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When writing to a flash device, what if the data size is less than the size of one page, how does OS deal with this writing request?

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  • Note sure that I understand your question. Please keep in mind that: "For questions on Adobe's cross-platform multimedia runtime used to embed animations, video, and interactive applications into web pages. For questions related to memory, use the tag [flash-memory]."
    – Ahmad F
    Feb 24, 2019 at 14:18
  • Maybe fill the remaining with ZERO?
    – VC.One
    Feb 25, 2019 at 10:51

1 Answer 1

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This depends on the type of flash.

  • NAND flash has block oriented reads and writes with much larger erase-units
  • NOR flash typically allows byte-wise reads and writes with much larger erase-units.

In both cases, the initial/erased state is 1 and a write pulls bits down to 0. Erasing returns them back to 1. Erases typically take much longer than writes. Neither is terribly quick

If a 1 bit is written to the device during a write cycle, noting happens. Thus it is possible with both types of device to perform a read-modify-write to achieve bit-level granularity.

In practice, most flash storage is used in a way that emulates magnetic rotating discs. These only support block-level reads and writes. Operating system already use a number of strategies to deal with the wasted space this causes - one of which is to not bother and just simply waste it.

A problem with both types is that the erase-units are much bigger than blocks: thus it is necessary to empty an erase-unit of valid blocks before it can be erased.

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