Re: [PATCH] trim memory not covered by WB MTRRs
From: Jesse Barnes
Date: Tue Jun 12 2007 - 11:29:31 EST
On Tuesday, June 12, 2007 7:50:08 Pavel Machek wrote:
> Hi!
>
> > On some machines, buggy BIOSes don't properly setup WB MTRRs to
> > cover all available RAM, meaning the last few megs (or even gigs)
> > of memory will be marked uncached. Since Linux tends to allocate
> > from high memory addresses first, this causes the machine to be
> > unusably slow as soon as the kernel starts really using memory
> > (i.e. right around init time).
> >
> > + if ((highest_addr >> PAGE_SHIFT) != end_pfn) {
> > + printk(KERN_WARNING "***************\n");
> > + printk(KERN_WARNING "**** WARNING: likely BIOS bug\n");
> > + printk(KERN_WARNING "**** MTRRs don't cover all of "
> > + "memory, trimmed %ld pages\n", end_pfn -
> > + (highest_addr >> PAGE_SHIFT));
> > + printk(KERN_WARNING "***************\n");
> > + end_pfn = highest_addr >> PAGE_SHIFT;
>
> Missing 4K of memory is not worth 4K of junk in syslog per boot. Can
> you drop the stars and stop shouting?
How missing about 1G of memory? We already discussed this, and Andi and
Venki felt that either a panic or a really obnoxious message was the
way to go...
Jesse
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