Searched refs:RAM (Results 1 – 25 of 283) sorted by relevance
12345678910>>...12
/Linux-v5.10/drivers/zorro/ |
D | zorro.ids | 18 0000 Golem RAM Box 2MB [RAM Expansion] 22 1300 Warp Engine [Accelerator, SCSI Host Adapter and RAM Expansion] 24 0200 Megamix 2000 [RAM Expansion] 36 0a00 A590/A2052/A2058/A2091 [RAM Expansion] 37 2000 A560 [RAM Expansion] 40 5000 A2620 68020 [Accelerator and RAM Expansion] 41 5100 A2630 68030 [Accelerator and RAM Expansion] 51 0200 EXP8000 [RAM Expansion] 64 0100 AX2000 [RAM Expansion] 68 0000 StarBoard II [RAM Expansion] [all …]
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/translations/zh_CN/arm/ |
D | Booting | 40 1、设置和初始化 RAM。 47 1、设置和初始化 RAM 53 引导装载程序应该找到并初始化系统中所有内核用于保持系统变量数据的 RAM。 55 RAM,或可能使用对这个设备已知的 RAM 信息,还可能使用任何引导装载程序 117 标签列表应该保存在系统的 RAM 中。 120 建议放在 RAM 的头 16KiB 中。 126 RAM 中,并用启动数据初始化它。dtb 格式在文档 132 dtb 必须置于内核自解压不会覆盖的内存区。建议将其放置于 RAM 的头 16KiB 146 zImage 也可以被放在系统 RAM(任意位置)中被调用。注意:内核使用映像 147 基地址的前 16KB RAM 空间来保存页表。建议将映像置于 RAM 的 32KB 处。 [all …]
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/admin-guide/blockdev/ |
D | ramdisk.rst | 2 Using the RAM disk block device with Linux 10 4) An Example of Creating a Compressed RAM Disk 16 The RAM disk driver is a way to use main system memory as a block device. It 22 The RAM disk dynamically grows as more space is required. It does this by using 23 RAM from the buffer cache. The driver marks the buffers it is using as dirty 26 The RAM disk supports up to 16 RAM disks by default, and can be reconfigured 27 to support an unlimited number of RAM disks (at your own risk). Just change 31 To use RAM disk support with your system, run './MAKEDEV ram' from the /dev 32 directory. RAM disks are all major number 1, and start with minor number 0 35 The new RAM disk also has the ability to load compressed RAM disk images, [all …]
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/translations/zh_CN/arm64/ |
D | booting.txt | 47 1、设置和初始化 RAM 53 1、设置和初始化 RAM 58 引导装载程序应该找到并初始化系统中所有内核用于保持系统变量数据的 RAM。 60 RAM,或可能使用对这个设备已知的 RAM 信息,还可能是引导装载程序设计者 154 x0 = 系统 RAM 中设备树数据块(dtb)的物理地址。
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/arm/ |
D | porting.rst | 25 to be located in RAM, it can be in flash or other read-only or 30 This must be pointing at RAM. The decompressor will zero initialise 43 Physical address to place the initial RAM disk. Only relevant if 48 Virtual address of the initial RAM disk. The following constraint 62 Physical start address of the first bank of RAM. 65 Virtual start address of the first bank of RAM. During the kernel 101 last virtual RAM address (found using variable high_memory). 105 between virtual RAM and the vmalloc area. We do this to allow 113 `pram` specifies the physical start address of RAM. Must always
|
D | booting.rst | 19 1. Setup and initialise the RAM. 27 1. Setup and initialise RAM 35 The boot loader is expected to find and initialise all RAM that the 38 to automatically locate and size all RAM, or it may use knowledge of 39 the RAM in the machine, or any other method the boot loader designer 120 The tagged list should be stored in system RAM. 124 it. The recommended placement is in the first 16KiB of RAM. 142 A safe location is just above the 128MiB boundary from start of RAM. 158 be loaded just above the 128MiB boundary from the start of RAM as 174 The zImage may also be placed in system RAM and called there. The [all …]
|
D | tcm.rst | 8 This is usually just a few (4-64) KiB of RAM inside the ARM 32 place you put it, it will mask any underlying RAM from the 33 CPU so it is usually wise not to overlap any physical RAM with 55 - Idle loops where all external RAM is set to self-refresh 56 retention mode, so only on-chip RAM is accessible by 61 the external RAM controller. 72 - Have the remaining TCM RAM added to a special 138 printk("Hello TCM executed from ITCM RAM\n");
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/ABI/testing/ |
D | sysfs-bus-coresight-devices-etb10 | 16 Description: (RW) Disables write access to the Trace RAM by stopping the 19 into the Trace RAM following the trigger event is equal to the 26 Description: (Read) Defines the depth, in words, of the trace RAM in powers of 40 Description: (Read) Shows the value held by the ETB RAM Read Pointer register 41 that is used to read entries from the Trace RAM over the APB 49 Description: (Read) Shows the value held by the ETB RAM Write Pointer register 51 the CoreSight bus into the Trace RAM. The value is read directly
