From: David Mosberger <davidm@hpl.hp.com>
To: linux-ia64@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: [Linux-ia64] LINUX IA64 Memory Support
Date: Fri, 18 Feb 2000 05:27:52 +0000 [thread overview]
Message-ID: <marc-linux-ia64-105590678204941@msgid-missing> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <marc-linux-ia64-105590678204939@msgid-missing>
>>>>> On 15 Feb 2000 22:03:03 +0100, Jes Sorensen <Jes.Sorensen@cern.ch> said:
>>>>> "Venkatesh" = Venkatesh Ramamurthy <Venkateshr@ami.com> writes:
Venkatesh> Hi, Is there any way in which one can allocate memory say
Venkatesh> below 4 GB ( physical address )in drivers. TIA Venkatesh
Jes> This is not IA64 specific actually, so consider it a general
Jes> answer rather than an IA64 one.
Jes> A regular GFP_KERNEL should give you memory within the PCI
Jes> DMA'able area, which with the old PCI system meant within the
Jes> 4GB range. GFP_DMA will give you something within the ISA DMA
Jes> space. However, in principle none of the above means that the
Jes> memory is within the lower 4GB memory range, if the machine in
Jes> question has an IOMMU type device, you may be handed memory
Jes> which is in the middle of the memory space, but which is mapped
Jes> to the 4GB the PCI bus in the machine can see.
Jes> With the new PCI allocation system it is even more flexible,
Jes> here you may get addresess anywhere and you then tell the PCI
Jes> subsystem at run time to map the memory to the space the PCI
Jes> bus can address. This means it will be possible to support
Jes> systems with for instance 200 PCI busses (if someone feels like
Jes> building such) etc.
Jes's answer is basically correct:
- If you're writing a driver, use the new PCI DMA API (see pci.h in
kernel 2.3.44 or later) and you'll be fine.
- If you need memory below 4GB for some other reason, you're
presently out of luck. However, the already agreed upon solution
is to add a new "zone" which will represent memory below 4GB
(ZONE_32BIT or some such). I plan to do this asap as we need this
zone to properly implement the PCI DMA API (it currently works only
because no Itanium system we know of/have access to has more than
1GB of RAM ;-).
--david
prev parent reply other threads:[~2000-02-18 5:27 UTC|newest]
Thread overview: 3+ messages / expand[flat|nested] mbox.gz Atom feed top
2000-02-15 20:36 [Linux-ia64] LINUX IA64 Memory Support Venkatesh Ramamurthy
2000-02-15 21:03 ` Jes Sorensen
2000-02-18 5:27 ` David Mosberger [this message]
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