That error message "write error: invalid argument" doesn't mean that
there was a syntax error.  Instead the kernel is rejecting the command.
In my case it added a line to dmesg explaining the rejection:

mtrr: type mismatch for d0000000,1000000 old: write-back new: write-
combining

That was because there was already an overlapping MTRR entry, covering
the first 4GB of address space, describing it as "write-back".  The
kernel rejects the write-combining MTRR since it overlaps that write-
back range.  (There are already a bunch of MTRR entries listing
uncacheable memory ranges in the first 4GB; but that's permissible,
whereas overlap of write-combining and write-back isn't permissible.)
This is on an AMD64 machine with 4GB of memory.  I did manage to add a
write-combining MTRR entry, but only by deleting the entry covering the
first 4GB, and replacing it with one 2GB entry and one 1GB entry.  This
wouldn't be possible on all motherboards; it just happens that on this
motherboard, there's no usable memory in the fourth GB of address space;
it's all mapped either above or below that.

-- 
[i915GM] MTRR entry gets removed when restarting xorg - causes corruption on 
ttys
https://bugs.launchpad.net/bugs/314928
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