[Looks like this buffer was laying dormant in my Emacs and never sent.
Hence the delay... ;-) ]
>>>>> On Thu, 2 May 2002 10:20:11 +1000, Anton Blanchard <anton@samba.org> said:
>> so ia64 is one of those archs with a ram layout with huge holes
>> in the middle of the ram of the nodes? I'd be curious to know
>> what's the hardware advantage of designing the ram layout in such
>> a way, compared to all other numa archs that I deal with. Also if
>> you know other archs with huge holes in the middle of the ram of
>> the nodes I'd be curious to know about them too. thanks for the
>> interesting info!
>> From arch/ppc64/kernel/iSeries_setup.c:
Anton> * The iSeries may have very large memories ( > 128 GB ) and
Anton> a partition * may get memory in "chunks" that may be anywhere
Anton> in the 2**52 real * address space. The chunks are 256K in
Anton> size.
Anton> Also check out CONFIG_MSCHUNKS code and see why I'd love to
Anton> see a generic solution to this problem.
Me too. HP's zx1 platform also has a rather giant hole above the 1GB
boundary. I don't know the exact reasons for this hole, but it's
related to the fact that (many) PCI devices need <4GB memory.
The current solution for zx1 is to place the mem_map in virtual
memory. This obviously increases TLB pressure when touching lots of
mem_map[] entries randomly, but I haven't really seen any benchmarks
so far (real or artificial) where this has a signifcant performance
effect. The nice part of this approach is that it is a rather general
solution, provided the kernel's page-table mapped address space is
sufficiently big.
--david
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This archive was generated by hypermail 2b29 : Tue May 07 2002 - 22:00:21 EST