[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] Why the machine address is out of the end of real physical memory?
IIRC it does, yes. -- Keir On 24/4/08 10:52, "ken lost" <kenlost@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > Does it mean that On xen domain0 the file /proc/iomem show the real machine > memory map, not the psudo physical memory map ? Can I get a memory page whose > machine address is below 4G ? These are the information of file iomem # cat > /proc/iomem 00000000-0009cfff : System RAM 0009dc00-0009ffff : > reserved 000a0000-000bffff : Video RAM area 000cb000-000cbfff : Adapter > ROM 000f0000-000fffff : System ROM 00100000-bfefffff : System RAM > 00100000-00bfffff : Hypervisor code and data 00be6080-00be6143 : Crash > note 00be7b80-00be7c77 : Crash note 00be7d00-00be7dc3 : Crash note > 00be7e80-00be7f43 : Crash note bff00000-bff08fff : ACPI > Tables bff09000-bff7ffff : ACPI Non-volatile Storage bff80000-bfffffff : > reserved c8000000-c80003ff : 0000:00:1d.7 c8000000-c80003ff : > ehci_hcd c8000400-c80007ff : 0000:00:1f.2 c8100000-c82fffff : PCI Bus #01 > c8200000-c82fffff : PCI Bus #02 c8200000-c82fffff : PCI Bus #04 > c8200000-c821ffff : 0000:04:00.0 c8200000-c821ffff : e1000 > c8220000-c823ffff : 0000:04:00.1 c8220000-c823ffff : > e1000 c8300000-c83fffff : PCI Bus #0c c8300000-c830ffff : 0000:0c:02.0 > c8320000-c833ffff : 0000:0c:02.0 d0000000-d7ffffff : PCI Bus #0c > d0000000-d7ffffff : 0000:0c:02.0 e0000000-efffffff : > reserved fe700000-fe7003ff : 0000:00:08.0 fec00000-fec0ffff : > reserved fee00000-fee00fff : reserved ff000000-ffffffff : > reserved 100000000-33fffffff : System RAM 2008/4/24, Keir Fraser > <keir.fraser@xxxxxxxxxxxxx>: > Physical memory doesn't run from 0MB to 8192MB. > There is always a hole just > below 4096MB, which is where PCI devices and > video framebuffers and the like > get mapped. The RAM which would be in that > hole gets remapped above 4096MB. > > So probably your memory map is something > like 0MB-3584MB and 4096MB-8704MB > (i.e., 512MB is remapped). See the e820 > map that Xen (or native Linux) > prints when you first boot your machine. > > > -- Keir > > On 24/4/08 02:20, "ken lost" <kenlost@xxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > > > Hello evrybody, > > > > I have a machine with 8G RAM, which runs on Redhat > Enterprise linux > > 5.1(kernel 2.6.18-53.el5xen, i386 platform PAE, xen 3.0.3 > ) . My > > driver need run on Domain0. > > The code has this code for get a > momory and its machine address for BIOS. > > > > dmamem_buff = > (void*)__get_free_pages( GFP_KERNEL|GFP_DMA, > > DMA_MEMORY_ORDER); > > > maddr_t ma = virt_to_machine(dmamem_buff) ; > > printk("machine > address is %lldM\n", ma/1024/1024 ); > > printk("machine address is > 0x%llx\n", ma ); > > ... > > > > But the result : > > machine > address is 8487M > > machine address is 0x212790000 > > > > Why the > machine address is out of the end of real physical memory? > > > > > _______________________________________________ > > Xen-devel mailing list > > > Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > > > http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel > > > -- 读懂一本书,精于一件事. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
|
![]() |
Lists.xenproject.org is hosted with RackSpace, monitoring our |