Thanks for your reply.
As you expected, the image size of x86-64 is much larger then that of arm. Also, the RSS and PSS of the
processes on x86-64 is larger than that of arm, even though the gap betweenthe same processes differs
depending on the process. I also suspected like you, when I saw that the boot with the x86-64 image failed.
But I couldn't find the reason from where this difference comes. From where, could you expect like you said?
Best regards,
Hyungwon Hwang
------- Original Message -------
Sender : 함명주<[email protected]> S5(책임)/책임/Frontier CS Lab(S/W센터)/삼성전자
Date : 2014-07-22 08:59 (GMT+09:00)
Title : Re: [Dev] How should I do to make it boot on the low-end machine with 64MB main memory?
Have you compared the image size (and runtime memory footprint as well) of ARM binaries and x86-64 binaries? I expect that the latter is much larger.
------- Original Message -------
Sender : 황형원
Date : 2014-07-22 08:56 (GMT+09:00)
Title : [Dev] How should I do to make it boot on the low-end machine with 64MB main memory?
Hi,
I'm trying to run Tizen Linux in the machine with Intel ivy bridge, and 64MB main memory. I followed the instructions in https://wiki.tizen.org/wiki/Tizen_on_yocto. But it failed to boot becuase out of memory. The image which is made after the instructions includes weston for GUI, and systemd for init. It seems that they use too many memory to run on the machine with 64MB. I saw that the image core-image-sato, which includes X and matchbox for GUI and sysvinit for init, is able to run on QEMU-ARM with 64MB, even though it failed to do on QEMU-x86_64. But especially I am interested to boot the image with weston. I wonder what I am missing. Is there someone who succeeded to boot the Tizen Linux or a Linux with weston in this kind of environments, or can give me some advice?
Thanks.
Best regards,
Hyungwon Hwang
--
MyungJoo Ham (함명주), PHD
Frontier CS Lab, Software Center
Samsung Electronics
Cell: +82-10-6714-2858
|
|
_______________________________________________ Dev mailing list [email protected] https://lists.tizen.org/listinfo/dev
