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author | Parag Warudkar <parag.warudkar@gmail.com> | 2008-01-30 13:31:59 +0100 |
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committer | Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu> | 2008-01-30 13:31:59 +0100 |
commit | 79da4721117fcf188b4b007b775738a530f574da (patch) | |
tree | 114fcff65bbed673c6ec809c71892829116eaa8f /drivers/mfd | |
parent | aca46ba29298810b329518b96f97ace985027b59 (diff) | |
download | talos-op-linux-79da4721117fcf188b4b007b775738a530f574da.tar.gz talos-op-linux-79da4721117fcf188b4b007b775738a530f574da.zip |
x86: fix DMI out of memory problems
People with HP Desktops (including me) encounter couple of DMI errors
during boot - dmi_save_oem_strings_devices: out of memory and
dmi_string: out of memory.
On some HP desktops the DMI data include OEM strings (type 11) out of
which only few are meaningful and most other are empty. DMI code
religiously creates copies of these 27 strings (65 bytes each in my
case) and goes OOM in dmi_string().
If DMI_MAX_DATA is bumped up a little then it goes and fails in
dmi_save_oem_strings while allocating dmi_devices of sizeof(struct
dmi_device) corresponding to these strings.
On x86_64 since we cannot use alloc_bootmem this early, the code uses a
static array of 2048 bytes (DMI_MAX_DATA) for allocating the memory DMI
needs. It does not survive the creation of empty strings and devices.
Fix this by detecting and not newly allocating empty strings and instead
using a one statically defined dmi_empty_string.
Also do not create a new struct dmi_device for each empty string - use
one statically define dmi_device with .name=dmi_empty_string and add
that to the dmi_devices list.
On x64 this should stop the OOM with same current size of DMI_MAX_DATA
and on x86 this should save a good amount of (27*65 bytes +
27*sizeof(struct dmi_device) bootmem.
Compile and boot tested on both 32-bit and 64-bit x86.
Signed-off-by: Parag Warudkar <parag.warudkar@gmail.com>
Signed-off-by: Ingo Molnar <mingo@elte.hu>
Signed-off-by: Thomas Gleixner <tglx@linutronix.de>
Diffstat (limited to 'drivers/mfd')
0 files changed, 0 insertions, 0 deletions