Re: Terrible IO performance when using 4GB of RAM on a 32 bit machine[solved]

From: Peter Rabbitson
Date: Sat Jun 23 2007 - 02:56:58 EST


Robert Hancock wrote:
Peter Rabbitson wrote:

reg00: base=0x00000000 ( 0MB), size=2048MB: write-back, count=1
reg01: base=0x80000000 (2048MB), size=1024MB: write-back, count=1
reg02: base=0xc0000000 (3072MB), size= 512MB: write-back, count=1
reg03: base=0xe0000000 (3584MB), size= 256MB: write-back, count=1
reg04: base=0xf0000000 (3840MB), size= 128MB: write-back, count=1
reg05: base=0xf8000000 (3968MB), size= 32MB: write-back, count=1

Looks like another case of bad MTRRs on an Intel motherboard? The BIOS is marking only memory up to 4000MB as cacheable, but the actual memory extends up to about 4031MB. Therefore anything that accesses the top 31MB of memory will run very slow.

I sincerely apologize for not paying enough attention. Intel has fixed this issue 2 BIOS revisions ago[1], kudos to Suren Karapetyan for pointing this out. I just upgraded the BIOS and it indeed solves the problem. The mtrr still seems not to be going over 4000MB, but everything works without any visible slowdowns at all. Here is how the mtrr and the relevant dmesg line look like now:

reg00: base=0x00000000 ( 0MB), size=2048MB: write-back, count=1
reg01: base=0x80000000 (2048MB), size=1024MB: write-back, count=1
reg02: base=0xc0000000 (3072MB), size= 512MB: write-back, count=1
reg03: base=0xe0000000 (3584MB), size= 256MB: write-back, count=1
reg04: base=0xf0000000 (3840MB), size= 128MB: write-back, count=1
(there is no reg05)
...
Memory: 4024568k/4063168k available (2894k kernel code, 37456k reserved, 930k data, 252k init, 3145664k highmem)
...

Thank you for the help!

Peter

[1] http://downloadcenter.intel.com/Detail_Desc.aspx?agr=N&Inst=Yes&ProductID=1640&DwnldID=11261&strOSs=All&OSFullName=All%20Operating%20Systems&lang=eng
-
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in
the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/