Page size

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POWER supports both 4KiB and 64KiB page sizes; this is in contrast to x86, which supports only 4KiB.

Performance

64KiB mode yields performance improvements for some workloads, if sufficient RAM is available. However, 64KiB mode also incurs higher RAM usage, so users with limited RAM will see better performance in 4KiB mode.

Porting Buggy Software

With rare exceptions (e.g. emulation), correctly written software will work in both 4KiB and 64KiB modes without issues. However, if software was only subject to QA testing on one page size, there is a nontrivial chance that it was written to rely on assumptions that only are accurate for that mode. Such breakage is most common in hardware drivers. In practice, this means that hardware drivers that were exclusively tested on x86 are likely to exhibit bugs in 64KiB mode, while some POWER-specific hardware drivers are likely to exhibit bugs in 4KiB mode.

The Hardware Compatibility List may be helpful in checking which page sizes your preferred hardware's drivers support, or finding hardware whose drivers support your preferred page size. For checking other software support, the Ports List may be helpful.

Emulation

User-mode emulators (e.g. Box86) work most reliably when the host and guest page size are the same. Some emulators are able to emulate a different page size, but doing so increases the complexity and decreases the accuracy of the emulation, which may or may not cause bugs. In practice, this means that if you are emulating x86 software, you will probably experience fewer bugs in 4KiB mode.

Virtual Machines

Virtual machine guests (in KVM-HV) can run in either page size, regardless of the host OS's page size. This can be a good approach if you need to run a specific software package that doesn't support your host OS's page size. Caveats:

  • If you're using a 64KiB guest that has a Radix MMU, you will need to add an extra flag if your host is 4KiB.
  • If you're using a 64KiB guest that has an HPT MMU, then your host must also be 64KiB.

Checking Your Page Size

You can check your kernel's page size with this command:

getconf PAGESIZE

Changing Your Page Size

You can build a kernel with your preferred page size via Linux's CONFIG_PPC_4K_PAGES and CONFIG_PPC_64K_PAGES options.

Fedora

Example commands to build and install a 4KiB kernel in Fedora (which defaults to 64KiB):

sudo dnf install fedpkg fedora-packager rpmdevtools ncurses-devel grubby 
fedpkg co -a kernel
cd kernel
git checkout -b f38 origin/f38
sudo dnf builddep kernel.spec
echo "CONFIG_PPC_4K_PAGES=y" >> ./kernel-local
echo "# CONFIG_PPC_64K_PAGES is not set" >> ./kernel-local
echo "CONFIG_ARCH_FORCE_MAX_ORDER=13" >> ./kernel-local
sed -i "s/Release: %{pkg_release}/Release: %{pkg_release}.4KiB/" kernel.spec
fedpkg local
sudo dnf install ./ppc64le/*.rpm

(Credit to Fedora wiki, Dan Aloni, and Skirmisher for some of the above incantations.)