diff options
author | Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com> | 2008-07-16 10:25:56 +0300 |
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committer | Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com> | 2008-07-24 13:32:56 +0300 |
commit | 85c6e6e28259e9b58b8984db536c45bc3161f40c (patch) | |
tree | f389adfe74753f318290b45b7ce190421d18c48e /drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c | |
parent | bb84c1a199558962edf4b4aeb4480fb09aa09b91 (diff) |
UBI: amend commentaries
Hch asked not to use "unit" for sub-systems, let it be so.
Also some other commentaries modifications.
Signed-off-by: Artem Bityutskiy <Artem.Bityutskiy@nokia.com>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c')
-rw-r--r-- | drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c | 94 |
1 files changed, 47 insertions, 47 deletions
diff --git a/drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c b/drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c index cc8fe2934d2b..761952ba125b 100644 --- a/drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c +++ b/drivers/mtd/ubi/wl.c @@ -19,22 +19,22 @@ */ /* - * UBI wear-leveling unit. + * UBI wear-leveling sub-system. * - * This unit is responsible for wear-leveling. It works in terms of physical - * eraseblocks and erase counters and knows nothing about logical eraseblocks, - * volumes, etc. From this unit's perspective all physical eraseblocks are of - * two types - used and free. Used physical eraseblocks are those that were - * "get" by the 'ubi_wl_get_peb()' function, and free physical eraseblocks are - * those that were put by the 'ubi_wl_put_peb()' function. + * This sub-system is responsible for wear-leveling. It works in terms of + * physical* eraseblocks and erase counters and knows nothing about logical + * eraseblocks, volumes, etc. From this sub-system's perspective all physical + * eraseblocks are of two types - used and free. Used physical eraseblocks are + * those that were "get" by the 'ubi_wl_get_peb()' function, and free physical + * eraseblocks are those that were put by the 'ubi_wl_put_peb()' function. * * Physical eraseblocks returned by 'ubi_wl_get_peb()' have only erase counter - * header. The rest of the physical eraseblock contains only 0xFF bytes. + * header. The rest of the physical eraseblock contains only %0xFF bytes. * - * When physical eraseblocks are returned to the WL unit by means of the + * When physical eraseblocks are returned to the WL sub-system by means of the * 'ubi_wl_put_peb()' function, they are scheduled for erasure. The erasure is * done asynchronously in context of the per-UBI device background thread, - * which is also managed by the WL unit. + * which is also managed by the WL sub-system. * * The wear-leveling is ensured by means of moving the contents of used * physical eraseblocks with low erase counter to free physical eraseblocks @@ -43,34 +43,36 @@ * The 'ubi_wl_get_peb()' function accepts data type hints which help to pick * an "optimal" physical eraseblock. For example, when it is known that the * physical eraseblock will be "put" soon because it contains short-term data, - * the WL unit may pick a free physical eraseblock with low erase counter, and - * so forth. + * the WL sub-system may pick a free physical eraseblock with low erase + * counter, and so forth. * - * If the WL unit fails to erase a physical eraseblock, it marks it as bad. + * If the WL sub-system fails to erase a physical eraseblock, it marks it as + * bad. * - * This unit is also responsible for scrubbing. If a bit-flip is detected in a - * physical eraseblock, it has to be moved. Technically this is the same as - * moving it for wear-leveling reasons. + * This sub-system is also responsible for scrubbing. If a bit-flip is detected + * in a physical eraseblock, it has to be moved. Technically this is the same + * as moving it for wear-leveling reasons. * - * As it was said, for the UBI unit all physical eraseblocks are either "free" - * or "used". Free eraseblock are kept in the @wl->free RB-tree, while used - * eraseblocks are kept in a set of different RB-trees: @wl->used, + * As it was said, for the UBI sub-system all physical eraseblocks are either + * "free" or "used". Free eraseblock are kept in the @wl->free RB-tree, while + * used eraseblocks are kept in a set of different RB-trees: @wl->used, * @wl->prot.pnum, @wl->prot.aec, and @wl->scrub. * * Note, in this implementation, we keep a small in-RAM object for each physical * eraseblock. This is surely not a scalable solution. But it appears to be good * enough for moderately large flashes and it is simple. In future, one may - * re-work this unit and make it more scalable. + * re-work this sub-system and make it more scalable. * - * At the moment this unit does not utilize the sequence number, which was - * introduced relatively recently. But it would be wise to do this because the - * sequence number of a logical eraseblock characterizes how old is it. For + * At the moment this sub-system does not utilize the sequence number, which + * was introduced relatively recently. But it would be wise to do this because + * the sequence