On Mon, Dec 09, 2013 at 08:08:39PM +0100, Vladimir 'φ-coder/phcoder' Serbinenko wrote: > > A simple fix would be to just stack the ifdefs, but a better one might > > be to move the define to one of <cpu/efi/memory.h> (which is currently > > a dummy for all platforms, simply including <efi/memory.h>) or types.h. > > > cpu/efi/memory.h is a possibility. cpu/types.h isn't because it's, at > least partially, EFI limitation (due to EFI bugs), not CPU.
Ah, ok - that makes sense then. > Real > restrictions is a mix of unrelated restriction but it seem to align well > with CPU. > Increasing it beyond 0xffffffff will need chacking that efi/mm.c can > handle it without overflow. > The limits are: > -0xffffffff on 32-bit platforms due to address space size (i386, arm) > -0x7fffffff when x86_64 compiled without -mcmodel=large due to compiler > assumptions > -0xffffffff on x86_64 because some EFI implementations don't map memory > above 4G contrary to spec. > - On ia64 it's probably unlimited but I didn't test and there is always > a danger of EFI bugs similar to x86_64 one, so better to be conservative > about it > - arm64. You're the expert. Thank you - that makes it very clear. / Leif _______________________________________________ Grub-devel mailing list Grub-devel@gnu.org https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/grub-devel