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			89 lines
		
	
	
		
			3.1 KiB
		
	
	
	
		
			Plaintext
		
	
	
	
	
	
		Kernel Memory Layout on ARM Linux
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		Russell King <rmk@arm.linux.org.uk>
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		     November 17, 2005 (2.6.15)
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This document describes the virtual memory layout which the Linux
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kernel uses for ARM processors.  It indicates which regions are
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free for platforms to use, and which are used by generic code.
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The ARM CPU is capable of addressing a maximum of 4GB virtual memory
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space, and this must be shared between user space processes, the
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kernel, and hardware devices.
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As the ARM architecture matures, it becomes necessary to reserve
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certain regions of VM space for use for new facilities; therefore
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this document may reserve more VM space over time.
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Start		End		Use
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--------------------------------------------------------------------------
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ffff8000	ffffffff	copy_user_page / clear_user_page use.
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				For SA11xx and Xscale, this is used to
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				setup a minicache mapping.
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ffff4000	ffffffff	cache aliasing on ARMv6 and later CPUs.
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ffff1000	ffff7fff	Reserved.
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				Platforms must not use this address range.
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ffff0000	ffff0fff	CPU vector page.
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				The CPU vectors are mapped here if the
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				CPU supports vector relocation (control
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				register V bit.)
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fffe0000	fffeffff	XScale cache flush area.  This is used
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				in proc-xscale.S to flush the whole data
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				cache. (XScale does not have TCM.)
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fffe8000	fffeffff	DTCM mapping area for platforms with
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				DTCM mounted inside the CPU.
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fffe0000	fffe7fff	ITCM mapping area for platforms with
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				ITCM mounted inside the CPU.
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ffc00000	ffefffff	Fixmap mapping region.  Addresses provided
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				by fix_to_virt() will be located here.
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fee00000	feffffff	Mapping of PCI I/O space. This is a static
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				mapping within the vmalloc space.
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VMALLOC_START	VMALLOC_END-1	vmalloc() / ioremap() space.
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				Memory returned by vmalloc/ioremap will
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				be dynamically placed in this region.
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				Machine specific static mappings are also
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				located here through iotable_init().
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				VMALLOC_START is based upon the value
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				of the high_memory variable, and VMALLOC_END
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				is equal to 0xff800000.
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PAGE_OFFSET	high_memory-1	Kernel direct-mapped RAM region.
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				This maps the platforms RAM, and typically
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				maps all platform RAM in a 1:1 relationship.
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PKMAP_BASE	PAGE_OFFSET-1	Permanent kernel mappings
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				One way of mapping HIGHMEM pages into kernel
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				space.
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MODULES_VADDR	MODULES_END-1	Kernel module space
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				Kernel modules inserted via insmod are
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				placed here using dynamic mappings.
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00001000	TASK_SIZE-1	User space mappings
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				Per-thread mappings are placed here via
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				the mmap() system call.
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00000000	00000fff	CPU vector page / null pointer trap
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				CPUs which do not support vector remapping
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				place their vector page here.  NULL pointer
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				dereferences by both the kernel and user
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				space are also caught via this mapping.
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Please note that mappings which collide with the above areas may result
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in a non-bootable kernel, or may cause the kernel to (eventually) panic
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at run time.
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Since future CPUs may impact the kernel mapping layout, user programs
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must not access any memory which is not mapped inside their 0x0001000
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to TASK_SIZE address range.  If they wish to access these areas, they
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must set up their own mappings using open() and mmap().
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