Ok, I think I've figured it out so I will try and answer my own
questions (the best part is at the end)...
On Mon, 2005-04-04 at 17:36 +0300, Ranko Zivojnovic wrote:
> (please do CC replies as I am still not on the list)
>
> As I am kind of pressured to resolve this issue, I've set up a test
> environment using VMWare in order to reproduce the problem and
> (un)fortunately the attempt was successful.
>
> I have noticed a few points that relate to the size of the physical RAM
> and the behavior vmalloc. As I am not sure if this is by design or a
> bug, so please someone enlighten me:
>
> The strange thing I have seen is that with the increase of the physical
> RAM, the VmallocTotal in the /proc/meminfo gets smaller! Is this how it
> is supposed to be?
>
As the size of memory grows, more gets allocated to the low memory, less
to the vmalloc memory - within first 1GB of RAM.
> Now the question: Is this behavior normal?
I guess it is (nobody said the oposite).
> Should it not be in reverse -
> more RAM equals more space for vmalloc?
>
It really depends on the setup and the workload - some reasonable
defaults (i.e. 128M) have been defined - you can change them using
vmalloc parameter - but with the _extreme_ care as it gets really tricky
if your RAM is 1G and above - read on...
> With regards to the 'vmalloc' kernel parameter, I was able to boot
> normally using kernel parameter vmalloc=192m with RAM sizes 256, 512,
> 768 but _not_ with 1024M of RAM and above.
>
> With 1024M of RAM (and apparently everything above), it is unable to
> boot if vmalloc parameter is specified to a value lager than default
> 128m. It panics with the following:
>
> EXT2-fs: unable to read superblock
> isofs_fill_super: bread failed, dev=md0, iso_blknum=16, block=32
> XFS: SB read failed
> VFS: Cannot open root device "md0" or unknown-block(9,0)
> Please append a correct "root=" boot option
> Kernel panic - not syncing: VFS: Unable to mount root fs on unknown-block(9,0)
>
And not just - I have just seen the actual culprit message (way up
front):
initrd extends beyond end of memory (0x37fef33a > 0x34000000)
disabling initrd
> Question: Is this inability to boot related to the fact that the system
> is unable to reserve enough space for vmalloc?
>
The resolution (or rather workaround) to the above is to _trick_ the
GRUB into loading the initrd image into the area below what is _going_
to be the calculated "end of memory" using the "uppermem" command.
Now:
1. I hope this is the right way around the problem.
2. I hope this is going to help someone.
Best regards,
Ranko
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