enow.com Web Search

Search results

  1. Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
  2. Memory segmentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_segmentation

    A segment can be extended by allocating another memory page and adding it to the segment's page table. An implementation of virtual memory on a system using segmentation with paging usually only moves individual pages back and forth between main memory and secondary storage, similar to a paged non-segmented system. Pages of the segment can be ...

  3. Flat memory model - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Flat_memory_model

    Similar to paged memory, but paging is achieved by the implicit addition of two relatively shifted registers: segment:offset; Variable page boundaries, more efficient and flexible than the paged memory model; Quite complex and awkward from a programmer's point of view; More difficult for compilers; Pages can overlap / poor resource protection ...

  4. Memory paging - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_paging

    In computer operating systems, memory paging (or swapping on some Unix-like systems) is a memory management scheme by which a computer stores and retrieves data from secondary storage [a] for use in main memory. [1]

  5. Page table - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Page_table

    As an alternative to tagging page table entries with process-unique identifiers, the page table itself may occupy a different virtual-memory page for each process so that the page table becomes a part of the process context. In such an implementation, the process's page table can be paged out whenever the process is no longer resident in memory.

  6. x86 memory segmentation - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/X86_memory_segmentation

    If the paging unit is enabled, addresses in a segment are now virtual addresses, rather than physical addresses as they were on the 80286. That is, the segment starting address, the offset, and the final 32-bit address the segmentation unit derived by adding the two are all virtual (or logical) addresses when the paging unit is enabled.

  7. Memory management unit - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_management_unit

    If paging is enabled, the base address in a segment descriptor is an address in a linear paged address space divided into 4 KB pages, so when that is added to the offset in the segment, the resulting address is a linear address in that address space; in IA-32, that address is then masked to be no larger than 32 bits. The result may be looked up ...

  8. Code segment - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Code_segment

    The term "segment" comes from the memory segment, which is a historical approach to memory management that has been succeeded by paging.When a program is stored in an object file, the code segment is a part of this file; when the loader places a program into memory so that it may be executed, various memory regions are allocated (in particular, as pages), corresponding to both the segments in ...

  9. Memory management (operating systems) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Memory_management...

    The Multics operating system is probably the best known system implementing segmented memory. Multics segments are subdivisions of the computer's physical memory of up to 256 pages, each page being 1K 36-bit words in size, resulting in a maximum segment size of 1MiB (with 9-bit bytes, as used in Multics). A process could have up to 4046 segments.