Am Donnerstag, 07 Juli 2016, 11:00:25 schrieb AKASHI Takahiro: > On Wed, Jul 06, 2016 at 04:29:18PM -0300, Thiago Jung Bauermann wrote: > > Hi, > > > > Am Mittwoch, 06 Juli 2016, 16:52:26 schrieb AKASHI Takahiro: > > > +linux,usable-memory > > > +------------------- > > > + > > > +This property is set on PowerPC and arm64 by kexec-tools during kdump > > > +to tell the crash kernel the base address of its reserved area of > > > memory, and +the size. e.g. > > > + > > > +/ { > > > + chosen { > > > + linux,usable-memory = <0x9 0xf0000000 0x0 0x10000000>; > > > + }; > > > +}; > > > > Again, this description is wrong for PowerPC. See messages from myself > > and Michael Ellerman: > > > > https://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/kexec/2016-June/016250.html > > > > https://lists.infradead.org/pipermail/kexec/2016-June/016253.html > > Oops, I must have missed your previous comments. Apologies. No problem. > Yes, I know that, and I used to implement the same functionality before. > It did work for dtb-based systems, but not for UEFI(ACPI)-based systems > because UEFI doesn't export memory regions information via a device tree, > but rather via ACPI table. So "/memory" node won't appear. > So I went back with "mem=" command line approach, and later this > "/chosen/" approach. Ah, I didn't realize there could be dtb and UEFI systems. > > IMHO, it would be simpler if ARM used linux,usable-memory in the same > > way > > that PowerPC does, for consistency. > > Well, this property won't conflict with per-"/memory" ones > if we take it that the former, if present, supersedes the latter. > Sophistic? > What about changing the name to usable-memory-limit? > (I know that you have another one, "memory-limit" though.) > > Again, I would like to defer to arm64 maintainers. My personal opinion is that having a property with a different name would be less confusing, but it's not a strong opinion. I would suggest calling it usable-memory-range, but I'm fine with whatever is decided by the maintainers. -- []'s Thiago Jung Bauermann IBM Linux Technology Center