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Re: Booting a kernel inside a large file, out of memory?
From: |
Andrei Borzenkov |
Subject: |
Re: Booting a kernel inside a large file, out of memory? |
Date: |
Fri, 5 Mar 2021 21:16:46 +0300 |
User-agent: |
Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:78.0) Gecko/20100101 Thunderbird/78.7.1 |
On 04.03.2021 17:51, Sebert, Holger.ext wrote:
> Hi!
>
> When booting a bzImage which is contained in a bigger file, does Grub
> load the whole file into memory or does it only load the bzImage from
> the file containing it?
>
It loads the whole file. Also it needs uncompressed size (and may
additionally need compressed size e.g. on secure boot system, where file
is loaded and verified before being used).
> Here is some background:
>
> I have a file, say "myimage", which contains both a kernel (bzImage)
> and a root filesystem (squashfs). The kernel is configured in a way to
> automatically boot into that filesystem.
>
How are you expecting kernel to access its root filesystem if this root
filesystem is not loaded in memory?
> I am booting the kernel inside "myimage" successfully using the
> following command:
>
> linux ($root)/myimage
> boot
>
> The root filesystem being contained in "myimage" is currently not huge,
> so it should fit into memory, but I am worried that this might change
> in the future and I can get an out-of-memory-condition. Therefore my
> question at the beginning of this mail.
>
> Thanks!
>
> Best,
> Holger
>