wok annotate memtester/description.txt @ rev 24486

updated djvulibre and djvulibre-dev (3.5.27 -> 3.5.28)
author Hans-G?nter Theisgen
date Fri Feb 18 16:54:18 2022 +0100 (2022-02-18)
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al@18531 1 memtester is a utility for testing the memory subsystem in a computer to
al@18531 2 determine if it is faulty.
al@18531 3
al@18531 4 Usage is simple for the basic case. As root, run the resulting memtester binary
al@18531 5 with the following commandline:
al@18531 6
al@18531 7 memtester <memory> [runs]
al@18531 8
al@18531 9 where `<memory>` is the amount of memory to test, in megabytes by default. You
al@18531 10 can optionally include a suffix of B, K, M, or G (for bytes, kilobytes,
al@18531 11 megabytes, and gigabytes respectively).
al@18531 12
al@18531 13 `[runs]` is an optional limit to the number of runs through all tests.
al@18531 14
al@18531 15 An optional `-p physaddr` argument available to cause memtester to test memory
al@18531 16 starting at a specific physical memory address (by mmap(2)ing a device file
al@18531 17 representing physical memory (/dev/mem by default, but can be specified with the
al@18531 18 `-d device` option) starting at an offset of `physaddr`, which is given in hex).
al@18531 19
al@18531 20 Note: the memory specified will be overwritten during testing; you therefore
al@18531 21 *cannot* specify a region belonging to the kernel or other applications without
al@18531 22 causing the other process or entire system to crash). If you use this option, it
al@18531 23 is up to you to ensure the specified memory is safe to overwrite. That makes
al@18531 24 this option mostly of use for testing memory-mapped I/O devices and similar.
al@18531 25 Thanks to Allon Stern for the idea behind this feature. For example, if you want
al@18531 26 to test a bank of RAM or device which is 64kbytes in size and starts at physical
al@18531 27 address 0x0C0000 through the normal /dev/mem, you would run memtester as
al@18531 28 follows:
al@18531 29
al@18531 30 memtester -p 0x0c0000 64k [runs]
al@18531 31
al@18531 32 If instead that device presented its memory as /dev/foodev at offset 0, you
al@18531 33 would run memtester instead as follows:
al@18531 34
al@18531 35 memtester -p 0 -d /dev/foodev 64k [runs]
al@18531 36
al@18531 37 Note that the `-d` option can only be specified in combination with `-p`.
al@18531 38
al@18531 39 memtester must run as user root so that it can lock its pages into memory. If
al@18531 40 memtester fails to lock its pages, it will issue a warning and continue
al@18531 41 regardless. Testing without the memory being locked is generally very slow and
al@18531 42 not particularly accurate, as you'll end up testing the same memory over and
al@18531 43 over as the system swaps the larger region.