射频消融是什么手术| 肺和大肠相表里是什么意思| 和包是什么| 粳米是什么米| 表面活性剂是什么| 网球肘用什么药最有效| 乙肝五项45阳性是什么意思| 碳元素是什么| 草字头加弓念什么| 杭州有什么好吃的| 沙和尚是什么妖怪| 升学宴选什么日子好| 打火机里面的液体是什么| 蜈蚣怕什么东西| 脸颊两边长痘痘是什么原因引起的| 止境是什么意思| 喝山楂水有什么功效与作用| 下巴起痘痘是什么原因| 脸部麻木是什么原因引起的| 睾丸是什么东西| 乳腺导管扩张是什么意思| 拉不出尿是什么原因| gravy是什么意思| 吃什么药去体内湿气| 2月份生日是什么星座| 化疗期间吃什么食物好| 13岁属什么| 女单读什么| 老虎最怕什么| 相亲为什么不能拖太久| 为的多音字是什么| 贫血的人吃什么水果| 双向情感障碍是什么意思| 囊肿是什么东西| 女人的第二张脸是什么| 胃痛去药店买什么药| 早期唐筛是检查什么| 小孩子消化不好吃什么调理| 耀字五行属什么| 蜜蜂蛰了用什么药| 囊变是什么意思| 意守丹田是什么意思| sport什么品牌| 依山傍水是什么意思| 良善是什么意思| 牙膏洗脸有什么好处| 左右逢源是什么生肖| 什么的生长| dic是什么| 腹主动脉钙化是什么意思| 海鲜有什么| dpa是什么意思| 阴道是什么| 高半胱氨酸是什么意思| 吃什么可以拉肚子通便| ly是什么意思| 黄瓜不能和什么一起吃| 如家是什么内涵| 正月开什么花| 海绵体是什么| 下面痒是什么原因女性| 西夏国是现在什么地方| 瑞夫泰格手表什么档次| 心脏大是什么病严重吗| 肺结节挂什么科| 幻听是什么症状| 腰疼肚子疼是什么原因引起的| 琼玖是什么意思| 爱什么稀罕| 豸是什么意思| 胸部正侧位片检查什么| 梦见房子是什么意思| 什么是云母| nbc是什么意思| 经常想睡觉是什么原因| 血液由什么组成| 12月13号是什么星座| dragon是什么意思| 不堪入目是什么意思| 难以入睡是什么原因引起的| 牙齿为什么会变黄| 2014年属什么生肖| 肠胃炎可以吃什么食物| 升白针叫什么名字| 复读是什么意思| 肠胃不好吃什么水果好| 哺乳期不能吃什么| 山楂泡水有什么好处| 子宫脱落有什么症状| 属猴的跟什么属相最配| 描述是什么意思| 胆固醇是什么意思| 氨基丁酸是什么| 卵巢囊肿是什么引起的| 肌肉拉伤有什么症状| 手淫有什么危害| 骨扫描是检查什么| 腊八有什么讲究| 禅悟是什么意思| 尿微量白蛋白高吃什么药| 乌龟不吃食是什么原因| 艾滋病吃什么药| 六月初四是什么星座| 门齿是指什么地方| 长期服用二甲双胍有什么副作用| 阳虚是什么意思| 正部级是什么级别| 弈字五行属什么| 2012年是什么命| cpi是什么意思啊| 72年属什么的生肖| 骶椎腰化什么意思| 肺挂什么科| 什么叫贵妃镯| 甘油三酯高是指什么| 过早是什么意思| moda是什么牌子| 使节是什么意思| 灵魂摆渡人是什么意思| 云南有什么好吃的| 嘿嘿嘿是什么意思| 什么是土象星座| 女人为什么会阳虚| 点痣后需要注意什么事项| 嘿咻是什么意思| 马马虎虎指什么生肖| 尿酸盐结晶是什么意思| 治妇科炎症用什么药好| 孕妇肾积水是什么原因引起的| 伪骨科什么意思| 次长是什么职位| 羊刃格是什么意思| 警察是什么生肖| 又当又立是什么意思| 胃胀气是什么原因| 