alloc_hugepages, free_hugepages - allocate or free huge pages
The system calls alloc_hugepages() and free_hugepages() were introduced in Linux 2.5.36 and removed again in Linux 2.5.54. They existed only on i386 and ia64 (when built with CONFIG_HUGETLB_PAGE). In Linux 2.4.20, the syscall numbers exist, but the calls fail with the error ENOSYS.
On i386 the memory management hardware knows about ordinary pages (4 KiB) and huge pages (2 or 4 MiB). Similarly ia64 knows about huge pages of several sizes. These system calls serve to map huge pages into the process's memory or to free them again. Huge pages are locked into memory, and are not swapped.
The key
argument is an identifier. When zero the pages are
private, and not inherited by children. When positive the pages are
shared with other applications using the same key
, and
inherited by child processes.
The addr
argument of free_hugepages() tells
which page is being freed: it was the return value of a call to
alloc_hugepages(). (The memory is first actually freed
when all users have released it.) The addr
argument of
alloc_hugepages() is a hint, that the kernel may or may
not follow. Addresses must be properly aligned.
The len
argument is the length of the required segment. It
must be a multiple of the huge page size.
The prot
argument specifies the memory protection of the
segment. It is one of PROT_READ,
PROT_WRITE, PROT_EXEC.
The flag
argument is ignored, unless key
is
positive. In that case, if flag
is IPC_CREAT,
then a new huge page segment is created when none with the given key
existed. If this flag is not set, then ENOENT is
returned when no segment with the given key exists.
On success, alloc_hugepages() returns the allocated
virtual address, and free_hugepages() returns zero. On
error, -1 is returned, and errno
is set to indicate the
error.
The system call is not supported on this kernel.
/proc/sys/vm/nr_hugepages
Number of configured hugetlb pages. This can be read and written.
/proc/meminfo
Gives info on the number of configured hugetlb pages and on their size in the three variables HugePages_Total, HugePages_Free, Hugepagesize.
Linux on Intel processors.
These system calls are gone; they existed only in Linux 2.5.36 through to Linux 2.5.54.
Now the hugetlbfs filesystem can be used instead. Memory backed by huge pages (if the CPU supports them) is obtained by using mmap(2) to map files in this virtual filesystem.
The maximal number of huge pages can be specified using the hugepages= boot parameter.