On 06/06/2014 05:06 PM, Nikolay Amiantov wrote: > > I've played a bit with this theory in mind and found a very > interesting thing -- when I reserve all memory upper than 4G with > "memmap" kernel option ("memmap=99G$0x100000000"), everything works! > Also, I've written a small utility that fills memory with zeros using > /dev/mem and then checks it. I've checked reserved memory with it, and > it appears that no memory in that region is corrupted at all, which is > even more strange. I suspect that somehow when nvidia is enabled > I/O-mapped memory regions are corrupted, and only when upper memory is > not enabled. Also, memory map does not differ apart from missing last > big chunk of memory with and without "memmap", and with Windows, too. > If I enable even small chunk of "upper" memory (e.g., > 0x270000000-0x280000000), there are usual crashes. > > Long story short: I'm interested how memory management can differ when > this "upper" memory regions are enabled? >
This would point either to an iommu problem, or a problem in the driver where addresses somehow get truncated to 32 bits. Since this is a graphics driver it is extremely complex, and subtle problems could be buried somewhere inside it. The fact that you can trigger it without a driver would point to that kind of problem inside the firmware. -hpa -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-kernel" in the body of a message to majord...@vger.kernel.org More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html Please read the FAQ at http://www.tux.org/lkml/