[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index] RE: [Xen-users] X86_64 and 4GB RAM
> -----Original Message----- > From: John Hannfield [mailto:hal9020@xxxxxxxxx] > Sent: 01 May 2007 11:53 > To: Petersson, Mats > Cc: xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx > Subject: Re: [Xen-users] X86_64 and 4GB RAM > > Hi Mats > > > What revision of processor do you have, and how large is > your graphics > > memory? > > The system has 2 dual core Opteron 2210's in it. Ah, yes that is a Rev F, so it definitely allows memory hoisting. > cat /proc/cpuinfo > > processor : 0 > vendor_id : AuthenticAMD > cpu family : 15 > model : 65 [snip] > > > > If you have a graphics card that eats a fair bit of memory (256 or > > 512MB) on a processor that doesn't support "memory > hoisting"[1] (i.e. > > It has an onboard graphics card, but I doubt it is high MB, as it is a > dedicated server. A PenguinComputing Altus 1600 Yeah, onboard graphics usuall use around 16-32MB, so not a whole lot. > > > remapping of "behind PCI memory" to a higher address), then > I wouldn't > > be surprised if you don't see more than 3.x GB - the reason > being that > > the rest of the memory is "behind" the PCI bus devices. > > > Also, if you have a newer processor you may need a new BIOS > to support > > this, and you'll possibly also need to enable "memory hoisting" (or > > memory hole or some such) in the BIOS setup. > > My BIOS has options for > > MemoryHole ReMapping this is "Enabled" That's the one we need... > MTRR Mapping this is "Discrete" > IOMMU Mode set to "256 MB" > CS Sparing Enable this is "Disabled" > > The thing is it boots and shows all 4GB with a vanilla debian > etch bootup. > It only has problems when booting in to Xen. Hmm. Something is certainly going wrong here... -- Mats > > -- > > John > > > _______________________________________________ Xen-users mailing list Xen-users@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx http://lists.xensource.com/xen-users
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