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1 Lecture 8: Virtual Memory Operating System Fall 2006.

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1 1 Lecture 8: Virtual Memory Operating System Fall 2006

2 2 Two characteristics of paging and segmentation Memory references are dynamically translated into physical addresses at run time A process may be swapped in and out of main memory such that it occupies different regions A process may be broken up into pieces that do not need to located contiguously in main memory All pieces of a process do not need to be loaded in main memory during execution

3 3 Virtual Memory It is not necessary that all of the pages or all of the segments of a process be in main memory during execution. As long as the piece holding the next instruction and the data to be accessed are in main memory, then execution may proceed. Use page table to do address translation. If the page is not in memory, it generates a page fault interrupt, the OS will bring the page from disk into main memory. When this is done, resume execution.

4 4 Advantages of Virtual Memory More processes may be maintained in main memory Only load in some of the pieces of each process With so many processes in main memory, it is very likely a process will be in the Ready state at any particular time A process may be larger than all of main memory. Programs become portable across different platforms.

5 5 Types of Memory Real memory Physical Main memory Virtual memory Programmer perceived memory Memory on disk Allows for effective multiprogramming and relieves the user of tight constraints of main memory

6 6 Principle of Locality Program and data references within a process tend to cluster Only a few pieces of a process will be needed over a short period of time Possible to make intelligent guesses about which pieces will be needed in the future This suggests that virtual memory may work efficiently

7 7 Support Needed for Virtual Memory Hardware must support paging and segmentation Operating system must be able to management the movement of pages and/or segments between secondary memory and main memory

8 8 Paging Each process has its own page table Each page table entry contains the frame number of the corresponding page in main memory Presence Bit: A bit is needed to indicate whether the page is in main memory or not Modify Bit: Another bit is needed to indicate if the page has been altered since it was last loaded into main memory If no change has been made, the page does not have to be written to the disk when it needs to be swapped out

9 9 Page Table Entries

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11 11 Translation Lookaside Buffer Contains page table entries that have been most recently used Functions same way as a memory cache

12 12 Paging Hardware With TLB

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15 15 Structure of the Page Table Hierarchical Paging Hashed Page Tables Inverted Page Tables

16 16 Hierarchical Page Tables Break up the logical address space into multiple page tables A simple technique is a two-level page table

17 17 Two-Level Page-Table Scheme

18 18 Address-Translation Scheme

19 19 Memory Protection Memory protection implemented by associating protection bit with each frame Valid-invalid bit attached to each entry in the page table: “valid” indicates that the associated page is in the process’ logical address space, and is thus a legal page “invalid” indicates that the page is not in the process’ logical address space

20 20 Valid (v) or Invalid (i) Bit In A Page Table

21 21 Segmentation May be unequal, dynamic size Simplifies handling of growing data structures Allows programs to be altered and recompiled independently Lends itself to sharing data among processes Lends itself to protection

22 22 Segment Tables corresponding segment in main memory Each entry contains the length of the segment A bit is needed to determine if segment is already in main memory Another bit is needed to determine if the segment has been modified since it was loaded in main memory

23 23 Segment Table Entries

24 24 Segmentation Hardware

25 25 Combined Paging and Segmentation Paging is transparent to the programmer Paging eliminates external fragmentation Segmentation is visible to the programmer Segmentation allows for growing data structures, modularity, and support for sharing and protection Each segment is broken into fixed-size pages

26 26 Combined Segmentation and Paging

27 27 OS Supports for Virtual Memory Virtual Memory: not all pages of a process are in main memory OS needs to decide on the following issues: Fetch Policy Placement Policy Replacement Policy

28 28 Fetch Policy Determines when a page should be brought into memory Demand paging – bring pages into main memory only when it is needed Many page faults when process first started Less I/O needed Less memory needed Faster response More users Prepaging – brings in more pages then needed even though it is not needed now. Faster to bring in several pages than one at a time More efficient to bring in pages that reside contiguously on the disk

29 29 Placement Policy Decides where a process piece reside in main memory For paging system, it is a trivial issue For segmentation system, use first-fit or best-fit to look for a hole.

30 30 Replacement Policy Determines which page to replace when a new page needs to be brought in and there is no empty page frame around Page removed should be the page least likely to be referenced in the near future Most policies predict the future behavior on the basis of past behavior

31 31 Replacement Policy Frame Locking If frame is locked, it may not be replaced Kernel of the operating system Control structures I/O buffers Associate a lock bit with each frame

32 32 Replacement Algorithms Belady’s Optimal Algorithm Least Recently Used Algorithm (LRU) First-in-first-out Algorithm (FIFO) Clock (approximation of LRU)

33 33 Belady’s Optimal Algorithm Optimal policy Selects for replacement that page for which the time to the next reference is the longest Impossible to have perfect knowledge of future events

34 34 Least Recently Used (LRU) Replaces the page that has not been referenced for the longest time By the principle of locality, this should be the page least likely to be referenced in the near future Each page could be tagged with the time of last reference. This would require a great deal of overhead.

35 35 First-in, first-out (FIFO) Treats page frames allocated to a process as a circular buffer Pages are removed in round-robin style Simplest replacement policy to implement Page that has been in memory the longest is replaced These pages may be needed again very soon LRU performs better than FIFO, but difficult to implement.

36 36 Clock Policy Additional bit called a use bit When a page is first loaded in memory, the use bit is set to 0 When the page is referenced, the use bit is set to 1 When it is time to replace a page, the first frame encountered with the use bit set to 0 is replaced. During the search for replacement, each use bit set to 1 is changed to 0

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39 39 Further Refinement for Clock Policy Two bits: Used bit: u bit=1 when used Modify bit: m bit=1 when the page is written Four states: u=0;m=0 – not used, not modified u=1;m=0 – used, not modified u=0;m=1 – not used, modified u=1;m=1 – used, modified

40 40 Further Refinement for Clock Policy Algorithm: 1. Beginning at the current position of the ptr, scan the frame buffer. During this scan, make no changes to the use bit. The first frame encountered with (u=0;m=0) is selected for replacement. 2. If step 1 fails, scan again, looking for the frame with (u=0;m=1). The first such frame encountered is selected for replacement. During this scan, set the use bit to 0 on each frame that is bypassed. 3. If step 2 fails, the ptr should have returned to its original position and all of the frames in the set will have a use bit of 0. Repeat step 1, and if necessary, step 2. This time, a frame will be found for the replacement.

41 41 End of lecture 8 Thank you!


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