满面红光是什么意思| 弄虚作假是什么生肖| 截根疗法是什么| 晚上吃什么| 恶心想吐吃什么药| 268数字代表什么意思| 人被老鼠咬了什么预兆| 米酒不甜是什么原因| 物是人非是什么意思| 来月经可以吃什么水果| 心肌病是什么病严重吗| 海底椰是什么| 喝酒后不能吃什么药| 子宫肌瘤是什么| 做梦梦见老公出轨是什么意思| 睡眠不好去医院挂什么科| 草金鱼吃什么| 青口是什么东西| 属鼠的和什么属相最配| 6月15日是什么星座| 什么钻进风箱里两头受气| 三界是什么意思| 发烧吃什么食物比较好| 什么时间吃水果比较好| 菜鸟裹裹是什么快递| 制作人是干什么的| 怀孕做nt检查什么| 草字头的字和什么有关| 什么是自闭症| 割包皮是什么意思| 四季更迭是什么意思| 耳鸣是什么病引起的| 代茶饮是什么意思| pretty是什么意思| 咖啡加奶叫什么| 吃秋葵有什么禁忌| 转呼啦圈有什么好处| 阴灵是什么意思| 通便吃什么最快排便| 卡点是什么意思| 梦见一个人代表什么| 不谷是什么意思| 什么叫高潮| 为什么喜欢| 93年的鸡是什么命| 什么叫心律不齐| 角膜塑形镜是什么| 吃什么能消除子宫肌瘤| 做梦梦见兔子是什么意思| 气虚吃什么中成药| 寸关尺代表什么器官| 肌酸是什么| 额头出汗是什么原因| 眼睛一直跳是什么原因| 九天揽月是什么意思| 吃狗肉有什么危害| 见招拆招下一句是什么| 细菌性炎症用什么药| 长瘊子是什么原因| 祛火喝什么茶| 鼻梁骨骨折属于什么伤| 局长是什么级别| 为什么不能空腹吃香蕉| 男人性功能不行是什么原因| 雪梨百合炖冰糖有什么功效| 裸婚什么意思| 吐黄水是什么原因| 走路带风是什么意思| 杏鲍菇炒什么好吃| 那好吧是什么意思| 世界上牙齿最多的动物是什么| 男人气虚吃什么补得快| 龙头凤尾是什么生肖| 怀孕了有什么征兆| 肉燕是什么| 腿部青筋明显是什么原因| 皮肤过敏吃什么药好| 彩字五行属什么| 心源性猝死是什么意思| 超敏crp是什么意思| 一级法官是什么级别| 梦见发大水是什么意思| 自戕是什么意思| 肺炎吃什么水果好| 感叹是什么意思| 情人节送妈妈什么花| 上嘴唇发白是因为什么原因| 突然头晕目眩是什么原因| hpv弱阳性是什么意思| playboy是什么牌子| 什么叫奢侈| 女性尿频尿急吃什么药| a型血的人是什么性格| 吃什么可以让奶水增多| 政委是什么军衔| 财神爷供奉什么供品| 主动脉硬化吃什么药好| 发烧42度是什么概念| darling什么意思| 白露是什么季节的节气| 高血压是什么引起的| 巴宝莉属于什么档次| 川芎有什么功效| 胸口有痣代表什么意思| 司空见惯的惯是什么意思| rarone是什么牌子的手表| 杨玉环属什么生肖| 白牡丹是什么茶| 五行缺土是什么意思| 姘头是什么意思| ms是什么单位| pe什么意思| 手书是什么| 珍珠鸟吃什么食物| 点痣用什么方法最好| 四什么八什么的成语| 身上长红色痣是什么原因| 盆底肌高张是什么意思| 二月一号是什么星座| 不自主的摇头是什么病| 狗贫血吃什么补血最快| 海纳百川是什么意思| 日本什么时候开始侵略中国| 一个三点水一个除念什么| 眉毛有什么作用| 女人梦见狼是什么预兆| 发痧吃什么药可以断根| 拉肚子不能吃什么| 肾上腺素是什么意思| 百度Jump to content

