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Date:      Fri, 7 May 2021 09:48:07 -0700
From:      Freddie Cash <fjwcash@gmail.com>
To:        Yasuhiro Kimura <yasu@utahime.org>
Cc:        FreeBSD Stable <freebsd-stable@freebsd.org>
Subject:   Re: Install of 13.0-RELEASE i386 with ZFS root hangs up
Message-ID:  <CAOjFWZ4m6ctgA%2BzOXXKk-cfEgypTcFKH58%2BVyJO%2BH4b=0nA=JQ@mail.gmail.com>
In-Reply-To: <20210507.214759.1825935389016318351.yasu@utahime.org>
References:  <20210507.214759.1825935389016318351.yasu@utahime.org>

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On Fri, May 7, 2021 at 5:49 AM Yasuhiro Kimura <yasu@utahime.org> wrote:

> Does anyone succeed to install 13.0-RELEASE i386 with ZFS root?
>
> I tried this with VirtualBox and VMware Player on Windows with
> following VM condition.
>
> * 4 CPUs
> * 8GB memory
> * 100GB disk
> * Bridge mode NIC
>
> But in both cases, VM gets high CPU load and hangs up after I moved
> to 'YES' at 'ZFS Configuration' menu and type return key.
>
> If I select UFS root installation completes successfully. So the
> problem is specific to ZFS root.
>

Running ZFS on 32-bit OSes is doable (although not recommended) but
requires a lot of manual configuration and tweaking, especially around
kernel memory and ARC usage.

You're limited to 4 GB of memory space, so you need to tune the ARC to use
less than that.  The auto-tuning has improved a lot over the years, but you
still need to limit the ARC size to around 2 GB (or less) to keep the
system stable.  KVA memory space tuning shouldn't be needed anymore, but
you can do research into that, just in case.

You can compile a custom kernel to enable PAE support, that will sometimes
help with memory issues on i386 (and will allow you to use more than 4 GB
of system RAM, although individual processes are still limited to 4 GB).

If you really need to, you can make ZFS work on i386.  If at all possible,
though, you really should run it on amd64 instead.

-- 
Freddie Cash
fjwcash@gmail.com



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