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Segmentation

Segmentation. Memory-management scheme that supports user view of memory. A program is a collection of segments. A segment is a logical unit such as: main program, procedure, function, method, object, local variables, global variables, common block, stack,

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Segmentation

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  1. Segmentation • Memory-management scheme that supports user view of memory. • A program is a collection of segments. A segment is a logical unit such as: main program, procedure, function, method, object, local variables, global variables, common block, stack, symbol table, arrays Operating System Concepts

  2. Logical View of Segmentation 1 4 2 3 1 2 3 4 user space physical memory space Operating System Concepts

  3. Segment Tables • Load segments separately into memory • Each process has a segment table in memory that maps segment-numbers (table index) to physical addresses. • Each entry has: • base – contains the starting physical address where the segments reside in memory. • limit – specifies the length of the segment. Operating System Concepts

  4. Segment Table Example Operating System Concepts

  5. Logical addresses are a segment number and an offset within the segment Segmentation Addressing Operating System Concepts

  6. Segmentation Registers • Each process has a segment-table base register (STBR) and a segment-table length register (STLR) that are loaded into the MMU. • STBR points to the segment table’s location in memory • STLR indicates number of segments used by a program • Segment number s is legal if s < STLR Operating System Concepts

  7. Considerations • Since segments vary in length, memory allocation is a dynamic storage-allocation problem. • Allocation. • first fit/best fit • external fragmentation • (Back to the old problems :-) • Sharing. • shared segments • same segment number Operating System Concepts

  8. Memory Protection • Protection. With each entry in segment table associate: • validation bit = 0  illegal segment • read/write/execute privileges • Protection bits associated with segments; code sharing occurs at segment level. Operating System Concepts

  9. Dynamic Linking • Linking postponed until execution time. • Small piece of code, stub, used to locate the appropriate memory-resident library routine. • Stub replaces itself with the address of the routine, and executes the routine. • Dynamic linking is particularly useful for libraries, which may be loaded in advance, or on demand • Also known as shared libraries • Permits update of system libraries without relinking • I NEED TO LEARN MORE ABOUT THIS Operating System Concepts

  10. Dynamic Loading • Routine is not loaded until it is called • When loaded, address tables in the resident portion are updated • Better memory-space utilization; unused routine is never loaded. • Useful when large amounts of code are needed to handle infrequently occurring cases. Operating System Concepts

  11. Paging • Divide physical memory into fixed-sized blocks called frames (size is power of 2, between 512 bytes and 8192 bytes). • Divide logical memory into blocks of same size called pages. • Keep track of all free frames. • To run a program of size n pages, need to find n free frames and load program (for now, assume all pages are loaded). Operating System Concepts

  12. Logical View of Paging Operating System Concepts

  13. Page Tables • Each process has a page table in memory that maps page numbers (table index) to physical addresses. Operating System Concepts

  14. Paging Addressing • Logical addresses are a page number and an offset within the segment Operating System Concepts

  15. Page Table Example Operating System Concepts

  16. Paging Registers • Each process has a page-tablebase register (PTBR) and a page-table length register (PTLR) that are loaded into the MMU • PTBR points to the page table in memory. • PTLR indicates number of page table entries Operating System Concepts

  17. Free Frames Before allocation After allocation Operating System Concepts

  18. Real Paging Examples • Example from Geoff’s notes x 2 • Multiply offsets by page table width = address width • WORK OUT DETAILS Operating System Concepts

  19. Memory Protection • Can access only inside frames anyway • PTLR protects against accessing non-existent, or not-in-use, parts of a page table. • An alternative is to attach a valid-invalid bit 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. • Finer grained protection is achieved using rwx bits for each page Operating System Concepts

  20. Valid (v) or Invalid (i) Bit In A Page Table Operating System Concepts

  21. Relocation and Swapping • Relocation requires update of page table • Swapping is an extension of this Operating System Concepts