|
D | sysfs-bus-coresight-devices-tmc | 5 Description: (RW) Disables write access to the Trace RAM by stopping the 14 Description: (Read) Defines the size, in 32-bit words, of the local RAM buffer. 28 Description: (Read) Shows the value held by the TMC RAM Read Pointer register 29 that is used to read entries from the Trace RAM over the APB 37 Description: (Read) Shows the value held by the TMC RAM Write Pointer register 39 the CoreSight bus into the Trace RAM. The value is read directly
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/vm/ |
D | frontswap.rst | 9 swapped pages are saved in RAM (or a RAM-like device) instead of a swap disk. 21 a synchronous concurrency-safe page-oriented "pseudo-RAM device" conforming 23 in-kernel compressed memory, aka "zcache", or future RAM-like devices); 24 this pseudo-RAM device is not directly accessible or addressable by the 88 useful for write-balancing for some RAM-like devices). Swap pages (and 89 evicted page-cache pages) are a great use for this kind of slower-than-RAM- 90 but-much-faster-than-disk "pseudo-RAM device" and the frontswap (and 95 provides a huge amount of flexibility for more dynamic, flexible RAM 100 that can be safely kept in RAM. Zcache essentially trades off CPU 108 as in zcache, but then "remotified" to another system's RAM. This [all …]
|
D | cleancache.rst | 122 saved in transcendent memory (RAM that is otherwise not directly 128 fast kernel-directly-addressable RAM and slower DMA/asynchronous devices. 132 balancing for some RAM-like devices). Evicted page-cache pages (and 133 swap pages) are a great use for this kind of slower-than-RAM-but-much- 140 virtual machines. This is really hard to do with RAM and efforts to 144 of flexibility for more dynamic, flexible RAM multiplexing. 146 "fallow" hypervisor-owned RAM to not only be "time-shared" between multiple 148 optimize RAM utilization. And when guest OS's are induced to surrender 149 underutilized RAM (e.g. with "self-ballooning"), page cache pages 156 the proposed "RAMster" driver shares RAM across multiple physical [all …]
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/arm/keystone/ |
D | knav-qmss.rst | 12 processors(PDSP), linking RAM, descriptor pools and infrastructure 18 Linking RAM registers are used to link the descriptors which are stored in 19 descriptor RAM. Descriptor RAM is configurable as internal or external memory. 20 The QMSS driver manages the PDSP setups, linking RAM regions,
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/qcom/ |
D | qcom,aoss-qmp.txt | 6 SoC has it's own block of message RAM and IRQ for communication with the AOSS. 7 The protocol used to communicate in the message RAM is known as Qualcomm 27 Definition: the base address and size of the message RAM for this 67 The following example represents the AOSS side-channel message RAM and the
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/admin-guide/ |
D | initrd.rst | 1 Using the initial RAM disk (initrd) 8 initrd provides the capability to load a RAM disk by the boot loader. 9 This RAM disk can then be mounted as the root file system and programs 27 1) the boot loader loads the kernel and the initial RAM disk 28 2) the kernel converts initrd into a "normal" RAM disk and 58 Loads the specified file as the initial RAM disk. When using LILO, you 59 have to specify the RAM disk image file in /etc/lilo.conf, using the 64 initrd data is preserved but it is not converted to a RAM disk and 77 with the RAM disk mounted as root. 117 Second, the kernel has to be compiled with RAM disk support and with [all …]
|
D | ramoops.rst | 11 Ramoops is an oops/panic logger that writes its logs to RAM before the system 13 needs a system with persistent RAM so that the content of that area can 52 to life (i.e. a watchdog triggered). In such cases, RAM may be somewhat 119 You can specify either RAM memory or peripheral devices' memory. However, when 120 specifying RAM, be sure to reserve the memory by issuing memblock_reserve() 138 a stored record from RAM, simply unlink the respective pstore file.
