[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] Re: [Xen-devel] RE: Ballooning up
On Tue, 2010-09-14 at 23:05 +0100, Jeremy Fitzhardinge wrote: > On 09/14/2010 08:06 AM, Dan Magenheimer wrote: > >> true, if you don't intend to balloon up, there's no point wasting > >> memory on unused page structures. > > I think this is the key. If dom0_mem is NOT specified, dom0 > > launches with (essentially) all the physical memory of the > > machine, page tables are allocated in dom0 to map all of physical > > memory, and auto-ballooning is necessary to launch guests. > > > > If dom0_mem IS specified, it is often a much smaller number > > than size of physical memory; why waste ~1.5% of physical memory > > on page structures that will never be used? > > > > If someone wants to add an option to augment dom0_mem to allow > > memory-up-ballooning of dom0 above dom0_mem (and can justify > > a reason why some user might ever use this functionality), > > that's fine. But let's not change the definition of the > > dom0_mem option just because a bug fix happens to make it > > possible. > > Technically (pedantically), the meaning of dom0_mem is unchanged - it > sets the initial number of pages given to the domain, and is > functionally identical to the normal "memory" parameter in a domU config > file. The difference is that we're now paying attention to the E820 > map, which is set by maxmem= in domU, but is the hardware/BIOS one in dom0. > > I'm not sure what I'm doing that's different to the xenolinux kernels; I > guess they hack up the whole memory init path more aggressively. But > the pvops behaviour is more or less the straightforward outcome of > looking at the Xen-provided E820 and reserving the gaps between the > actual page count and the memory described therein. xenolinux treats the XENMEM_memory_map and XENMEM_machine_memory_map as separate things in some wierd split-brain understanding of the physical address space. Try looking in /proc/iomem on a xenolinux kernel -- IIRC it has a mish-mash of both address spaces in it... What PVops does is far more sane. Ian. _______________________________________________ Xen-devel mailing list Xen-devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-devel
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