Hi Dave,
On Tue, Dec 18, 2012 at 2:12 PM, Dave Anderson <anderson(a)redhat.com> wrote:
> > crash> p mem_section[0x400]
> > $13 = (struct mem_section *) 0xffffffff81a26658
> > crash> p mem_section[0x400][0x0]
> > $14 = {
> > section_mem_map = 0xffffffff81a26630,
> > pageblock_flags = 0xffffffff81a26680
> > }
I think I did show the memory section. But it is understandable if
you missed it.
I plodded my way through the macros to figure out that the flag value of
crash> p $tp->page->flags
$9 = 0x200000000000000
ultimately maps to indexes of 0x400 and 0.
(47 bit shift for first index)
There are only two fields because of kernel build options.
crash> struct mem_section ffff88021e5eb000 -x
struct mem_section {
section_mem_map = 0xffffea0000000003,
pageblock_flags = 0xffff88021e1eaa00,
Since your example has upper 4 bytes of 0xffffea00, similar to
the (cfs_page_t *) 0xffffea001bb1d1e8 page address I am trying to understand,
maybe the 0xffffffff81a26630 address is bogus?
page_cgroup = 0xffff880215880000,
pad = 0x0