vm-object can be used to demand-allocate non-contiguous physical memory, and
will provide an api for userspace programs to do the same. unless a vm-object
is created in-place (i.e. to represent a specific area of physical memory),
its memory pages are only allocated when the object is mapped AND someone
attempts to access the memory.
when the sector coverage mode is set to free, the loop that initialises the vm_page structs for free and reserved pages is limited to the same upper bound that is used to calculate the sector size and count.
kernel.early-console is used to specify which output device the
kernel boot log should be written to. the first thing the kernel
does on boot after initialising the bootstrap processor is initialise
the early console, making it useful for debugging problems that
occur early in the boot process. this arg accepts a list of hard-coded
values for output devices, such as tty0 for the display or ttyS0
for the serial port. the exact values supported will depend on the
platform.
once all drivers are loaded, the kernel switches to the device specified
by kernel.console for output. unlike kernel.early-console, this arg
specifies the name of a tty device in /dev/tty. this means that, not
only are more devices supported (any device provided by a tty driver),
but the kernel can also get input from the user using this console too
(not used by the kernel itself, but will be used by the user to interact
with userspace programs, like the shell).
by default, the sector map created under the sparse model now only extends to the last non-reserved page frame, any reserved page frames afterwards are ignored.