On Wednesday 12 Jun 2013 16:10:03 Rik van Riel wrote:On 06/12/2013 12:54 PM, Simon Brown wrote:Hello,
For the sake of an old prototype peripheral I'm using a non PAE 32 bit
x86 kernel and I'm having trouble accessing memory above 2 GB. The
system has 4GB installed and all is well with a PAE kernel.
I'm obviously expecting to lose some memory due to memory mapped devices
but I wasn't expecting to lose 2GB. Instead I'm suspecting a BIOS bug.
The system reports:
free -m
total used free shared buffers
cached
Mem: 2012 491 1521 0 40
277
The mtrr table looked odd so I enabled sanitisation:
[ 0.000000] original variable MTRRs
[ 0.000000] reg 0, base: 2GB, range: 2GB, type UC
[ 0.000000] reg 1, base: 0GB, range: 4GB, type WB
[ 0.000000] reg 2, base: 4GB, range: 2GB, type WB
[ 0.000000] total RAM covered: 4096M
[ 0.000000] Found optimal setting for mtrr clean up
[ 0.000000] gran_size: 64K chunk_size: 64K num_reg: 2
lose cover RAM: 0G
[ 0.000000] New variable MTRRs
[ 0.000000] reg 0, base: 0GB, range: 2GB, type WB
[ 0.000000] reg 1, base: 4GB, range: 2GB, type WB
I don't understand the gap in the new table.
Check the e820 table. Chances are the BIOS is reserving 2GB to
map various devices (especially video cards) below the 4GB limit.
The table looks like this:
[ 0.000000] BIOS-provided physical RAM map:
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 0000000000000000 - 000000000009fc00 (usable)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 000000000009fc00 - 00000000000a0000 (reserved)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 00000000000e4000 - 0000000000100000 (reserved)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 0000000000100000 - 000000007ff80000 (usable)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 000000007ff80000 - 000000007ff8e000 (ACPI data)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 000000007ff8e000 - 000000007ffe0000 (ACPI NVS)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 000000007ffe0000 - 0000000080000000 (reserved)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 00000000fee00000 - 00000000fee01000 (reserved)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 00000000fff00000 - 0000000100000000 (reserved)
[ 0.000000] BIOS-e820: 0000000100000000 - 0000000180000000 (usable)
So the BIOS has reserved the entire upper half. Can I do anything about that?