I have the book.  Sorry, but it's about as practically informative as
these numerous emails.



On Thu, 2004-12-23 at 18:24 +0100, Peter Robinson wrote:
> On Thu, 2004-12-23 at 15:15, Jerome BENOIT wrote:
> > Dave Ewart wrote:
> > > On Thursday, 23.12.2004 at 13:39 +0000, Jerome BENOIT wrote:
> > > 
> > > 
> > >>Hello List,
> > >>
> > >>I observed a similar behaviour on my Sarge laptop (Inspiron 8200): I
> > >>have 1GB ram but /proc/mening shows (only) 905136 kB and the Gnome
> > >>system monitor 884 MB.
> > >>
> > >>I have to say that my kernel is not 4GB enabled: so far I thought that
> > >>1GB was smaller that 4GB.
> > 
> > In fact, according to the help message provided by the kernel,
> > 1GB is on the edge: so it is  not so clear to me wether the kernel
> > must be 4GB enabled.
> > 
> > > 
> > > 
> > > There's something magic about that 905MB line - a 1GB RAM machine of
> > > ours showed that amount as total RAM when on a non-4GB and non-64GB
> > > kernel.  Don't know why exactly it's 905MB, but that ties up with what I
> > > saw.  It's not sharing with AGP memory, because my system didn't have
> > > that.
> > > 
> > > Once upgraded to a 4GB kernel, the full 1GB was visible.
> > > 
> > > Dave.
> > 
> > I am rebuilding my kernel with this option.
> > 
> > We will see,
> > Jerome
> 
> 
> There are three memory zones on x86 for linux
> ZONE_DMA  < 16 MB
> ZONE_NORMAL 16-896 MB
> ZONE_HIGHMEM > 896 MB
> 
> related to various hardware limitations. There's some interesting
> discussions of this in 'Linux Kernel Development' by R. Love.
> -peter
> 
> 
> 
-- 
JerryN <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>



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