ARM: 8700/1: nommu: always reserve address 0 away
Some nommu systems have RAM at address 0. When vectors are not located there, the very beginning of memory remains available for dynamic allocations. The memblock allocator explicitly skips the first page but the standard page allocator does not, and while it correctly returns a non-null struct page pointer for that page, page_address() gives 0 which gets confused with NULL (out of memory) by callers despite having plenty of free memory left. Signed-off-by: Nicolas Pitre <nico@linaro.org> Signed-off-by: Russell King <rmk+kernel@armlinux.org.uk>
This commit is contained in:
parent
2bd6bf03f4
commit
195320fd6e
1 changed files with 5 additions and 0 deletions
|
@ -344,6 +344,11 @@ void __init arm_mm_memblock_reserve(void)
|
|||
* reserved here.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
#endif
|
||||
/*
|
||||
* In any case, always ensure address 0 is never used as many things
|
||||
* get very confused if 0 is returned as a legitimate address.
|
||||
*/
|
||||
memblock_reserve(0, 1);
|
||||
}
|
||||
|
||||
void __init adjust_lowmem_bounds(void)
|
||||
|
|
Loading…
Reference in a new issue