> Hey Sai and others,
>
> I did not verify this is actually the case for QEMU, but the mentioned range
> is
> usually the SMRAM ASEG.
> SMRAM ranges are not reported in the Memory Map by-design.
>
Thanks for educating us on this Marvin :)
Regards,
Sai
t; On Behalf Of Prakhya,
> Sai Praneeth
> Sent: Tuesday, May 15, 2018 3:29 AM
> To: Bill Paul <wp...@windriver.com>; edk2-devel@lists.01.org
> Cc: Neri, Ricardo <ricardo.n...@intel.com>
> Subject: Re: [edk2] Query regarding hole in EFI Memory Map
>
> > Of all
> Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, Prakhya, Sai
> Praneeth had to
> walk into mine at 16:30 on Monday 14 May 2018 and say:
>
> > Hi All,
> >
> > Recently, I have observed that there was a hole in EFI Memory Map
> > passed by firmware to Linux kernel. So, wanted to check
:13 PM
To: edk2-devel@lists.01.org
Cc: Neri, Ricardo <ricardo.n...@intel.com>
Subject: Re: [edk2] Query regarding hole in EFI Memory Map
Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, Prakhya, Sai
Praneeth had to walk into mine at 16:30 on Monday 14 May 2018 and say:
> Hi All,
&
Of all the gin joints in all the towns in all the world, Prakhya, Sai Praneeth
had to walk into mine at 16:30 on Monday 14 May 2018 and say:
> Hi All,
>
> Recently, I have observed that there was a hole in EFI Memory Map passed by
> firmware to Linux kernel. So, wanted to check with you if this
Hi All,
Recently, I have observed that there was a hole in EFI Memory Map passed by
firmware to Linux kernel. So, wanted to check with you if this is expected or
not.
My Test setup:
I usually boot qemu with OVMF and Linux kernel. I use below command to boot
kernel.
"qemu-system-x86_64 -cpu
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