  22. TLBs • In simple paging every data/instruction access requires two memory accesses. One for the page table and one for the data/instruction. • The two memory access problem can be solved by the use of a special fast-lookup hardware cache called associative memory or translation look-aside buffers(TLBs) • Associative memory – parallel search Address translation (A´, A´´) • If A´ is in associative register, get frame # out. • Otherwise get frame # from page table in memory • Fast cache is an alternative Page # Frame # Operating System Concepts

  23. Paging Hardware With TLB Operating System Concepts

  24. TLB Performance • Effective access time • Assume memory cycle time is X time unit • Associative lookup =  time unit • Hit ratio  – percentage of times that a page number is found in the associative registers • Effective Access Time (EAT) EAT = (X + )  + (2X + )(1 – ) = 2X +  – X • OK if  is small and  is large, e.g., 0.2 and 95% • TLB Reach • The amount of memory accessible from the TLB. • TLB Reach = (TLB Size) X (Page Size) • Ideally, the working set of each process is stored in the TLB • Examples • 68030 - 22 entry TLB • 80486 - 32 register TLB, claims 98% hit rate Operating System Concepts

  25. Considerations • Fragmentation vs Page table size and TLB hits • Page size selection • internal fragmentation => smaller pages • table size => larger pages (32 bit address = 4GB, 4KB frames => 220 entries @ 4 bytes = 4MB table!) • i386 - 4K pages • 68030 - up to 32K pages • Newer hardware tending to larger page sizes - to 16MB • Multiple Page Sizes. This allows applications that require larger page sizes the opportunity to use them without an increase in fragmentation. • UltraSparc supports 8K, 64K, 512K, and 4M • Requires OS support Operating System Concepts

  26. Two-Level Paging Example • A logical address (on 32-bit machine (4GB addresses) with 4K page size (12 bit offsets)) is divided into: • a page number consisting of 20 bits. • a page offset consisting of 12 bits. • 220 pages, 4 bytes per entry => 4MB page table • The page table is paged, the page number is further divided into: • a 10-bit page number. • a 10-bit page offset. • Thus, a logical address is as follows:where pi is an index into the outer page table, and p2 is the displacement within the page of the outer page table. page number page offset p2 pi d 10 12 10 Operating System Concepts

  27. Address-Translation Scheme • Address-translation scheme for a two-level paging architecture • p1 and p2 may be found in a TLB • Example from Geoff’s notes • Examples • SPARC - 3 level hierarchy (32 bit) • 68030 - 4 level hierarchy (32 bit) • Multiple memory accesses, up to 7 for 64 bit addressing Operating System Concepts

  28. Hashed Page Tables • Common in address spaces > 32 bits. • The page number is hashed into a page table. This page table contains a chain of elements hashing to the same location. • Page numbers are compared in this chain • More efficient than multi-level for small processes Operating System Concepts

  29. Inverted Page Table • For very large virtual address spaces (see VM) • One entry for each frame of memory. • Entry consists of the virtual address of the page stored in that real memory location, with information about the process that owns that page, e.g., PID. • Virtual address may be duplicated, but PIDs are unique • Decreases memory needed to store each page table, but increases time needed to search the table when a page reference occurs. • Use hash table to limit the search to one — or at most a few — page-table entries. • Used by IBM RT and PowerPC Operating System Concepts

  30. Inverted Page Table Architecture Operating System Concepts

  31. Shared Pages • Shared code • One copy of read-only (reentrant) code shared among processes (i.e., text editors, compilers, window systems). • Shared code must appear in same location in the logical address space of all processes. • Private code and data • Each process keeps a separate copy of the code and data. • The pages for the private code and data can appear anywhere in the logical address space. Operating System Concepts

  32. Shared Pages Example Operating System Concepts

  33. Segmentation with Paging – MULTICS • The MULTICS system solved problems of external fragmentation and lengthy search times by paging the segments. • Solution differs from pure segmentation in that the segment-table entry contains not the base address of the segment, but rather the base address of a page table for this segment. Operating System Concepts

  34. MULTICS Address Translation Scheme Operating System Concepts

  35. Intel 30386 Address Translation Operating System Concepts

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