Hello, On Mon, Aug 12, 2013 at 11:41:25PM +0800, Tang Chen wrote: > Then there is no way to tell the users which memory is hotpluggable. > > phys addr is not user friendly. For users, node or memory device is the > best. The firmware should arrange the hotpluggable ranges well. I don't follow. Why can't the kernel export that information to userland after boot is complete via printk / sysfs / proc / whatever? The admin can "request" hotplug by boot param and the kernel would try to honor that and return the result on boot completion. I don't understand why that wouldn't work. > In my opinion, maybe some application layer tools may use SRAT to show > the users which memory is hotpluggable. I just think both of the kernel > and the application layer should obey the same rule. Sure, just let the kernel tell the user which memory node ended up hotpluggable after booting. > >* Similar to the point hpa raised. If this can be made opportunistic, > > do we need the strict reordering to discover things earlier? > > Shouldn't it be possible to configure memblock to allocate close to > > the kernel image until hotplug and numa information is available? > > For most sane cases, the memory allocated will be contained in > > non-hotpluggable node anyway and in case they aren't hotplug > > wouldn't work but the system will boot and function perfectly fine. > > So far as I know, the kernel image and related data can be loaded > anywhere, above 4GB. I just can't make any assumption. I don't follow why that would be problematic. Wouldn't finding out which node the kernel image is located in and preferring to allocate from that node before hotplug info is available be enough? Thanks. -- tejun -- To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-acpi" in the body of a message to majordomo@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxx More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html