: * the lists, writes the EC header if it is needed, and removes it from the * list. * - * This function returns scanning physical eraseblock information in case of - * success and an error code in case of failure. + * This function returns a pointer to the "aeb" of the found free PEB in case + * of success and an error code in case of failure. */ struct ubi_ainf_peb *ubi_early_get_peb(struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai) @@ -793,16 +796,18 @@ out_unlock: } /** - * process_eb - read, check UBI headers, and add them to attaching information. + * scan_peb - scan and process UBI headers of a PEB. * @ubi: UBI device description object * @ai: attaching information * @pnum: the physical eraseblock number * - * This function returns a zero if the physical eraseblock was successfully - * handled and a negative error code in case of failure. + * This function reads UBI headers of PEB @pnum, checks them, and adds + * information about this PEB to the corresponding list or RB-tree in the + * "attaching info" structure. Returns zero if the physical eraseblock was + * successfully handled and a negative error code in case of failure. */ -static int process_eb(struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai, - int pnum) +static int scan_peb(struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai, + int pnum) { long long uninitialized_var(ec); int err, bitflips = 0, vol_id, ec_err = 0; @@ -814,11 +819,6 @@ static int process_eb(struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai, if (err < 0) return err; else if (err) { - /* - * FIXME: this is actually duty of the I/O sub-system to - * initialize this, but MTD does not provide enough - * information. - */ ai->bad_peb_count += 1; return 0; } @@ -1033,18 +1033,17 @@ adjust_mean_ec: } /** - * check_what_we_have - check what PEB were found by scanning. + * late_analysis - analyze the overall situation with PEB. * @ubi: UBI device description object * @ai: attaching information * - * This is a helper function which takes a look what PEBs were found by - * scanning, and decides whether the flash is empty and should be formatted and - * whether there are too many corrupted PEBs and we should not attach this - * MTD device. Returns zero if we should proceed with attaching the MTD device, - * and %-EINVAL if we should not. + * This is a helper function which takes a look what PEBs we have after we + * gather information about all of them ("ai" is compete). It decides whether + * the flash is empty and should be formatted of whether there are too many + * corrupted PEBs and we should not attach this MTD device. Returns zero if we + * should proceed with attaching the MTD device, and %-EINVAL if we should not. */ -static int check_what_we_have(struct ubi_device *ubi, - struct ubi_attach_info *ai) +static int late_analysis(struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai) { struct ubi_ainf_peb *aeb; int max_corr, peb_count; @@ -1112,7 +1111,8 @@ static int check_what_we_have(struct ubi_device *ubi, * @ubi: UBI device description object * * This function does full scanning of an MTD device and returns complete - * information about it. In case of failure, an error code is returned. + * information about it in form of a "struct ubi_attach_info" object. In case + * of failure, an error code is returned. */ struct ubi_attach_info *ubi_scan(struct ubi_device *ubi) { @@ -1151,7 +1151,7 @@ struct ubi_attach_info *ubi_scan(struct ubi_device *ubi) cond_resched(); dbg_gen("process PEB %d", pnum); - err = process_eb(ubi, ai, pnum); + err = scan_peb(ubi, ai, pnum); if (err < 0) goto out_vidh; } @@ -1162,7 +1162,7 @@ struct ubi_attach_info *ubi_scan(struct ubi_device *ubi) if (ai->ec_count) ai->mean_ec = div_u64(ai->ec_sum, ai->ec_count); - err = check_what_we_have(ubi, ai); + err = late_analysis(ubi, ai); if (err) goto out_vidh; @@ -1208,12 +1208,11 @@ out_ai: } /** - * destroy_av - free the scanning volume information - * @av: scanning volume information + * destroy_av - free volume attaching information. + * @av: volume attaching information * @ai: attaching information * - * This function destroys the volume RB-tree (@av->root) and the scanning - * volume information. + * This function destroys the volume attaching information. */ static void destroy_av(struct ubi_attach_info *ai, struct ubi_ainf_volume *av) { diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.h b/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.h index 20bec7cf9ac8..a794577d0f30 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.h +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/scan.h @@ -146,7 +146,7 @@ struct ubi_vid_hdr; * ubi_move_aeb_to_list - move