Path: utzoo!utgpu!jarvis.csri.toronto.edu!mailrus!uwm.edu!cs.utexas.edu!rice!sun-spots-request From: jms@tardis.tymnet.com (Joe Smith) Newsgroups: comp.sys.sun Subject: Re: Maximum Swap per Process Limit in SUNOS 4.0 Keywords: Miscellaneous Message-ID: <4184@brazos.Rice.edu> Date: 3 Jan 90 01:32:27 GMT Sender: root@rice.edu Organization: Sun-Spots Lines: 32 Approved: Sun-Spots@rice.edu X-Refs: Original: v8n228 X-Sun-Spots-Digest: Volume 9, Issue 4, message 2 of 12 In article <3992@brazos.Rice.edu> murthy@algron.cs.cornell.edu (Chet Murthy) writes: >X-Sun-Spots-Digest: Volume 8, Issue 228, message 4 of 18 >Does anybody out there know how to increase the max datasize per process >limit under SUNOS 4.0? I have a sun-4/260 here with 1.6Gigabytes of swap, >and I'd like to use most of that for a really big symbolic processing job. >I'm currently getting a "mere" 512MB (1/2 Gig) right now per process. It looks like you have run into a hardware limit. I found the following in "Writing Device Drivers", Part No: 800-1780-10, Revision A, of 24 April 1989 (which is part of the 4.0.3 "Change Pages and Addenda to the Docubox", Part No: 800-3378-10, Revision A of 24 April 1989). Pages 79 and 80, topic "Selecting a Virtual to Physical Mapping", says that the Sun-4/260 has two virtual address spaces of 512 magabytes in size. The diagram on page 85 shows the block diagram of the Sun-4 MMU. It shows that the context register plus 12 high address bits are used to index into the segment map and look up a 9 bit quantity. These 9 bits, plus 5 middle address bits, plus 13 low address bits = 27 bits = 2**27 words = 128 mega words = 512 mega bytes. The manual said nothing about the Sun-4x architechure; maybe it has a larger virtual address space. But it looks like you are maxed out on your 4/260. Joe Smith (408)922-6220 | SMTP: JMS@F74.TYMNET.COM or jms@gemini.tymnet.com BT Tymnet Tech Services | UUCP: ...!{ames,pyramid}!oliveb!tymix!tardis!jms PO Box 49019, MS-D21 | PDP-10 support: My car's license plate is "POPJ P," San Jose, CA 95161-9019 | humorous dislaimer: "My Amiga speaks for me."