beth kon wrote:
Richard W.M. Jones wrote:My results are a bit inconclusive. I have a machine here which supposedly supports NUMA (2 socket, 2 core AMD with hypertransport and two separate banks of RAM).Are you setting "numa=on dom0_mem=512m" on the kernel line in grub? I'm not sure if the dom0_mem=512m should be required but we were having problems when trying to boot numa without it.BIOS is _not_ configured to interleave memory. Other BIOS settings lead me to suppose that NUMA is enabled (or at least not disabled).Booting with Daniel's Xen & kernel does not give any messages about NUMA enabled or disabled. (See attached messages).# numactl --show physcpubind: 0 1 2 3 No NUMA support available on this system.
Aha, the results are quite a bit better now :-) virsh shows the correct topology: <topology> <cells num='2'> <cell id='0'> <cpus num='2'> <cpu id='0'/> <cpu id='1'/> </cpus> </cell> <cell id='1'> <cpus num='2'> <cpu id='2'/> <cpu id='3'/> </cpus> </cell> </cells> </topology>numactl --show still doesn't work (missing support in dom0 kernel or is this just completely incompatible with Xen?)
'virsh freecell 0' and 'virsh freecell 1' show numbers which are plausible (I have no idea if they're actually correct though).
Can I pin a domain or vCPU to memory to see if that works? Rich. -- Emerging Technologies, Red Hat - http://et.redhat.com/~rjones/ Registered Address: Red Hat UK Ltd, Amberley Place, 107-111 Peascod Street, Windsor, Berkshire, SL4 1TE, United Kingdom. Registered in England and Wales under Company Registration No. 03798903
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