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+<think>
+Alright, so I'm trying to figure out whether this bug report about jemalloc on Asahi Linux is a user-mode or system-mode issue. Let's break it down.
+
+The problem description says that M1 Macs use 16KB pages, but jemalloc builds with 4KB pages by default. This is causing an issue in QEMU. Hmm, I know that page size can affect memory management, so maybe this is related to how the system handles memory at a low level.
+
+jemalloc is a memory allocator library. If it's using a different page size than what the system actually uses, that could cause problems. But where does jemalloc operate? It's used by applications, which are typically user-mode processes. However, the page size setting might be related to how the kernel manages memory.
+
+QEMU is an emulator, and if it's experiencing issues with memory allocation due to incorrect page sizes, that might mean it's a system-level problem because it's interacting with hardware resources like memory pages managed by the OS.
+
+Wait, but jemalloc configurations can sometimes be adjusted at runtime or compile-time. If the default configuration isn't compatible with the system's actual page size (16KB), maybe it's a user-mode issue if the application doesn't handle that correctly. However, since it's specifically about page sizes which are kernel-level attributes, this might fall under system-mode because it involves how the OS handles memory.
+
+Also, Asahi Linux is running on M1 Macs, which have specific hardware considerations. So if jemalloc isn't configured properly for these systems, it could be a system-mode issue as it relates to the OS's configuration or compatibility with the hardware.
+</think>
+
+system
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