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  2. Hardware stress test - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Hardware_stress_test

    Stress testing, in general, should put computer hardware under exaggerated levels of stress in order to ensure stability when used in a normal environment. These can include extremes of workload, type of task, memory use, thermal load (heat), clock speed, or voltages. Memory and CPU are two components that are commonly stress tested in this way.

  3. CPU-bound - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/CPU-bound

    Establishing that a computer is frequently CPU-bound implies that upgrading the CPU or optimizing code will improve the overall computer performance. With the advent of multiple buses, parallel processing, multiprogramming , preemptive scheduling, advanced graphics cards , advanced sound cards and generally, more decentralized loads, it became ...

  4. Commit charge - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Commit_charge

    This is composed of main memory (RAM) and disk (pagefiles). The corresponding performance counter is called "Committed Bytes". Limit is the maximum possible value for Total ; it is the sum of the current pagefile size plus the physical memory available for pageable contents (this excludes RAM that is assigned to non-pageable areas).

  5. Intel Management Engine - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Intel_Management_Engine

    The Management Engine is often confused with Intel AMT (Intel Active Management Technology). AMT runs on the ME, but is only available on processors with vPro.AMT gives device owners remote administration of their computer, [5] such as powering it on or off, and reinstalling the operating system.

  6. Self-modifying code - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Self-modifying_code

    The Linux kernel notably makes wide use of self-modifying code; it does so to be able to distribute a single binary image for each major architecture (e.g. IA-32, x86-64, 32-bit ARM, ARM64...) while adapting the kernel code in memory during boot depending on the specific CPU model detected, e.g. to be able to take advantage of new CPU ...

  7. Copy-on-write - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Copy-on-write

    When the memory is allocated, all the pages returned refer to the page of zeros and are all marked copy-on-write. This way, physical memory is not allocated for the process until data is written, allowing processes to reserve more virtual memory than physical memory and use memory sparsely, at the risk of running out of virtual address space.

  8. Firmware - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Firmware

    A computer's firmware may be manually updated by a user via a small utility program. In contrast, firmware in mass storage devices (hard-disk drives, optical disc drives, flash memory storage e.g. solid state drive) is less frequently updated, even when flash memory (rather than ROM, EEPROM) storage is used for the firmware.

  9. Java performance - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Java_performance

    Java memory use is much higher than C++'s memory use because: There is an overhead of 8 bytes for each object and 12 bytes for each array [ 61 ] in Java. If the size of an object is not a multiple of 8 bytes, it is rounded up to next multiple of 8.