Ok, here's the strangest memory map I've seen:
Code: Select all
0x000000000 to 0x00009DFFF - 632 KiB, usable RAM
0x00009E000 to 0x00009FFFF - 8 KiB, system
* legacy hole (256 KiB) *
0x0000E0000 to 0x0000FFFFF - 128 KiB, system
0x000100000 to 0x0CE72FFFF - 3381440 KiB, usable RAM
0x0CE730000 to 0x0CE7F2FFF - 780 KiB, ACPI NVS
0x0CE7F3000 to 0x0CFA91FFF - 19068 KiB, usable RAM
0x0CFA92000 to 0x0CFA93FFF - 8 KiB, system
0x0CFA94000 to 0x0CFB8DFFF - 1000 KiB, usable RAM
0x0CFB8E000 to 0x0CFBE4FFF - 348 KiB, ACPI NVS
0x0CFBE5000 to 0x0CFBE6FFF - 8 KiB, usable RAM
0x0CFBE7000 to 0x0CFBF1FFF - 44 KiB, ACPI reclaimable
0x0CFBF2000 to 0x0CFBF2FFF - 4 KiB, usable RAM
0x0CFBF3000 to 0x0CFBFEFFF - 48 KiB, ACPI reclaimable
0x0CFBFF000 to 0x0CFBFFFFF - 4 KiB, usable RAM
0x0CFC00000 to 0x0CFFFFFFF - 4096 KiB, system
* PCI hole (524288 KiB) *
0x0F0000000 to 0x0F7FFFFFF - 131072 KiB, system
0x0FFF00000 to 0x0FFFFFFFF - 1024 KiB, system
0x100000000 to 0x22BFFFFFF - 4800 MiB, usable RAM
This is from a relatively modern Intel machine - an Intel DG33FB/DG33BU motherboard with an Intel BIOS. I used "BIOS Int 0x15, eax = 0xE820" to get the memory map, and thought it might be interesting for others to see how messed up it can get.
I was also wondering if anyone has a computer with an even stranger memory map - post yours if it looks unusual!
Cheers,
Brendan