a PEB from the volume tree to a list. * * @av: volume attaching information - * @aeb: scanning eraseblock information + * @aeb: attaching eraseblock information * @list: the list to move to */ static inline void ubi_move_aeb_to_list(struct ubi_ainf_volume *av, diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h b/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h index 6fb8ec2174a5..07cd88f2b203 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/ubi-media.h @@ -149,10 +149,10 @@ enum { * The @image_seq field is used to validate a UBI image that has been prepared * for a UBI device. The @image_seq value can be any value, but it must be the * same on all eraseblocks. UBI will ensure that all new erase counter headers - * also contain this value, and will check the value when scanning at start-up. + * also contain this value, and will check the value when attaching the flash. * One way to make use of @image_seq is to increase its value by one every time * an image is flashed over an existing image, then, if the flashing does not - * complete, UBI will detect the error when scanning. + * complete, UBI will detect the error when attaching the media. */ struct ubi_ec_hdr { __be32 magic; diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/vtbl.c b/drivers/mtd/ubi/vtbl.c index 341c956c8cdb..437bc193e170 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/vtbl.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/vtbl.c @@ -37,16 +37,15 @@ * LEB 1. This scheme guarantees recoverability from unclean reboots. * * In this UBI implementation the on-flash volume table does not contain any - * information about how many data static volumes contain. This information may - * be found from the scanning data. + * information about how much data static volumes contain. * * But it would still be beneficial to store this information in the volume * table. For example, suppose we have a static volume X, and all its physical * eraseblocks became bad for some reasons. Suppose we are attaching the - * corresponding MTD device, the scanning has found no logical eraseblocks + * corresponding MTD device, for some reason we find no logical eraseblocks * corresponding to the volume X. According to the volume table volume X does * exist. So we don't know whether it is just empty or all its physical - * eraseblocks went bad. So we cannot alarm the user about this corruption. + * eraseblocks went bad. So we cannot alarm the user properly. * * The volume table also stores so-called "update marker", which is used for * volume updates. Before updating the volume, the update marker is set, and @@ -702,16 +701,16 @@ bad: } /** - * check_scanning_info - check that attaching information. + * check_attaching_info - check that attaching information. * @ubi: UBI device description object * @ai: attaching information * * Even though we protect on-flash data by CRC checksums, we still don't trust * the media. This function ensures that attaching information is consistent to - * the information read from the volume table. Returns zero if the scanning + * the information read from the volume table. Returns zero if the attaching * information is OK and %-EINVAL if it is not. */ -static int check_scanning_info(const struct ubi_device *ubi, +static int check_attaching_info(const struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai) { int err, i; @@ -719,15 +718,14 @@ static int check_scanning_info(const struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_volume *vol; if (ai->vols_found > UBI_INT_VOL_COUNT + ubi->vtbl_slots) { - ubi_err("scanning found %d volumes, maximum is %d + %d", + ubi_err("found %d volumes while attaching, maximum is %d + %d", ai->vols_found, UBI_INT_VOL_COUNT, ubi->vtbl_slots); return -EINVAL; } if (ai->highest_vol_id >= ubi->vtbl_slots + UBI_INT_VOL_COUNT && ai->highest_vol_id < UBI_INTERNAL_VOL_START) { - ubi_err("too large volume ID %d found by scanning", - ai->highest_vol_id); + ubi_err("too large volume ID %d found", ai->highest_vol_id); return -EINVAL; } @@ -749,7 +747,7 @@ static int check_scanning_info(const struct ubi_device *ubi, continue; /* - * During scanning we found a volume which does not + * During attaching we found a volume which does not * exist according to the information in the volume * table. This must have happened due to an unclean * reboot while the volume was being removed. Discard @@ -839,7 +837,7 @@ int ubi_read_volume_table(struct ubi_device *ubi, struct ubi_attach_info *ai) * Make sure that the attaching information is consistent to the * information stored in the volume table. */ - err = check_scanning_info(ubi, ai); + err = check_attaching_info(ubi, ai); if (err) goto out_free; |