Tom Moore wrote:
> Thank you for the reply back. Your answer makes perfect sense to me,
> and it is what I had suspected but was not sure about. The math seems
> to indicate that 4Gb of ram plus 1Gb of PCI address space equals 5Gb of
> memory space. So it does sound like I should have a larger kernel model.
>
> What confused me the most (and still does), is the help message string
> that is presented for the CONFIG_HIGHMEM4G option:
> "Select this if you have a 32-bit processor and between 1 and 4
> gigabytes of physical RAM."
4 is not between 1 and 4.
> Well that sounds like the amount of memory that I have, so that is what
> I selected.
You should select CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G.
> Also, although I know what PAE stands for, I don't know how to select it
> when building a kernel. Would I get this from the CONFIG_HIGHMEM64G
> option? The help text for that says:
> "Select this if you have a 32-bit processor and more than 4 gigabytes
> of physical RAM."
Personally, I feel the wording should say:
Select this if you have a 32-bit processor and 4 or more gigabytes of
physical RAM.
It may not hurt to say 3 or more, but I'm not that familiar with x86
hardware in regards to memory.
> This does not sound like it applies to my hardware. There is something
> wrong with my understanding, or with these message strings. I am still
> confused.
It does.
Here's my system (4gb of memory):
total used free shared buffers cached
Mem: 3619996 3289352 330644 0 469764 2025416
-/+ buffers/cache: 794172 2825824
Swap: 0 0 0
I know it says 3.6gb of memory, but 4gb is installed. I had 5gb in this
machine and I saw all 5gb. This is a 32-bit dual xeon (12gb max memory)
I would be interested to know where the last 400mb of memory went.
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