On Mon, 28 Sep 2020 16:55:28 +0200 Miquel Raynal <miquel.ray...@bootlin.com> wrote:
> > IMHO, grouped means, ecc bytes are at continuous address, where as > > interleaved means ecc bytes splitted into multiple addresses > > I don't like the name. Interleaved means that there are OOB bytes > stored in the data section, which is not the case here. Well, I would argue that the term interleaved alone doesn't say anything about the things that are interleaved. But I guess split/grouped would be fine too if you want to avoid re-using interleaved here. > The way OOB > bytes are organized do not seem relevant to me, I think i prefer the > "_4_/_8_" naming,even if it's not very explicit. The ECC strength doesn't say anything about the scheme used for ECC bytes placement, and you might end up with 2 different schemes providing the same strength, or the same scheme used for 2 different strengths.