1 / 18

Computer Systems

Computer Systems. Virtual Memory. 0:. 1:. CPU. N-1:. A System with Virtual Memory. Memory. Page Table. Virtual Addresses. Physical Addresses. 0:. 1:. P-1:. Disk. Address Translation: Hardware converts virtual addresses to physical addresses via lookup table (page table).

astra
Télécharger la présentation

Computer Systems

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Computer Systems Virtual Memory Computer Systems – virtual memory

  2. 0: 1: CPU N-1: A System with Virtual Memory Memory Page Table Virtual Addresses Physical Addresses 0: 1: P-1: Disk • Address Translation: Hardware converts virtual addresses to physical addresses via lookup table (page table) Computer Systems – virtual memory

  3. Object Name X Data 0: 243 D: 1: 17 J: • • • N-1: 105 X: VM advance #1: Caching Tool • DRAM Cache (Main Memory) • Each allocated page of virtual memory has entry in page table • Mapping from virtual pages to physical pages • From uncached form to cached form • Page table entry even if page not in memory • Specifies disk address Page Table “Cache” Location 0 On Disk • • • 1 Computer Systems – virtual memory

  4. “Cache” Tag Data 0: Object Name J D X 105 17 243 = X? 1: X • • • • • • N-1: Locating an Object in a “Cache” • SRAM Cache (level 1 en level 2) • Tag stored with cache line • Maps from cache block to memory blocks • From cached to uncached form • Save a few bits by only storing tag • No tags for blocks not in cache • Hardware retrieves information • can quickly match against multiple tags Computer Systems – virtual memory

  5. Memory Mountain Computer Systems – virtual memory

  6. Page Faults (like “Cache Misses”) What if an object is on disk rather than in memory? • Page table entry indicates virtual address not in memory • OS exception handler invoked to move data from disk into memory • current process suspends, others can resume • OS has full control over placement, etc. Before fault After fault Memory Memory Page Table Page Table Virtual Addresses Physical Addresses Virtual Addresses Physical Addresses CPU CPU Disk Disk Computer Systems – virtual memory

  7. VM Address Translation:Hardware vs Software page fault fault handler Processor  Hardware Addr Trans Mechanism Secondary memory Main Memory a a' OS performs this transfer (only if miss) virtual address part of the on-chip memory mgmt unit (MMU) physical address Computer Systems – virtual memory

  8. VM Address Translation • Parameters • P = 2p = page size (bytes). • N = 2n = Virtual address limit • M = 2m = Physical address limit n–1 p p–1 0 virtual address virtual page number page offset address translation m–1 p p–1 0 physical address physical page number page offset Page offset bits don’t change as a result of translation Computer Systems – virtual memory

  9. Address Translation via Page Table virtual address page table base register n–1 p p–1 0 VPN acts as table index virtual page number (VPN) page offset physical page number (PPN) access valid PTEA = PTE if valid=0 then page not in memory m–1 p p–1 0 physical page number (PPN) page offset physical address Computer Systems – virtual memory

  10. miss VA PA Trans- lation Cache Main Memory CPU hit data Integrating VM and Cache • Most Caches “Physically Addressed” • Allows multiple processes to have blocks in cache at same time • Cache doesn’t need to be concerned with protection issues (Access rights checked as part of address translation) • Perform Address Translation Before Cache • But this involves a memory access itself (of the PTE) • Of course, page table entries can also become cached Computer Systems – virtual memory

  11. hit miss VA PA TLB Lookup Cache Main Memory CPU miss hit Trans- lation data Speeding up Translation with a dedicated cache • “Translation Lookaside Buffer” (TLB) • Small hardware cache in MMU • Maps virtual page to physical page numbers • Contains complete PTEs for small number of pages Computer Systems – virtual memory

  12. What do you know? (ow133)cpuid This system has a Genuine Intel(R) Pentium(R) 4 processor Processor Family: F, Extended Family: 0, Model: 2, Stepping: 7 Pentium 4 core C1 (0.13 micron): core-speed 2 Ghz - 3.06 GHz (bus-speed 400/533 MHz) Instruction TLB: 4K, 2M or 4M pages, fully associative, 128 entries Data TLB: 4K or 4M pages, fully associative, 64 entries 1st-level data cache: 8K-bytes, 4-way set associative, sectored cache, 64-byte line size No 2nd-level cache or, if processor contains a valid 2nd-level cache, no3rd-level cache Trace cache: 12K-uops, 8-way set associative 2nd-level cache: 512K-bytes, 8-way set associative, sectored cache, 64-byte line size Computer Systems – virtual memory

  13. VM advance #2: Memory Management • Multiple processes in physical memory. • How do we resolve address conflicts? • what if two processes access something at the same address? memory invisible to user code kernel virtual memory stack %esp Memory mapped region forshared libraries Linux/x86 process memory image the “brk” ptr runtime heap (via malloc) uninitialized data (.bss) initialized data (.data) program text (.text) forbidden 0 Computer Systems – virtual memory

  14. Solution: Separate Virt. Addr. Spaces • Each process has its own virtual address space • operating system controls how virtual pages as assigned to physical memory 0 Physical Address Space (DRAM) Address Translation Virtual Address Space for Process 1: 0 VP 1 PP 2 VP 2 ... N-1 (e.g., read/only library code) PP 7 Virtual Address Space for Process 2: 0 VP 1 PP 10 VP 2 ... M-1 N-1 Computer Systems – virtual memory

  15. Linux Organizes VM as Collection of “Areas” process virtual memory vm_area_struct task_struct mm_struct vm_end vm_start mm pgd • pgd: • page directory address • vm_prot: • read/write permissions for this area • vm_flags • shared with other processes or private to this process vm_prot vm_flags mmap shared libraries vm_next 0x40000000 vm_end vm_start data vm_prot vm_flags 0x0804a020 text vm_next vm_end 0x08048000 vm_start vm_prot vm_flags 0 vm_next Computer Systems – virtual memory

  16. 0: Read? Write? Physical Addr 1: VP 0: VP 0: Yes No PP 9 VP 1: VP 1: Yes Yes PP 4 VP 2: VP 2: No No XXXXXXX • • • • • • • • • Read? Write? Physical Addr Yes Yes PP 6 N-1: Yes No PP 9 No No XXXXXXX • • • • • • • • • VM advance#3: Protection • Page table contains access rights information • hardware enforces this protection (trap into OS if violation occurs) Memory Process i: Process j: Computer Systems – virtual memory

  17. vm_end vm_end vm_end vm_start vm_start vm_start r/o r/o r/w vm_next vm_next vm_next Linux Page Fault Handling process virtual memory vm_area_struct • Is the VA legal? • i.e. is it in an area defined by a vm_area_struct? • if not then signal segmentation violation (e.g. (1)) • Is the operation legal? • i.e., can the process read/write this area? • if not then signal protection violation (e.g., (2)) • If OK, handle fault (3) shared libraries 1 read 3 data read 2 text write 0 Computer Systems – virtual memory

  18. Assignment • Practice Problem 10.1:Find the largest possible virtual address. • At some point in your lifetime, you find yourself complaining about the cramped 64-bit address space in your computer! Computer Systems – virtual memory

More Related