Hello Rob, I have tried a kernel rebuild with this option (a snipit of my config is below):
CONFIG_MPENTIUM4=y CONFIG_HIGHMEM4G=y CONFIG_MTRR=y CONFIG_SMP=y CONFIG_MTRR=y CONFIG_SMP=y But, I am still getting the same results. ----------------- #~: uname -a Linux blah 2.4.18 #3 SMP Thu Jun 2 10:08:29 CDT 2005 i686 unknown #~: free total used free shared buffers cached Mem: 900264 149120 751144 0 5148 31336 -/+ buffers/cache: 112636 787628 Swap: 501832 0 501832 ----------------- I have also tried passing "MEM=1024M" to the boot parameters, but this seems to do nothing as well. ----------------- image=/boot/bzImage label=Linux read-only append="MEM=1024M" ----------------- Suggestions would be greatly appreciated. -- ~~~~~~~~~ -greg "hrmmm - a Beowulf cluster of Dreamcasts and PS2s..." -Slashdot.org post On Thu, Jun 02, 2005 at 09:18:50AM -0600, Rob Sims wrote: > On Wed, Jun 01, 2005 at 04:38:39PM -0500, Greg Gilmour wrote: > > I currently have an HP Proliant DL360 G3 with two 2.8 GHz Xeon > > processors, SmartArray 5i, and 1024 MB of memory installed currently. I > > wanted to install more memory so I purchased and installed 2 GB more to > > make a grand total of 3 GB of system memory (PC2100 DDR ECC) -- 2x512 MB > > sticks and 2x1024 MB sticks. > > > Upon boot-up the BIOS detects all 3 GB, but once I boot into Linux it > > only registers as 900264 KB. I've tried checking the BIOS on the server > > You need a kernel with high memory support. In the kernel configuration, > it is: > Processor type and features > High Memory Support (4G) > > -- > Rob -- To UNSUBSCRIBE, email to [EMAIL PROTECTED] with a subject of "unsubscribe". Trouble? Contact [EMAIL PROTECTED]