We can't mix 64K and 4K pte's in the same page-table, so for now we
align 64K objects to 2M to avoid any potential mixing. This is
potentially wasteful but in reality shouldn't be too bad since this only
applies to the virtual address space of a 48b PPGTT.
v2: don't separate logically connected op
We can't mix 64K and 4K pte's in the same page-table, so for now we
align 64K objects to 2M to avoid any potential mixing. This is
potentially wasteful but in reality shouldn't be too bad since this only
applies to the virtual address space of a 48b PPGTT.
v2: don't separate logically connected op
On Fri, 2017-09-29 at 17:10 +0100, Matthew Auld wrote:
> We can't mix 64K and 4K pte's in the same page-table, so for now we
> align 64K objects to 2M to avoid any potential mixing. This is
> potentially wasteful but in reality shouldn't be too bad since this only
> applies to the virtual address s
We can't mix 64K and 4K pte's in the same page-table, so for now we
align 64K objects to 2M to avoid any potential mixing. This is
potentially wasteful but in reality shouldn't be too bad since this only
applies to the virtual address space of a 48b PPGTT.
v2: don't separate logically connected op
Quoting Matthew Auld (2017-09-22 18:32:40)
> We can't mix 64K and 4K pte's in the same page-table, so for now we
> align 64K objects to 2M to avoid any potential mixing. This is
> potentially wasteful but in reality shouldn't be too bad since this only
> applies to the virtual address space of a 48
We can't mix 64K and 4K pte's in the same page-table, so for now we
align 64K objects to 2M to avoid any potential mixing. This is
potentially wasteful but in reality shouldn't be too bad since this only
applies to the virtual address space of a 48b PPGTT.
v2: don't separate logically connected op