大兴区学雷锋志愿者服务队

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
百度 禁止悬挂外省市机动车号牌的小客车、使用临时行驶车号牌的小客车、未载客的出租小客车及实习期驾驶员驾驶的小客车通行(周六、周日、国定假日除外)。

In computer operating systems, memory paging is a memory management scheme that allows the physical memory used by a program to be non-contiguous.[1] This also helps avoid the problem of memory fragmentation and requiring compaction to reduce fragmentation.

Paging is often combined with the related technique of allocating and freeing page frames and storing pages on and retrieving them from secondary storage[a] in order to allow the aggregate size of the address spaces to exceed the physical memory of the system.[2] For historical reasons, this technique is sometimes referred to as swapping.

When combined with virtual memory, it is known as paged virtual memory. In this scheme, the operating system retrieves data from secondary storage in blocks of the same size (pages). Paging is an important part of virtual memory implementations in modern operating systems, using secondary storage to let programs exceed the size of available physical memory.

Hardware support is necessary for efficient translation of logical addresses to physical addresses. As such, paged memory functionality is usually hardwired into a CPU through its Memory Management Unit (MMU) or Memory Protection Unit (MPU), and separately enabled by privileged system code in the operating system's kernel. In CPUs implementing the x86 instruction set architecture (ISA) for instance, the memory paging is enabled via the CR0 control register.

History

[edit]

In the 1960s, swapping was an early virtual memory technique. An entire program or entire segment would be "swapped out" (or "rolled out") from RAM to disk or drum, and another one would be swapped in (or rolled in).[3][4] A swapped-out program would be current but its execution would be suspended while its RAM was in use by another program; a program with a swapped-out segment could continue running until it needed that segment, at which point it would be suspended until the segment was swapped in.

A program might include multiple overlays that occupy the same memory at different times. Overlays are not a method of paging RAM to secondary storage[a] but merely of minimizing the program's RAM use. Subsequent architectures used memory segmentation, and individual program segments became the units exchanged between secondary storage and RAM. A segment was the program's entire code segment or data segment, or sometimes other large data structures. These segments had to be contiguous when resident in RAM, requiring additional computation and movement to remedy fragmentation.[5]

Ferranti's Atlas, and the Atlas Supervisor developed at the University of Manchester,[6] (1962), was the first system to implement memory paging. Subsequent early machines, and their operating systems, supporting paging include the IBM M44/44X and its MOS operating system (1964),[7] the SDS 940[8] and the Berkeley Timesharing System (1966), a modified IBM System/360 Model 40 and the CP-40 operating system (1967), the IBM System/360 Model 67 and operating systems such as TSS/360 and CP/CMS (1967), the RCA 70/46 and the Time Sharing Operating System (1967), the GE 645 and Multics (1969), and the PDP-10 with added BBN-designed paging hardware and the TENEX operating system (1969).

Those machines, and subsequent machines supporting memory paging, use either a set of page address registers or in-memory page tables[d] to allow the processor to operate on arbitrary pages anywhere in RAM as a seemingly contiguous logical address space. These pages became the units exchanged between secondary storage[a] and RAM.

Page faults

[edit]

When a process tries to reference a page not currently mapped to a page frame in RAM, the processor treats this invalid memory reference as a page fault and transfers control from the program to the operating system. The operating system must:

  1. Determine whether a stolen page frame still contains an unmodified copy of the page; if so, use that page frame.
  2. Otherwise, obtain an empty page frame in RAM to use as a container for the data, and:
    • Determine whether the page was ever initialized
    • If so determine the location of the data on secondary storage[a].
    • Load the required data into the available page frame.
  3. Update the page table to refer to the new page frame.
  4. Return control to the program, transparently retrying the instruction that caused the page fault.

When all page frames are in use, the operating system must select a page frame to reuse for the page the program now needs. If the evicted page frame was dynamically allocated by a program to hold data, or if a program modified it since it was read into RAM (in other words, if it has become "dirty"), it must be written out to secondary storage before being freed. If a program later references the evicted page, another page fault occurs and the page must be read back into RAM.

The method the operating system uses to select the page frame to reuse, which is its page replacement algorithm, affects efficiency. The operating system predicts the page frame least likely to be needed soon, often through the least recently used (LRU) algorithm or an algorithm based on the program's working set. To further increase responsiveness, paging systems may predict which pages will be needed soon, preemptively loading them into RAM before a program references them, and may steal page frames from pages that have been unreferenced for a long time, making them available. Some systems clear new pages to avoid data leaks that compromise security; some set them to installation defined or random values to aid debugging.

Page fetching techniques

[edit]

Demand paging

[edit]

When pure demand paging is used, pages are loaded only when they are referenced. A program from a memory mapped file begins execution with none of its pages in RAM. As the program commits page faults, the operating system copies the needed pages from a file, e.g., memory-mapped file, paging file, or a swap partition containing the page data into RAM.

Anticipatory paging

[edit]

Some systems use only demand paging—waiting until a page is actually requested before loading it into RAM.

Other systems attempt to reduce latency by guessing which pages not in RAM are likely to be needed soon, and pre-loading such pages into RAM, before that page is requested. (This is often in combination with pre-cleaning, which guesses which pages currently in RAM are not likely to be needed soon, and pre-writing them out to storage).

When a page fault occurs, anticipatory paging systems will not only bring in the referenced page, but also other pages that are likely to be referenced soon. A simple anticipatory paging algorithm will bring in the next few consecutive pages even though they are not yet needed (a prediction using locality of reference); this is analogous to a prefetch input queue in a CPU. Swap prefetching will prefetch recently swapped-out pages if there are enough free pages for them.[9]

If a program ends, the operating system may delay freeing its pages, in case the user runs the same program again.