number of a logical eraseblock characterizes how old is it. For * example, when we move a PEB with low erase counter, and we need to pick the * target PEB, we pick a PEB with the highest EC if our PEB is "old" and we * pick target PEB with an average EC if our PEB is not very "old". This is a - * room for future re-works of the WL unit. + * room for future re-works of the WL sub-system. * - * FIXME: looks too complex, should be simplified (later). + * Note: the stuff with protection trees looks too complex and is difficult to + * understand. Should be fixed. */ #include <linux/slab.h> @@ -92,20 +94,21 @@ /* * Maximum difference between two erase counters. If this threshold is - * exceeded, the WL unit starts moving data from used physical eraseblocks with - * low erase counter to free physical eraseblocks with high erase counter. + * exceeded, the WL sub-system starts moving data from used physical + * eraseblocks with low erase counter to free physical eraseblocks with high + * erase counter. */ #define UBI_WL_THRESHOLD CONFIG_MTD_UBI_WL_THRESHOLD /* - * When a physical eraseblock is moved, the WL unit has to pick the target + * When a physical eraseblock is moved, the WL sub-system has to pick the target * physical eraseblock to move to. The simplest way would be just to pick the * one with the highest erase counter. But in certain workloads this could lead * to an unlimited wear of one or few physical eraseblock. Indeed, imagine a * situation when the picked physical eraseblock is constantly erased after the * data is written to it. So, we have a constant which limits the highest erase - * counter of the free physical eraseblock to pick. Namely, the WL unit does - * not pick eraseblocks with erase counter greater then the lowest erase + * counter of the free physical eraseblock to pick. Namely, the WL sub-system + * does not pick eraseblocks with erase counter greater then the lowest erase * counter plus %WL_FREE_MAX_DIFF. */ #define WL_FREE_MAX_DIFF (2*UBI_WL_THRESHOLD) @@ -123,11 +126,11 @@ * @abs_ec: the absolute erase counter value when the protection ends * @e: the wear-leveling entry of the physical eraseblock under protection * - * When the WL unit returns a physical eraseblock, the physical eraseblock is - * protected from being moved for some "time". For this reason, the physical - * eraseblock is not directly moved from the @wl->free tree to the @wl->used - * tree. There is one more tree in between where this physical eraseblock is - * temporarily stored (@wl->prot). + * When the WL sub-system returns a physical eraseblock, the physical + * eraseblock is protected from being moved for some "time". For this reason, + * the physical eraseblock is not directly moved from the @wl->free tree to the + * @wl->used tree. There is one more tree in between where this physical + * eraseblock is temporarily stored (@wl->prot). * * All this protection stuff is needed because: * o we don't want to move physical eraseblocks just after we have given them @@ -175,7 +178,6 @@ struct ubi_wl_prot_entry { * @list: a link in the list of pending works * @func: worker function * @priv: private data of the worker function - * * @e: physical eraseblock to erase * @torture: if the physical eraseblock has to be tortured * @@ -1136,7 +1138,7 @@ out_ro: } /** - * ubi_wl_put_peb - return a physical eraseblock to the wear-leveling unit. + * ubi_wl_put_peb - return a PEB to the wear-leveling sub-system. * @ubi: UBI device description object * @pnum: physical eraseblock to return * @torture: if this physical eraseblock has to be tortured @@ -1175,11 +1177,11 @@ retry: /* * User is putting the physical eraseblock which was selected * as the target the data is moved to. It may happen if the EBA - * unit already re-mapped the LEB in 'ubi_eba_copy_leb()' but - * the WL unit has not put the PEB to the "used" tree yet, but - * it is about to do this. So we just set a flag which will - * tell the WL worker that the PEB is not needed anymore and - * should be scheduled for erasure. + * sub-system already re-mapped the LEB in 'ubi_eba_copy_leb()' + * but the WL sub-system has not put the PEB to the "used" tree + * yet, but it is about to do this. So we just set a flag which + * will tell the WL worker that the PEB is not needed anymore + * and should be scheduled for erasure. */ dbg_wl("PEB %d is the target of data moving", pnum); ubi_assert(!ubi->move_to_put); @@ -1425,8 +1427,7 @@ static void cancel_pending(struct ubi_device *ubi) } /** - * ubi_wl_init_scan - initialize the wear-leveling unit using scanning - * information. + * ubi_wl_init_scan - initialize the WL sub-system using scanning information. * @ubi: UBI device description object * @si: scanning information * @@ -1583,13 +1584,12 @@ static void protection_trees_destroy(struct ubi_device *ubi) } /** - * ubi_wl_close - close the wear-leveling unit. + * ubi_wl_close - close the wear-leveling sub-system. * @ubi: UBI device description object */ void ubi_wl_close(struct ubi_device *ubi) { - dbg_wl("close the UBI wear-leveling unit"); - + dbg_wl("close the WL sub-system"); cancel_pending(ubi); protection_trees_destroy(ubi); tree_destroy(&ubi->used); |