On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 02:24:25PM -0800, Yinghai Lu wrote: > On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 10:03 AM, Vivek Goyal <vgoyal@xxxxxxxxxx> wrote: > > On Fri, Nov 15, 2013 at 09:33:41AM -0800, Yinghai Lu wrote: > > >> I have one system with 6TiB memory, kdump does not work even > >> crashkernel=512M in legacy mode. ( it only work on system with > >> 4.5TiB). > > > > Recently I tested one system with 6TB of memory and dumped successfully > > with 512MB reserved under 896MB. Also I have heard reports of successful > > dump of 12TB system with 512MB reserved below 896MB (due to cyclic > > mode of makedumpfile). > > > > So with newer releases only reason one might want to reserve more > > memory is that it might provide speed benefits. We need more testing > > to quantify this. > > You may need bunch of PCIe cards installed. > > The system with 6TiB + 16 PCIe cards, second kernel OOM. > The system with 4.5TiB + 16 PCIe cards, second kernel works with vmcore dumped. What's the distro you are testing with? Do you have latest bits of makeudmpfile where we use cyclic mode by default and one does not need more reserved memory because of more physical memory present in the box. I suspect that might be the problem in your testing environment and old makedumpfile wil try to allocate larger memory on large RAM machines and OOM. [..] > > So issue remains that crashkernel=X,high is not a good default choice > > because it consumes extra 72M which we don't have to. > > then if it falls into 896~4G, user may still need to update kexec-tools ? Yep. But distributions control the version of kexec-tools and version of kernel and can ship updated kexec-tools by default. Thanks Vivek -- To unsubscribe, send a message with 'unsubscribe linux-mm' in the body to majordomo@xxxxxxxxx. For more info on Linux MM, see: http://www.linux-mm.org/ . Don't email: <a href=mailto:"dont@xxxxxxxxx"> email@xxxxxxxxx </a>