Some systems allow application hints; the application may request that a page be made available and continue without delay.

Page replacement techniques

[edit]

Free page queue, stealing, and reclamation

[edit]

The free page queue is a list of page frames that are available for assignment. Preventing this queue from being empty minimizes the computing necessary to service a page fault. Some operating systems periodically look for pages that have not been recently referenced and then free the page frame and add it to the free page queue, a process known as "page stealing". Some operating systems[e] support page reclamation; if a program commits a page fault by referencing a page that was stolen, the operating system detects this and restores the page frame without having to read the contents back into RAM.

Pre-cleaning

[edit]

The operating system may periodically pre-clean dirty pages: write modified pages back to secondary storage[a] even though they might be further modified. This minimizes the amount of cleaning needed to obtain new page frames at the moment a new program starts or a new data file is opened, and improves responsiveness. (Unix operating systems periodically use sync to pre-clean all dirty pages; Windows operating systems use "modified page writer" threads.)

Some systems allow application hints; the application may request that a page be cleared or paged out and continue without delay.

Thrashing

[edit]

After completing initialization, most programs operate on a small number of code and data pages compared to the total memory the program requires. The pages most frequently accessed are called the working set.

When the working set is a small percentage of the system's total number of pages, virtual memory systems work most efficiently and an insignificant amount of computing is spent resolving page faults. As the working set grows, resolving page faults remains manageable until the growth reaches a critical point. Then faults go up dramatically and the time spent resolving them overwhelms time spent on the computing the program was written to do. This condition is referred to as thrashing. Thrashing occurs on a program that works with huge data structures, as its large working set causes continual page faults that drastically slow down the system. Satisfying page faults may require freeing pages that will soon have to be re-read from secondary storage.[a] "Thrashing" is also used in contexts other than virtual memory systems; for example, to describe cache issues in computing or silly window syndrome in networking.

A worst case might occur on VAX processors. A single MOVL crossing a page boundary could have a source operand using a displacement deferred addressing mode, where the longword containing the operand address crosses a page boundary, and a destination operand using a displacement deferred addressing mode, where the longword containing the operand address crosses a page boundary, and the source and destination could both cross page boundaries. This single instruction references ten pages; if not all are in RAM, each will cause a page fault. As each fault occurs the operating system needs to go through the extensive memory management routines perhaps causing multiple I/Os which might include writing other process pages to disk and reading pages of the active process from disk. If the operating system could not allocate ten pages to this program, then remedying the page fault would discard another page the instruction needs, and any restart of the instruction would fault again.

To decrease excessive paging and resolve thrashing problems, a user can increase the number of pages available per program, either by running fewer programs concurrently or increasing the amount of RAM in the computer.

Sharing

[edit]

In multi-programming or in a multi-user environment, many users may execute the same program, written so that its code and data are in separate pages. To minimize RAM use, all users share a single copy of the program. Each process's page table is set up so that the pages that address code point to the single shared copy, while the pages that address data point to different physical pages for each process.

Different programs might also use the same libraries. To save space, only one copy of the shared library is loaded into physical memory. Programs which use the same library have virtual addresses that map to the same pages (which contain the library's code and data). When programs want to modify the library's code, they use copy-on-write, so memory is only allocated when needed.

Shared memory is an efficient means of communication between programs. Programs can share pages in memory, and then write and read to exchange data.

Implementations

[edit]

Ferranti Atlas

[edit]

The first computer to support paging was the supercomputer Atlas,[10][11][12] jointly developed by Ferranti, the University of Manchester and Plessey in 1963. The machine had an associative (content-addressable) memory with one entry for each 512 word page. The Supervisor[13] handled non-equivalence interruptions[f] and managed the transfer of pages between core and drum in order to provide a one-level store[14] to programs.

Microsoft Windows

[edit]

Windows 3.x and Windows 9x

[edit]

Paging has been a feature of Microsoft Windows since Windows 3.0 in 1990. Windows 3.x creates a hidden file named 386SPART.PAR or WIN386.SWP for use as a swap file. It is generally found in the root directory, but it may appear elsewhere (typically in the WINDOWS directory). Its size depends on how much swap space the system has (a setting selected by the user under Control Panel → Enhanced under "Virtual Memory"). If the user moves or deletes this file, a blue screen will appear the next time Windows is started, with the error message "The permanent swap file is corrupt". The user will be prompted to choose whether or not to delete the file (even if it does not exist).

