It is perfectly clear to me that a change of brute force will not work.
And extracting the raw memories via a NAND reader, I figure I'll have to rebuild a sort of virtual RAID from the SSD. ?
In general my questions may be somewhat awkward recently research on the subject seems incredibly interesting
Can you recommend information to better understand the subject?
EJ:
http://rusolut.com/HaQue wrote:
What is the marvell chip number?
Swapping won't work.
at the bare minimum, if it were possible, you would probably need to match exactly:
firmware version / revision
controller version / revision
nand chip part number
board revision
- hope that whatever bad blocks / bad columns are handled correctly
-hope no tables, config data etc are stored on the controller
-hope SSD does not instantly write anything to chips for whatever reason if things dont look right to its initialisation.
If I wanted data, the only way I would try this is to dump each nand chip first during the process while they are off anyway.
Marvell controllers are not dumb algorithmic controllers like Phison / SMI / Alcor. They are more like a microprocessor. There are alot of buzzwords used when they talk about how the controller stores data economically and safely, which translates to "hard to recover"