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From: "Stephen C. Tweedie" <sct@redhat.com>
To: cohutta <cohutta@MailAndNews.com>
Cc: linux-mm@kvack.org
Subject: Re: temp. mem mappings
Date: Wed, 6 Jun 2001 09:23:58 +0100	[thread overview]
Message-ID: <20010606092358.R26756@redhat.com> (raw)
In-Reply-To: <3B581215@MailAndNews.com>; from cohutta@MailAndNews.com on Tue, Jun 05, 2001 at 04:42:52PM -0400

Hi,

On Tue, Jun 05, 2001 at 04:42:52PM -0400, cohutta wrote:

>   Normal memory is identity-mapped very early in boot anyway (except for
>   highmem on large Intel boxes, that is, and kmap() works for that.)
> 
> I don't really want to play with the page tables if i can help it.
> I didn't use ioremap() because it's real system memory, not IO bus
> memory.
> 
> How much normal memory is identity-mapped at boot on x86?
> Is it more than 8 MB?

> I'm trying to read some ACPI tables, like the FACP.
> On my system, this is at physical address 0x3fffd7d7 (e.g.).

It depends at what time during boot.  Some ACPI memory is reusable
once the system boots: the kernel parses the table then frees up the
memory which the BIOS initialised.

VERY early in boot, while the VM is still getting itself set up, there
is only a minimal mapping set up by the boot loader code.  However,
once the VM is initialised far enough to let you play with page
tables, all memory will be identity-mapped up to just below the 1GB
watermark.

> kmap() ends up calling set_pte(), which is close to what i am
> already doing.  i'm having a problem on the unmap side when i
> am done with the temporary mapping.

kunmap().  :-)  But kmap only works on CONFIG_HIGHMEM kernel builds.
On kernels built without high memory support, kmap will not allow you
to access memory beyond the normal physical memory boundary.

Cheers,
 Stephen
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  parent reply	other threads:[~2001-06-06  8:23 UTC|newest]

Thread overview: 17+ messages / expand[flat|nested]  mbox.gz  Atom feed  top
2001-06-05 20:42 cohutta
2001-06-05 20:59 ` Timur Tabi
2001-06-05 22:27   ` Joseph A. Knapka
2001-06-06  8:23 ` Stephen C. Tweedie [this message]
  -- strict thread matches above, loose matches on Subject: below --
2001-06-11 16:32 cohutta
2001-06-25  6:52 ` Eric W. Biederman
2001-06-08  1:38 cohutta
2001-06-08 17:02 ` Joseph A. Knapka
2001-06-08 18:07 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-06-08 21:22   ` Joseph A. Knapka
2001-06-06 21:14 cohutta
2001-06-07 10:00 ` Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-06-05 17:54 cohutta
2001-06-05 18:25 ` Timur Tabi
2001-06-05 18:41   ` Stephen C. Tweedie
2001-06-05 18:51     ` Timur Tabi
2001-06-05 18:59       ` Stephen C. Tweedie

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