Windows 95, Windows 98 and Windows Me use a similar file, and the settings for it are located under Control Panel → System → Performance tab → Virtual Memory. Windows automatically sets the size of the page file to start at 1.5× the size of physical memory, and expand up to 3× physical memory if necessary. If a user runs memory-intensive applications on a system with low physical memory, it is preferable to manually set these sizes to a value higher than default.

Windows NT

[edit]

The file used for paging in the Windows NT family is pagefile.sys. The default location of the page file is in the root directory of the partition where Windows is installed. Windows can be configured to use free space on any available drives for page files. It is required, however, for the boot partition (i.e., the drive containing the Windows directory) to have a page file on it if the system is configured to write either kernel or full memory dumps after a Blue Screen of Death. Windows uses the paging file as temporary storage for the memory dump. When the system is rebooted, Windows copies the memory dump from the page file to a separate file and frees the space that was used in the page file.[15]

Fragmentation

[edit]

In the default configuration of Windows, the page file is allowed to expand beyond its initial allocation when necessary. If this happens gradually, it can become heavily fragmented which can potentially cause performance problems.[16] The common advice given to avoid this is to set a single "locked" page file size so that Windows will not expand it. However, the page file only expands when it has been filled, which, in its default configuration, is 150% of the total amount of physical memory.[17] Thus the total demand for page file-backed virtual memory must exceed 250% of the computer's physical memory before the page file will expand.

The fragmentation of the page file that occurs when it expands is temporary. As soon as the expanded regions are no longer in use (at the next reboot, if not sooner) the additional disk space allocations are freed and the page file is back to its original state.

Locking a page file size can be problematic if a Windows application requests more memory than the total size of physical memory and the page file, leading to failed requests to allocate memory that may cause applications and system processes to fail. Also, the page file is rarely read or written in sequential order, so the performance advantage of having a completely sequential page file is minimal. However, a large page file generally allows the use of memory-heavy applications, with no penalties besides using more disk space. While a fragmented page file may not be an issue by itself, fragmentation of a variable size page file will over time create several fragmented blocks on the drive, causing other files to become fragmented. For this reason, a fixed-size contiguous page file is better, providing that the size allocated is large enough to accommodate the needs of all applications.

The required disk space may be easily allocated on systems with more recent specifications (i.e. a system with 3 GB of memory having a 6 GB fixed-size page file on a 750 GB disk drive, or a system with 6 GB of memory and a 16 GB fixed-size page file and 2 TB of disk space). In both examples, the system uses about 0.8% of the disk space with the page file pre-extended to its maximum.

Defragmenting the page file is also occasionally recommended to improve performance when a Windows system is chronically using much more memory than its total physical memory.[18] This view ignores the fact that, aside from the temporary results of expansion, the page file does not become fragmented over time. In general, performance concerns related to page file access are much more effectively dealt with by adding more physical memory.

Unix and Unix-like systems

[edit]

Unix systems, and other Unix-like operating systems, use the term "swap" to describe the act of substituting disk space for RAM when physical RAM is full.[19] In some of those systems, it is common to dedicate an entire partition of a hard disk to swapping. These partitions are called swap partitions. Many systems have an entire hard drive dedicated to swapping, separate from the data drive(s), containing only a swap partition. A hard drive dedicated to swapping is called a "swap drive" or a "scratch drive" or a "scratch disk". Some of those systems only support swapping to a swap partition; others also support swapping to files.

Linux

[edit]

The Linux kernel supports a virtually unlimited number of swap backends (devices or files), and also supports assignment of backend priorities. When the kernel swaps pages out of physical memory, it uses the highest-priority backend with available free space. If multiple swap backends are assigned the same priority, they are used in a round-robin fashion (which is somewhat similar to RAID 0 storage layouts), providing improved performance as long as the underlying devices can be efficiently accessed in parallel.[20]

Swap files and partitions
[edit]

From the end-user perspective, swap files in versions 2.6.x and later of the Linux kernel are virtually as fast as swap partitions; the limitation is that swap files should be contiguously allocated on their underlying file systems. To increase performance of swap files, the kernel keeps a map of where they are placed on underlying devices and accesses them directly, thus bypassing the cache and avoiding filesystem overhead.[21][22] When residing on HDDs, which are rotational magnetic media devices, one benefit of using swap partitions is the ability to place them on contiguous HDD areas that provide higher data throughput or faster seek time. However, the administrative flexibility of swap files can outweigh certain advantages of swap partitions. For example, a swap file can be placed on any mounted file system, can be set to any desired size, and can be added or changed as needed. Swap partitions are not as flexible; they cannot be enlarged without using partitioning or volume management tools, which introduce various complexities and potential downtimes.

