On Sun, Feb 12, 2023 at 11:50:08AM +0000, Matthew Wilcox wrote: > On Sun, Feb 12, 2023 at 11:54:45AM +0200, 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:: > > s/or RAM/of RAM/ Thanks > The "Note," is superfluous, you can just write: > > Memory banks may belong to interleaved nodes. Ok > And I think we prefer the newer form "GiB" for new documentation. I've used Gbytes in previous examples, so I'd prefer to keep it consistent We can swipe s/Gbytes/GiB/g later. > > + > > + 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 to 16 Gbytes. > > s/such/this/ (and I'd use GiB again) -- Sincerely yours, Mike.