}
#endif
+/*
+ * Adaptive scale is meant to reduce sizes of hash tables on large memory
+ * machines. As memory size is increased the scale is also increased but at
+ * slower pace. Starting from ADAPT_SCALE_BASE (64G), every time memory
+ * quadruples the scale is increased by one, which means the size of hash table
+ * only doubles, instead of quadrupling as well.
+ * Because 32-bit systems cannot have large physical memory, where this scaling
+ * makes sense, it is disabled on such platforms.
+ */
+#if __BITS_PER_LONG > 32
+#define ADAPT_SCALE_BASE (64ul << 30)
+#define ADAPT_SCALE_SHIFT 2
+#define ADAPT_SCALE_NPAGES (ADAPT_SCALE_BASE >> PAGE_SHIFT)
+#endif
+
/*
* allocate a large system hash table from bootmem
* - it is assumed that the hash table must contain an exact power-of-2
if (PAGE_SHIFT < 20)
numentries = round_up(numentries, (1<<20)/PAGE_SIZE);
+#if __BITS_PER_LONG > 32
+ if (!high_limit) {
+ unsigned long adapt;
+
+ for (adapt = ADAPT_SCALE_NPAGES; adapt < numentries;
+ adapt <<= ADAPT_SCALE_SHIFT)
+ scale++;
+ }
+#endif
+
/* limit to 1 bucket per 2^scale bytes of low memory */
if (scale > PAGE_SHIFT)
numentries >>= (scale - PAGE_SHIFT);