Swappiness
[edit]

Swappiness is a Linux kernel parameter that controls the relative weight given to swapping out of runtime memory, as opposed to dropping pages from the system page cache, whenever a memory allocation request cannot be met from free memory. Swappiness can be set to a value from 0 to 200.[23] A low value causes the kernel to prefer to evict pages from the page cache while a higher value causes the kernel to prefer to swap out "cold" memory pages. The default value is 60; setting it higher can cause high latency if cold pages need to be swapped back in (when interacting with a program that had been idle for example), while setting it lower (even 0) may cause high latency when files that had been evicted from the cache need to be read again, but will make interactive programs more responsive as they will be less likely to need to swap back cold pages. Swapping can also slow down HDDs further because it involves a lot of random writes, while SSDs do not have this problem. Certainly the default values work well in most workloads, but desktops and interactive systems for any expected task may want to lower the setting while batch processing and less interactive systems may want to increase it.[24]

Swap death
[edit]

When the system memory is highly insufficient for the current tasks and a large portion of memory activity goes through a slow swap, the system can become practically unable to execute any task, even if the CPU is idle. When every process is waiting on the swap, the system is considered to be in swap death.[25][26]

Swap death can happen due to incorrectly configured memory overcommitment.[27][28][29]

The original description of the "swapping to death" problem relates to the X server. If code or data used by the X server to respond to a keystroke is not in main memory, then if the user enters a keystroke, the server will take one or more page faults, requiring those pages to read from swap before the keystroke can be processed, slowing the response to it. If those pages do not remain in memory, they will have to be faulted in again to handle the next keystroke, making the system practically unresponsive even if it's actually executing other tasks normally.[30]

macOS

[edit]

macOS uses multiple swap files. The default (and Apple-recommended) installation places them on the root partition, though it is possible to place them instead on a separate partition or device.[31]

AmigaOS 4

[edit]

AmigaOS 4.0 introduced a new system for allocating RAM and defragmenting physical memory. It still uses flat shared address space that cannot be defragmented. It is based on slab allocation and paging memory that allows swapping. Paging was implemented in AmigaOS 4.1. It can lock up the system if all physical memory is used up.[32] Swap memory could be activated and deactivated, allowing the user to choose to use only physical RAM.

Performance

[edit]

The backing store for a virtual memory operating system is typically many orders of magnitude slower than RAM. Hard disks, for instance, introduce several milliseconds delay before the reading or writing begins. Therefore, it is desirable to reduce or eliminate swapping, where practical. Some operating systems offer settings to influence the kernel's decisions.

  • Linux offers the /proc/sys/vm/swappiness parameter, which changes the balance between swapping out runtime memory, as opposed to dropping pages from the system page cache.
  • Windows 2000, XP, and Vista offer the DisablePagingExecutive registry setting, which controls whether kernel-mode code and data can be eligible for paging out.
  • Mainframe computers frequently used head-per-track disk drives or drums for page and swap storage to eliminate seek time, and several technologies[33] to have multiple concurrent requests to the same device in order to reduce rotational latency.
  • Flash memory has a finite number of erase-write cycles (see limitations of flash memory), and the smallest amount of data that can be erased at once might be very large,[g] seldom coinciding with pagesize. Therefore, flash memory may wear out quickly if used as swap space under tight memory conditions. For this reason, mobile and embedded operating systems (such as Android) may not use swap space. On the attractive side, flash memory is practically delayless compared to hard disks, and not volatile as RAM chips. Schemes like ReadyBoost and Intel Turbo Memory are made to exploit these characteristics.

Many Unix-like operating systems (for example AIX, Linux, and Solaris) allow using multiple storage devices for swap space in parallel, to increase performance.

Swap space size

[edit]

In some older virtual memory operating systems, space in swap backing store is reserved when programs allocate memory for runtime data. Operating system vendors typically issue guidelines about how much swap space should be allocated.

Physical and virtual address space sizes

[edit]

Paging is one way of allowing the size of the addresses used by a process, which is the process's "virtual address space" or "logical address space", to be different from the amount of main memory actually installed on a particular computer, which is the physical address space.

Main memory smaller than virtual memory

[edit]

In most systems, the size of a process's virtual address space is much larger than the available main memory.[35] For example:

  • The address bus that connects the CPU to main memory may be limited. The i386SX CPU's 32-bit internal addresses can address 4 GB, but it has only 24 pins connected to the address bus, limiting installed physical memory to 16 MB. There may be other hardware restrictions on the maximum amount of RAM that can be installed.
  • The maximum memory might not be installed because of cost, because the model's standard configuration omits it, or because the buyer did not believe it would be advantageous.
  • Sometimes not all internal addresses can be used for memory anyway, because the hardware architecture may reserve large regions for I/O or other features.

