I'm trying to limit the OS (Ubuntu Server 15.04) to a certain memory usage and reserve the rest but write a kernel module to read/write to the reserved memory. I figured out how to limit the usage/reserve memory using the kernel parameters "mem=4G memmap=4G@0 memmap=4G$4G" (4GB for OS and 4GB reserved, split at 4GB point) but I don't know how DMA to reserved memory works with kernel modules. I was thinking just create a proc file but I'm not sure if you can create one outside of the OS's allocated memory.
Any suggestions? Thanks!
Edit: This is for research so it doesn't need to be "nice"
Update: Maybe I don't need to write a kernel module. I just found this and I'm going to give it a shot: http://elinux.org/Memory_Management#Reserving_.28and_accessing.29_the_top_of_memory_on_startup
Update: I tried the link above but I segfault whenever I try to write. Here's my code:
#include <fcntl.h>
#include <stdio.h>
#include <stdlib.h>
#include <sys/mann.h>
#define RESERVED_MEMORY_SIZE 0x100000000
int main() {
int fd;
char *reserved_memory;
fd = open("/dev/mem", O_RDWR | O_SYNC);
reserved_memory = (char *) mmap(0, RESERVED_MEMORY_SIZE, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_FILE | MAP_SHARED, fd, 4096);
reserved_memory[0] = 'a';
return 0;
}
dmesg shows:
a.out[1167]: segfault at ffffffffffffffff ip 00000000004005d7 sp 00007ffeffccbd80 error 7 in a.out[400000+1000]
For kicks I tried reserved_memory[1]:
a.out[1180]: segfault at 0 ip 00000000004005db sp 00007ffc388d77b0 error 6 in a.out[400000+1000]
I'll look into the format of those messages so I can figure out what it's telling me.
Update:
I found this question by somebody with the same issue as me however the only solution appears to be a kernel rebuild. I'm going to try to avoid this so maybe my best option is a custom kernel module again. accessing mmaped /dev/mem?
mmap
correctly? It seems that it is returning an error (-1 numeric value) as you are requesting to map a 4GiB region starting from offset 4096 and according to your question the system doesn't have 4GiB+4096Byte memory (since you splitted at 4GiB). Maybe you swapped the second and last argument? Also I don't known if /dev/mem can be used to access the whole (memory) address space or just the part occupied by usable RAM./dev/mem
is a file. Reading the first byte means reading the physical address 0x0, reading the second byte means reading 0x1, reading the 100th byte means reading the address 0x63. Theoffset
parameter tellmmap
at which byte start to read the/dev/mem
. So if you want to map the memory starting from 4GiB, the offset must be 0x100000000. The second parameter is how many bytes you want to map, this can be 4096.reserved_memory = (char *) mmap(0, 4096, PROT_READ | PROT_WRITE, MAP_FILE | MAP_SHARED, fd, 0x100000000);
and it still fails to map.errno.h
header and print the value of theerrno
lvalue (ieprintf("%d\n", errno)
. My guess is that you cannot map the memory the OS is not aware of.