We have a special application (GNU/Linux 3.4.47, x86_64, BIOS, PXE, OpenSuSE 
grub2-2.00-1.6.1) that requires large initrds.  We are approaching the 462M 
size limit that appears to exist on our architecture.  Since we have 16G of 
memory I'm not sure I understand where the 462M maximum size (specifically, 
GRUB_LINUX_INITRD_MAX_ADDRESS in include/i386/linux.h, which is 0x37FFFFFF, 
unchanged in the bleeding-edge code) comes from.  Understanding this choice of 
value for the ceiling seems to require some background I don't have and can't 
find.  I've been studying the code (grub-core/loader/i386/linux.c) and doing a 
lot of research but I'm unable to gain any traction.  Can a developer point me 
in the right direction or offer some helpful background?  Could this be a 
one-size-fits-all/least-common-denominator value that might be tweakable upward 
for our particular hardware, or is it a hard architectural limit?  Is this a 
32-bit limit of some sort?

Much appreciated.

Eric



<<attachment: Eric J Ewanco.vcf>>

_______________________________________________
Help-grub mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.gnu.org/mailman/listinfo/help-grub

Reply via email to