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Date:      Thu, 02 Aug 2001 21:04:17 -0400
From:      Sergey Babkin <babkin@bellatlantic.net>
To:        tlambert2@mindspring.com
Cc:        Rik van Riel <riel@conectiva.com.br>, craig <craiglei@pasia.com.cn>, freebsd-hackers@FreeBSD.ORG
Subject:   Re: How to visit physical memory above 4G?
Message-ID:  <3B69F891.3492FA21@bellatlantic.net>
References:  <Pine.LNX.4.33L.0108020728100.5582-100000@duckman.distro.conectiva> <3B6933F0.FC88449A@mindspring.com>

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Terry Lambert wrote:
> 
> Rik van Riel wrote:
>
> > > > Only the FreeBSD memory management subsystem doesn't
> > > > support it (yet?).
> > >
> > > It's not a question of "supporting it", it's a question of
> > > whether or not it's a useful idea at all.
> >
> > > I have yet to see one person using it for anything.  So far,
> > > it is nothing more than marketing fodder: I haven't seen one
> > > motherboard capable of more than 4G worth of SIMMs.

Every box based on the Intel Saber board is capable of up to 16G.

> > I've seen a bunch of the machines. They're rather
> > popular with the database folks.
> 
> Name an OS that supports this; more than likely, you will
> have to appeal to a purpose built embedded system.

UnixWare (A.K.A. OpenUNIX). As far as I understand, Oracle
maps in the pieces of SGA as it needs them, keeping the total 
mapped size under 3G.

-SB

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