このコンテンツは選択した言語では利用できません。

8.3.3.3. Enabling 1 GB huge pages for guests at boot or runtime


Red Hat Enterprise Linux 6.7 systems support 2 MB and 1 GB huge pages, which can be allocated at boot or at runtime.

Procedure 8.2. Allocating 1 GB huge pages at boot time

  1. To allocate different sizes of huge pages at boot, use the following command, specifying the number of huge pages. This example allocates 4 1 GB huge pages and 1024 2 MB huge pages:
    'default_hugepagesz=1G hugepagesz=1G hugepages=4 hugepagesz=2M hugepages=1024'
    
    Change this command line to specify a different number of huge pages to be allocated at boot.

    Note

    The next two steps must also be completed the first time you allocate 1 GB huge pages at boot time.
  2. Mount the 2 MB and 1 GB huge pages on the host:
    # mkdir /dev/hugepages1G
    # mount -t hugetlbfs -o pagesize=1G none /dev/hugepages1G
    # mkdir /dev/hugepages2M
    # mount -t hugetlbfs -o pagesize=2M none /dev/hugepages2M
    
  3. Restart libvirtd to enable the use of 1 GB huge pages on guests:
    # service restart libvirtd
    
1 GB huge pages are now available for guests.

Procedure 8.3. Allocating 1 GB huge pages at runtime

1 GB huge pages can also be allocated at runtime. Runtime allocation allows the system administrator to choose which NUMA node to allocate those pages from. However, runtime page allocation can be more prone to allocation failure than boot time allocation due to memory fragmentation.
  1. To allocate different sizes of huge pages at runtime, use the following command, replacing values for the number of huge pages, the NUMA node to allocate them from, and the huge page size:
    # echo 4 > /sys/devices/system/node/node1/hugepages/hugepages-1048576kB/nr_hugepages
    # echo 1024 > /sys/devices/system/node/node3/hugepages/hugepages-2048kB/nr_hugepages
    
    This example command allocates 4 1 GB huge pages from node1 and 1024 2MB huge pages from node3.
    These huge page settings can be changed at any time with the above command, depending on the amount of free memory on the host system.

    Note

    The next two steps must also be completed the first time you allocate 1 GB huge pages at runtime.
  2. Mount the 2 MB and 1 GB huge pages on the host:
    # mkdir /dev/hugepages1G
    # mount -t hugetlbfs -o pagesize=1G none /dev/hugepages1G
    # mkdir /dev/hugepages2M
    # mount -t hugetlbfs -o pagesize=2M none /dev/hugepages2M
    
  3. Restart libvirtd to enable the use of 1 GB huge pages on guests:
    # systemctl restart libvirtd
    
Red Hat logoGithubredditYoutubeTwitter

詳細情報

試用、購入および販売

コミュニティー

会社概要

Red Hat は、企業がコアとなるデータセンターからネットワークエッジに至るまで、各種プラットフォームや環境全体で作業を簡素化できるように、強化されたソリューションを提供しています。

多様性を受け入れるオープンソースの強化

Red Hat では、コード、ドキュメント、Web プロパティーにおける配慮に欠ける用語の置き換えに取り組んでいます。このような変更は、段階的に実施される予定です。詳細情報: Red Hat ブログ.

Red Hat ドキュメントについて

Legal Notice

Theme

© 2026 Red Hat
トップに戻る