On 2/11/23 17:22, Mike Rapoport wrote: > +Note, that memory banks may belong to interleaving nodes. In the example > +below an x86 machine has 16Gbytes or RAM in 4 memory banks, even banks > +belong to node 0 and odd banks belong to node 1:: > + > + > + 0 4G 8G 12G 16G > + +-------------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ > + | node 0 | | node 1 | | node 0 | | node 1 | > + +-------------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ > + > + 0 16M 4G > + +-----+-------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ > + | DMA | DMA32 | | NORMAL | | NORMAL | | NORMAL | > + +-----+-------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ +-------------+ > + > +In such case node 0 will span from 0 to 12 Gbytes and node 1 will span from > +4 Gbytes to 16 Gbytes. > + What about "... and node 1 will span from 4 to 16 Gbytes"? -- An old man doll... just what I always wanted! - Clara