Jon Ringle wrote: > Fawad Lateef wrote: > > On 11/30/06, Jon Ringle <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > > Do you think that the following would work to properly > reserve the > > > memory. If it does, then I think I can just do a > ioremap(0x0ffff000, > > > 0x1000) to obtain a virtual address. (Ofcourse I would > actually use > > > symbolic names rather than the hardcoded addesses shown here). > > > > > > Index: linux/arch/arm/mm/init.c > > > > =================================================================== > > > --- linux.orig/arch/arm/mm/init.c 2006-11-30 > > 11:03:00.000000000 > > > -0500 > > > +++ linux/arch/arm/mm/init.c 2006-11-30 > 11:09:09.000000000 -0500 > > > @@ -429,6 +429,10 @@ > > > unsigned long addr; > > > void *vectors; > > > > > > +#ifdef CONFIG_MACH_VERTICAL_RSC4 > > > + reserve_bootmem (0x0ffff000, 0x1000); #endif > > > + > > > /* > > > * Allocate the vector page early. > > > */ > > > > > > > > > > I think you can do like this but can't say accurately > because I havn't > > worked on arm architecture and also you havn't mentioned your > > kernel-version or function (in file > > arch/arm/mm/init.c) which you are going to do call reserve_bootmem ! > > Kernel version is 2.6.16.29 and the reserve_bootmem() call > above is at the top of the function devicemaps_init().
Is there some way I can verify that the above works? I've tried the following to try to get info on the reservation: # cat /proc/iomem # cat /proc/meminfo # cat /proc/slabinfo # echo m > /proc/sysrq-trigger The only one that hints that this might have worked is the `echo m > /proc/sysrq-trigger` in that I see the reserved pages count one larger than using a kernel without this patch. Does this mean that the page I reserved won't get used by Linux for any purpose? Jon - To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to [EMAIL PROTECTED] More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/