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  2. Physical address - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_address

    Diagram of relationship between the virtual and physical address spaces. In computing, a physical address (also real address, or binary address), is a memory address that is represented in the form of a binary number on the address bus circuitry in order to enable the data bus to access a particular storage cell of main memory, or a register of memory-mapped I/O device.

  3. Physical Address Extension - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Physical_Address_Extension

    Supporting 64 bit addresses in the page-table is a significant change as this enables two changes to the processor addressing. Firstly, the page table walker, which uses physical addresses to access the page table and directory, can now access physical addresses greater than the 32-bit physical addresses supported in systems without PAE.

  4. Page table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_table

    Pages can be held on disk if seldom used, or if physical memory is full. In the diagram above, some pages are not in physical memory. A page table is a data structure used by a virtual memory system in a computer to store mappings between virtual addresses and physical addresses. Virtual addresses are used by the program executed by the ...

  5. Memory address - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_address

    In a computer using virtual memory, accessing the location corresponding to a memory address may involve many levels. In computing, a memory address is a reference to a specific memory location in memory used by both software and hardware. [1] These addresses are fixed-length sequences of digits, typically displayed and handled as unsigned ...

  6. RAM limit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/RAM_limit

    Software limitations to usable physical RAM may be present. An operating system may only be designed to allocate a certain amount of memory, with upper address bits reserved to indicate designations such as I/O or supervisor mode or other security information. Or the operating system may rely on internal data structures with fixed limits for ...

  7. 26-bit computing - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/26-bit_computing

    In computer architecture, 26-bit integers, memory addresses, or other data units are those that are 26 bits wide, and thus can represent unsigned values up to 67,108,863. . Two examples of computer processors that featured 26-bit memory addressing are certain second generation IBM System/370 mainframe computer models introduced in 1981 (and several subsequent models), which had 26-bit physical ...

  8. Address space - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Address_space

    An iconic example of virtual-to-physical address translation is virtual memory, where different pages of virtual address space map either to page file or to main memory physical address space. It is possible that several numerically different virtual addresses all refer to one physical address and hence to the same physical byte of RAM.

  9. Aperture (computer memory) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Aperture_(computer_memory)

    Typically, a memory device attached to a computer accepts addresses starting at zero, and so a system with more than one such device would have ambiguous addressing. To resolve this, the memory logic will contain several aperture selectors , each containing a range selector and an interface to one of the memory devices.