Sent from my iPhone
> On Apr 18, 2019, at 11:31 PM, 曾懷恩 <[email protected]> wrote:
>
> HI, Stephen,
>
> Yes, I set huge page in default_hugepagesz=1G hugepagesz=1G hugepages=4
>
> and also did rte_eal_init at the beginning of my program.
>
> thanks for reply.
Is the core doing the rte_malloc one of the cores listed in the core list on
the command line. In other words the pthread doing the allocation should be
the master lcore or one of the slave lcores.
Also I seems like a very simple test case, can you do the rte_eal_init() and
then do the allocation as your sample code looks and then exit? Does this cause
a segfault?
>
>
>> Stephen Hemminger <[email protected]> 於 2019年4月19日 上午10:59 寫道:
>>
>> On Fri, 19 Apr 2019 09:11:05 +0800
>> 曾懷恩 <[email protected]> wrote:
>>
>>> Hi all,
>>>
>>> i have 1 problem while using rte_malloc
>>>
>>> Every time I use this function and use the memory it returns, it shows
>>> segmentation fault(core dump)
>>>
>>> Is something wrong?
>>>
>>> thanks.
>>>
>>>
>>> rte init …
>>> ………...
>>> unsigned char *str1;
>>> printf("str1 addr = %x\n", str1);
>>> str1 = rte_malloc(NULL,2,RTE_CACHE_LINE_SIZE);
>>> printf("str1 addr = %x\n", str1);
>>> str1[0] = 'a’; //segmentation fault here
>>> str1[1] = '\0';
>> Do you have huge pages?
>> Did you do eal_init?
>