> I've written MIPS highmem support in late 2002 for a customer who
> back then wasn't interested in being the first through the 64-bit
> minefield. Which back then certainly was justified - but there are
> now fairly stable 64-bit Linux kernels available so if you happen to
> be running on 64-bit hardware don't even spend a nanosecond on
> thinking about 32-bit highmem kernels. Highmem fundamentally sucks
> rocks through a straw.
>
> Coming back to your question. Highmem was only ever tested to work
> on SB1 and somewhat later PMC-Sierra RM9000 cores, both being 64-bit.
> With the increasing maturity of 64-bit Linux interest in these went
> away and as the result the highmem code started a slow bitrot -
> unnoticed for many moons.
Hmm, this is not good. I've got a MIPS 24Kc processor with a very
awkward memory layout. Any hints?
> Ralf
--
David VomLehn, dvomlehn@xxxxxxxxx
The opinions expressed herein are likely mine, but might not be my
employer's...