Hi,
On Sat, Sep 02, 2000 at 11:50:32AM -0700, [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
> The kernel is compiled with the 4GB option. (which I think is
> the 2/2GB option from 2.2.x kernels). I believe the option is
> supposed to assign 2GB of address space to real memory, and
> 2GB to virtual memory (from a per process point of view).
No, it's much better than that in 2.4! The 2.4 4GB option still has
the 3+1 split, and only maps the first just-under-1GB of physical
memory into the kernel's permanent VA space. The rest of the memory
is mapped on demand.
> Without glibc 2.2 I should be able to get to 2GB of memory
> allocated via the heap. I only need glibc 2.2 to start
> mmap'ing malloc'able pools from VM. I.E. beyond 2GB of
> malloc'ed memory.
Right.
> My app running with 1 GB RAM under linux 2.2, with glibc 2.2
> successfully malloc's up to 3GB and the app works fine. (though
> swapping quite a bit).
>
> My app running with 2 GB RAM under linux 2.4.0-test7, with glibc 2.2
> dies at 1 GB of memory used. (it also dies at 1 GB using glibc 2.1.2).
What happens at this point? If you strace the binary, what fails?
--Stephen
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