Main memory the same size as virtual memory

[edit]

A computer with true n-bit addressing may have 2n addressable units of RAM installed. An example is a 32-bit x86 processor with 4 GB and without Physical Address Extension (PAE). In this case, the processor is able to address all the RAM installed and no more.

However, even in this case, paging can be used to support more virtual memory than physical memory. For instance, many programs may be running concurrently. Together, they may require more physical memory than can be installed on the system, but not all of it will have to be in RAM at once. A paging system makes efficient decisions on which memory to relegate to secondary storage, leading to the best use of the installed RAM.

In addition the operating system may provide services to programs that envision a larger memory, such as files that can grow beyond the limit of installed RAM. Not all of the file can be concurrently mapped into the address space of a process, but the operating system might allow regions of the file to be mapped into the address space, and unmapped if another region needs to be mapped in.

Main memory larger than virtual address space

[edit]

A few computers have a main memory larger than the virtual address space of a process, such as the Magic-1,[35] some PDP-11 machines, and some systems using 32-bit x86 processors with Physical Address Extension. This nullifies a significant advantage of paging, since a single process cannot use more main memory than the amount of its virtual address space. Such systems often use paging techniques to obtain secondary benefits:

  • The "extra memory" can be used in the page cache to cache frequently used files and metadata, such as directory information, from secondary storage.
  • If the processor and operating system support multiple virtual address spaces, the "extra memory" can be used to run more processes. Paging allows the cumulative total of virtual address spaces to exceed physical main memory.
  • A process can store data in memory-mapped files on memory-backed file systems, such as the tmpfs file system or file systems on a RAM drive, and map files into and out of the address space as needed.
  • A set of processes may still depend upon the enhanced security features page-based isolation may bring to a multitasking environment.

The size of the cumulative total of virtual address spaces is still limited by the amount of secondary storage available.

See also

[edit]

