On Wed, Nov 21, 2012 at 6:50 AM, Vivek Goyal <vgoyal at redhat.com> wrote: > On Tue, Nov 20, 2012 at 11:31:38PM -0800, Yinghai Lu wrote: > > [..] >> +int bzImage64_probe(const char *buf, off_t len) >> +{ >> + const struct x86_linux_header *header; >> + if ((uintmax_t)len < (uintmax_t)(2 * 512)) { >> + if (probe_debug) { >> + fprintf(stderr, "File is too short to be a bzImage!\n"); >> + } >> + return -1; >> + } >> + header = (const struct x86_linux_header *)buf; >> + if (memcmp(header->header_magic, "HdrS", 4) != 0) { >> + if (probe_debug) { >> + fprintf(stderr, "Not a bzImage\n"); >> + } >> + return -1; >> + } >> + if (header->boot_sector_magic != 0xAA55) { >> + if (probe_debug) { >> + fprintf(stderr, "No x86 boot sector present\n"); >> + } >> + /* No x86 boot sector present */ >> + return -1; >> + } >> + if (header->protocol_version < 0x020C) { >> + if (probe_debug) { >> + fprintf(stderr, "Must be at least protocol version 2.12\n"); >> + } >> + /* Must be at least protocol version 2.12 */ >> + return -1; >> + } >> + if ((header->loadflags & 1) == 0) { >> + if (probe_debug) { >> + fprintf(stderr, "zImage not a bzImage\n"); >> + } >> + /* Not a bzImage */ >> + return -1; >> + } >> + if (!(header->xloadflags & 1)) { >> + if (probe_debug) { >> + fprintf(stderr, "Not a bzImage64\n"); >> + } >> + /* Must be LOADED_ABOVE_4G */ >> + return -1; >> + } > > So how do I force a 16bit or 32bit entry using a bzImage64? kexec -t bzImage -l .... will load low and use 32bit entry. kexec -t bzImage64 -l ... kexec -l ... will try to load high and use 64bit entry.