Thanks for your reply. I thought the -ent version was built with 4/4?
If not, can I enable it? How? Kirill Korotaev wrote: > default OpenVZ kernel is built with 3GB / 4GB split, not 4/4. for > compatibility with some old java versions. So user space is limited > to 3GB as usually. > > On 4/9/09 4:30 PM, "Edward Hibbert" <[email protected]> > wrote: > >> One other bit of info; I'm fairly sure that the 4G patch is built in >> to the kernel, because I can see this during the boot sequence: >> >> mapped 4G/4G trampoline to fff6d000. >> So that leaves me baffled as to why I can't get a process above 3G. >> >> >> From: Edward Hibbert >> Sent: 09 April 2009 11:41 >> To: '[email protected]' >> Subject: Trouble getting the 4G (a.k.a. hugemem) patch to work. >> >> Apologies if this is a dumb FAQ. >> >> I'm trying to get a kernel with what's known in the RedHat world as >> hugemem, i.e. 4G user space. I've downloaded a -ent version of the >> 2.6.18 kernel, and also tried building one myself, but neither of >> these seems to allow me to exceed 3G. >> >> The source code does seem to have 4G macros in it, and I find it hard >> to believe that the patch simply doesn't work - so I'm more inclined >> to think I'm doing something stupid. >> >> Any suggestions? Yes, yes, I know we should move to 64-bit, but >> that's not an option right now. >> >> Regards, >> >> Edward. > > > _______________________________________________ > Users mailing list > [email protected] > https://openvz.org/mailman/listinfo/users _______________________________________________ Users mailing list [email protected] https://openvz.org/mailman/listinfo/users
