because i hadn't nderstood it in deep:
when i would for example do an nand_erase on mtd6 and would make for
example an ext3 of it,
would this work or is the jffs necessary for writing into nand (mtd6) ?
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because i hadn't nderstood it in deep:
when i would for example do an nand_erase on mtd6 and would make for
example an ext3 of it,
would this work or is the jffs necessary for writing into nand (mtd6) ?
You may create ext3 on top of mtdblock6, however this will be slower than
ext3, and
because i hadn't nderstood it in deep:
when i would for example do an nand_erase on mtd6 and would make for
example an ext3 of it,
would this work or is the jffs necessary for writing into nand (mtd6)
?
You may create ext3 on top of mtdblock6, however this will be slower
than
Nikita V. Youshchenko schrieb:
because i hadn't nderstood it in deep:
when i would for example do an nand_erase on mtd6 and would make for
example an ext3 of it,
would this work or is the jffs necessary for writing into nand (mtd6)
?
You may create ext3 on top of mtdblock6, however
On Wednesday 28 October 2009, Matthias Huber wrote:
Nikita V. Youshchenko schrieb:
because i hadn't nderstood it in deep:
when i would for example do an nand_erase on mtd6 and would make for
example an ext3 of it,
would this work or is the jffs necessary for writing into nand (mtd6)
Matthias Huber wrote:
because i hadn't nderstood it in deep:
when i would for example do an nand_erase on mtd6 and would make for
example an ext3 of it,
would this work or is the jffs necessary for writing into nand (mtd6) ?
I'd suggest to move to ubifs... I'm using it (I'm still with an
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