On 7/20/05, Erik Mouw <[email protected]> wrote:
> On Wed, Jul 20, 2005 at 01:35:07PM +0000, Miquel van Smoorenburg wrote:
> > In article <[email protected]>,
> > Erik Mouw <[email protected]> wrote:
> > >On Wed, Jul 20, 2005 at 02:16:36PM +0200, Bastiaan Naber wrote:
> > >AFAIK you can't use a 15 GB tmpfs on i386 because large memory support
> > >is basically a hack to support multiple 4GB memory spaces (some VM guru
> > >correct me if I'm wrong).
> >
> > I'm no VM guru but I have a 32 bit machine here with 8 GB of
> > memory and 8 GB of swap:
> >
> > # mount -t tmpfs -o size=$((12*1024*1024*1024)) tmpfs /mnt
> > # df
> > Filesystem 1K-blocks Used Available Use% Mounted on
> > /dev/sda1 19228276 1200132 17051396 7% /
> > tmpfs 12582912 0 12582912 0% /mnt
> >
> > There you go, a 12 GB tmpfs. I haven't tried to create a 12 GB
> > file on it, though, since this is a production machine and it
> > needs the memory ..
>
> I stand corrected.
>
> > So yes that appears to work just fine.
>
> The question is if it's a good idea to use a 15GB tmpfs on a 32 bit
> i386 class machine. I guess a real 64 bit machine will be much faster
> in handling suchs amounts of data simply because you don't have to go
> through the hurdles needed to address such memory on i386.
>
>
> Erik
>
On 32bit: you would have to use read() and write() or mmap() munmap()
mremap() to perform your own paging, since you can't fit 15GB on a 4GB
address space.
On 64bit: you would simply mmap() the whole file and you are done.
Most probably the cost of programming and debugging the hand-made
paging on 32bit machines will cost more than the difference for a
64bit machine.
--
Greetz, Antonio Vargas aka winden of network
http://wind.codepixel.com/
Las cosas no son lo que parecen, excepto cuando parecen lo que si son.
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