|
/Linux-v5.10/arch/m68k/ |
D | Kconfig.machine | 333 comment "RAM configuration" 336 hex "Address of the base of RAM" 339 Define the address that RAM starts at. On many platforms this is 341 platforms choose to setup their RAM at other addresses within the 345 hex "Size of RAM (in bytes), or 0 for automatic" 348 Define the size of the system RAM. If you select 0 then the 349 kernel will try to probe the RAM size at runtime. This is not 357 put at the start of RAM, but it doesn't have to be. On ColdFire 388 of RAM, but usually some small offset from it. Define the start 390 processor vectors at the base of RAM and then the start of the [all …]
|
/Linux-v5.10/arch/arm/mach-socfpga/ |
D | Kconfig | 24 bool "Suspend to RAM on SOCFPGA" 26 Select this if you want to enable Suspend-to-RAM on SOCFPGA
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/mips/img/ |
D | xilfpga.txt | 20 - 128Mbyte DDR RAM at 0x0000_0000 21 - 8Kbyte RAM at 0x1000_0000 69 The BootRAM is a writeable "RAM" in FPGA at 0x1FC0_0000.
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/ti/ |
D | keystone-navigator-qmss.txt | 6 processors(PDSP), linking RAM, descriptor pools and infrastructure 12 Linking RAM registers are used to link the descriptors which are stored in 13 descriptor RAM. Descriptor RAM is configurable as internal or external memory. 14 The QMSS driver manages the PDSP setups, linking RAM regions, 38 - Queue status RAM. 109 - PDSP internal RAM region.
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/devicetree/bindings/soc/fsl/cpm_qe/ |
D | cpm.txt | 34 parameter RAM region (if it has one). 36 * Multi-User RAM (MURAM) 38 The multi-user/dual-ported RAM is expressed as a bus under the CPM node.
|
/Linux-v5.10/arch/arm/boot/dts/ |
D | armada-xp-matrix.dts | 24 * This board has 4 GB of RAM, but the last 256 MB of 25 * RAM are not usable due to the overlap with the MBus
|
/Linux-v5.10/tools/testing/selftests/zram/ |
D | README | 1 zram: Compressed RAM based block devices 5 The zram module creates RAM based block devices named /dev/zram<id>
|
/Linux-v5.10/arch/arm/mm/ |
D | proc-arm740.S | 73 ldr r0, =(CONFIG_DRAM_BASE & 0xFFFFF000) @ base[31:12] of RAM 74 ldr r3, =(CONFIG_DRAM_SIZE >> 12) @ size of RAM (must be >= 4KB) 81 mcr p15, 0, r0, c6, c1 @ set area 1, RAM
|
/Linux-v5.10/arch/powerpc/platforms/powernv/ |
D | Kconfig | 30 bool "Enable removal of RAM from kernel mappings for tracing" 33 Enabling this option allows for the removal of memory (RAM)
|
/Linux-v5.10/Documentation/filesystems/ |
D | tmpfs.rst | 20 you gain swapping and limit checking. Another similar thing is the RAM 22 RAM, where you have to create an ordinary filesystem on top. Ramdisks 67 default is half of your physical RAM without swap. If you 72 is half of the number of your physical RAM pages, or (on a 73 machine with highmem) the number of lowmem RAM pages, 79 to limit this tmpfs instance to that percentage of your physical RAM: 171 RAM/SWAP in 10240 inodes and it is only accessible by root.
|
12345678910>>...12