Am Freitag, 16. Dezember 2005 19:42 schrieb Horst von Brand:
> linux-os \(Dick Johnson\) <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> [...]
>
> > Throughout the past two years of 4k stack-wars, I never heard why
> > such a small stack was needed (not wanted, needed). It seems that
> > everybody "knows" that smaller is better and most everybody thinks
> > that one page in ix86 land is "optimum". However I don't think
> > anybody ever even tried to analyze what was better from a technical
> > perspective. Instead it's been analyzed as religious dogma, i.e.,
> > keep the stack small, it will prevent idiots from doing bad things.
>
> OK, so here goes again...
>
> The kernel stack has to be contiguous in /physical/ memory. Keep the stack
> /one/ page, that way you can always get a new stack when needed (== each
> fork(2) or clone(2)). If the stack is 2 (or more) pages, you'll have to
> find (or create) a multi-page free area, and (fragmentation being what it
> is, and Linux routinely running for months at a time) you are in a whole
> new world of pain.
How about ignoring physical pages and going to virtual, say, 16K pages?
After all, 4K is 15 years old. Disks and RAM have grown enormously.
Regards
Oliver
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