Notes

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f Initially drums, and then hard disk drives and solid-state drives have been used for overlays and paging.
  2. ^ E.g., Multics, OS/VS1, OS/VS2, VM/370
  3. ^ E.g.,z/OS.
  4. ^ Some systems have a global page table, some systems have a separate page table for each process, some systems have a separate page table for each segment[b] and some systems have cascaded page tables.[c]
  5. ^ For example, MVS (Multiple Virtual Storage).
  6. ^ A non-equivalence interruption occurs when the high order bits of an address do not match any entry in the associative memory.
  7. ^ 128 KiB for an Intel X25-M SSD[34]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ Operating System Concepts, 10th Edition. February 2021. 9.3 Paging. ISBN 978-1-119-80036-1.
  2. ^ "Paging in Operating System". GeeksforGeeks. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  3. ^ Belzer, Jack; Holzman, Albert G.; Kent, Allen, eds. (1981). "Operating systems". Encyclopedia of computer science and technology. Vol. 11. CRC Press. p. 442. ISBN 0-8247-2261-2. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  4. ^ Cragon, Harvey G. (1996). Memory Systems and Pipelined Processors. Jones and Bartlett Publishers. p. 109. ISBN 0-86720-474-5. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  5. ^ Belzer, Jack; Holzman, Albert G.; Kent, Allen, eds. (1981). "Virtual memory systems". Encyclopedia of computer science and technology. Vol. 14. CRC Press. p. 32. ISBN 0-8247-2214-0. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  6. ^ Kilburn, T; Payne, R B; Howarth, D J (1962). "The Atlas Supervisor".
  7. ^ R. W. O'Neill. Experience using a time sharing multiprogramming system with dynamic address relocation hardware. Proc. AFIPS Computer Conference 30 (Spring Joint Computer Conference, 1967). pp. 611–621. doi:10.1145/1465482.1465581.
  8. ^ Scientific Data Systems Reference Manual, SDS 940 Computer (PDF). 1966. pp. 8–9.
  9. ^ "Swap prefetching". Linux Weekly News. 2025-08-06.
  10. ^ Sumner, F. H.; Haley, G.; Chenh, E. C. Y. (1962). "The Central Control Unit of the 'Atlas' Computer". Information Processing 1962. IFIP Congress Proceedings. Vol. Proceedings of IFIP Congress 62. Spartan.
  11. ^ "The Atlas". University of Manchester: Department of Computer Science. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  12. ^ "Atlas Architecture". Atlas Computer. Chilton: Atlas Computer Laboratory. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  13. ^ Kilburn, T.; Payne, R. B.; Howarth, D. J. (December 1961). "The Atlas Supervisor". Computers - Key to Total Systems Control. Conferences Proceedings. Vol. 20, Proceedings of the Eastern Joint Computer Conference Washington, D.C. Macmillan. pp. 279–294. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  14. ^ Kilburn, T.; Edwards, D. B. G.; Lanigan, M. J.; Sumner, F. H. (April 1962). "One-Level Storage System". IRE Transactions on Electronic Computers (2). Institute of Radio Engineers: 223–235. doi:10.1109/TEC.1962.5219356.
  15. ^ Tsigkogiannis, Ilias (2025-08-06). "Crash Dump Analysis". driver writing != bus driving. Microsoft. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  16. ^ "Windows Sysinternals PageDefrag". Sysinternals. Microsoft. 2025-08-06. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  17. ^ "Page File Information". Oingo KPT. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  18. ^ "What Does Defragging Do?". HP Tech Takes. Hewlett-Packard. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  19. ^ Both, David (2025-08-06). "An introduction to swap space on Linux systems". Opensource.com. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  20. ^ "swapon(2) – Linux man page". Linux.Die.net. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  21. ^ ""Jesper Juhl": Re: How to send a break? - dump from frozen 64bit linux". LKML. 2025-08-06. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  22. ^ "Andrew Morton: Re: Swap partition vs swap file". LKML. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  23. ^ "The Linux Kernel Documentation for /proc/sys/vm/".
  24. ^ Andrews, Jeremy (2025-08-06). "Linux: Tuning Swappiness". kerneltrap.org. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  25. ^ Rik van Riel (2025-08-06). "swap death (as in 2.1.91) and page tables". Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  26. ^ Kyle Rankin (2012). DevOps Troubleshooting: Linux Server Best Practices. Addison-Wesley. p. 159. ISBN 978-0-13-303550-6. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  27. ^ Andries Brouwer. "The Linux kernel: Memory". Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  28. ^ Red Hat. "Capacity Tuning". Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  29. ^ "Memory overcommit settings". 2025-08-06. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  30. ^ Peter MacDonald (2025-08-06). "swapping to death". Archived from the original on 2025-08-06.
  31. ^ John Siracusa (2025-08-06). "Mac OS X 10.1". Ars Technica. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  32. ^ AmigaOS Core Developer (2025-08-06). "Re: Swap issue also on Update 4 ?". Hyperion Entertainment. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  33. ^ E.g., Rotational Position Sensing on a Block Multiplexor channel
  34. ^ "Aligning filesystems to an SSD's erase block size | Thoughts by Ted". Thunk.org. 2025-08-06. Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
  35. ^ a b Bill Buzbee. "Magic-1 Minix Demand Paging Design". Archived from the original on 2025-08-06. Retrieved 2025-08-06.
[edit]
子宫内膜厚吃什么食物好 婴幼儿吃什么奶粉好 男人本色是什么意思 大便黑色的是什么原因 更年期什么症状
土地兼并是什么意思 理化检验主要检验什么 什么人不能吃绿豆 中国的国花是什么花 6.16是什么星座
哈密瓜为什么叫哈密瓜 什么是开悟 钾低了会出现什么症状 原汤化原食什么意思 沙弗莱是什么宝石
什么是提供情绪价值 皮角是什么病 乐色是什么意思 牛的本命佛是什么佛 介入室是干什么的
腰椎间盘突出有什么症状hcv9jop3ns3r.cn sdh是什么意思hcv9jop2ns0r.cn 溥仪为什么没有后代520myf.com 不尽人意是什么意思hcv8jop6ns1r.cn 南瓜子吃多了有什么副作用hcv7jop6ns8r.cn
阿迪耐克为什么那么贵adwl56.com 麦芽糊精是什么hcv7jop5ns0r.cn 鲁班姓什么weuuu.com 儿女双全什么意思1949doufunao.com ceremony是什么意思hcv7jop4ns5r.cn
什么药止汗效果最好hcv8jop9ns5r.cn 什么饼干养胃最好hcv8jop6ns8r.cn 爆表是什么意思fenrenren.com 什么原因导致缺钾hcv9jop1ns4r.cn 吃狗肉有什么危害hcv9jop7ns9r.cn
相公是什么意思hcv9jop3ns1r.cn 苹果醋有什么作用hcv9jop5ns8r.cn 粽叶是什么植物xjhesheng.com 令郎是什么意思hcv8jop3ns2r.cn 吃的多拉的少是什么原因hcv8jop4ns2r.cn
百度