Download as pdf or txt
Download as pdf or txt
You are on page 1of 75

Chapter 9: Virtual Memory

Operating System Concepts Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Chapter 9: Outline

! Background

! Demand Paging

! Copy-on-Write

! Page Replacement

! Allocation of Frames

! Thrashing

! Memory-Mapped Files

! Allocating Kernel Memory

! Other Considerations

! Operating-System Examples

Operating System Concepts 2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Objectives

! Define virtual memory and describe its benefits.

! Illustrate how pages are loaded into memory using demand paging.

! Apply the FIFO, optimal, and LRU page-replacement algorithms.

! Describe the working set of a process, and explain how it is related to


program locality.
! Describe how Windows 10 manage virtual memory.

Operating System Concepts 3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Background

! Observation

! Code needs to be in memory to be executed, but entire program rarely


used. E.g., Error code, unusual routines, large data structures

! Entire program code are not needed at same time

! Motivation: consider ability to execute partially-loaded program

! Program no longer constrained by limits of physical memory

! Each program takes less memory while running


➤ more programs run at the same time
4 Increase CPU utilization and throughput

4 No increase in response time or turnaround time

! Less I/O needed to load or swap programs into memory


➤ each user program runs faster

Operating System Concepts 4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Virtual memory

! Virtual memory – separation of user logical memory from physical


memory
4 Only part of the program needs to be in memory for execution

4 Logical address space can be much larger than physical address space

4 Allows address spaces to be shared by several processes

4 Allows for more efficient process creation

4 More programs running concurrently

4 Less I/O needed to load or swap processes

! Virtual memory can be implemented via:

! Demand paging

! Demand segmentation

Operating System Concepts 5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Virtual Address Space

! Virtual address space


– logical view of how
process is stored in
memory
! Usually start at
address 0,
contiguous
addresses until end
of space

! Meanwhile, physical
memory organized in
page frames

! MMU must map


logical to physical
addresses

Operating System Concepts 6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Virtual Address Space (Cont.)

! Usually design logical address space for stack to start


at Max logical address and grows “down” while heap
grows “up”
! Maximizes address space use
! Unused address space between the two is hole
4 No physical memory needed until heap or stack grows
to a given new page
! Enables sparse address spaces with holes left for
growth, dynamically linked libraries, etc.
! System libraries shared via mapping into virtual
address space
! Shared memory by mapping pages read-write into
virtual address space
! Pages can be shared during fork(), speeding
process creation

Operating System Concepts 7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Shared Library Using Virtual Memory

Operating System Concepts 8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Demand Paging

! Could bring entire


process into memory at
load time
! Or bring a page into
memory only when it is
needed
! Less I/O needed, no
unnecessary I/O

! Less memory needed

! Faster response

! More users

! Similar to paging system


with swapping
Operating System Concepts 9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Basic Concepts

! Lazy swapper – never swaps a page into memory unless page will be
needed (Swapper that deals with pages is a pager)
! With swapping, pager guesses which pages will be used before
swapping out again
! Instead, pager brings in only those pages into memory
! How to determine that set of pages?
! Need new MMU functionality to implement demand paging
! If pages needed are already memory resident
! No difference from non demand-paging
! If page needed are not memory resident
! Need to detect and load the page into memory from storage
4 Without changing program behavior
4 Without programmer needing to change code

Operating System Concepts 10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Valid-Invalid Bit

! Page is needed Þ reference to it

! invalid reference? Þ abort

! If valid, but not-in-memory? Þ bring to memory

! With each page-table entry, a valid-invalid bit


is associated
! v Þ in-memory (memory resident)

! i Þ not-in-memory (Initially, valid-invalid bit is


set to i on all entries)

! During MMU address translation, if valid-


invalid bit in page-table entry is i
Þ page fault

! Example of a page-table snapshot is shown

Operating System Concepts 11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Page Table When Some Pages Are Not in
Main Memory



Operating System Concepts 12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Steps in Handling Page Fault

1. If there is a reference to a missed page, first reference to that page


will trap to operating system
Þ Page fault

2. Operating system looks at another table to decide:

! Invalid reference? Þ abort


! Or just not-in-memory?

3. Find free frame

4. Swap page into frame via scheduled disk operation

5. Reset page tables to indicate that page now is in memory

! Set valid-invalid bit = v

6. Restart the instruction that caused the page fault

Operating System Concepts 13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Steps in Handling a Page Fault (Cont.)

Operating System Concepts 14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Aspects of Demand Paging

! Extreme case – start process with no pages in memory


! OS sets instruction pointer to first instruction of process, non-memory-
resident Þ page fault
! And for every other process pages on first access Þ pure demand
paging
! Actually, a given instruction could access multiple pages Þ multiple
page faults
! E.g., Consider fetch and decode of instruction which adds 2 numbers
from memory and stores result back to memory
! Pain decreased because of locality of reference
! Hardware support needed for demand paging
! Page table with valid-invalid bit
! Secondary memory (swap device with swap space)
! Instruction restart

Operating System Concepts 15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Free-Frame List

! When a page fault occurs, the operating system must bring the
desired page from secondary storage into main memory
! Most operating systems maintain a free-frame list – a pool of free
frames for satisfying such requests

! Operating system typically allocate free frames using a technique


known as zero-fill-on-demand – the content of the frames zeroed-out
before being allocated

! When a system starts up, all available memory is placed on the free-
frame list

Operating System Concepts 17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Stages in Demand Paging – Worse Case

1. Trap to the operating system


2. Save the registers and process state

3. Determine that the interrupt was a page fault

4. Check that the page reference was legal and determine the location
of the page on the disk
5. Issue a read from the disk to a free frame:
1. Wait in a queue for this device until the read request is serviced

2. Wait for the device seek and/or latency time (disk)

3. Begin the transfer of the page to a free frame

Operating System Concepts 18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Stages in Demand Paging (Cont.)

6. While waiting, allocate the CPU to some other user processes


7. Receive an interrupt from the disk I/O subsystem (I/O completed)

8. Save the registers and process state for the other user processes

9. Determine that the interrupt was from the disk


10. Correct the page table and other tables to show page is now in
memory

11. Wait for the CPU to be allocated to this process again

12. Restore the user registers, process state, and new page table, and
then resume the interrupted instruction

Operating System Concepts 19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Performance of Demand Paging

! Three major activities

! Service the interrupt – careful coding means just several hundred


instructions needed

! Read the page – lots of time

! Restart the process – again just a small amount of time

! Page fault rate p, 0 £ p £ 1


! if p = 0, no page faults
! if p = 1, every reference is a fault
! Effective Access Time (EAT)

EAT = (1 – p) x memory access + p x (page fault overhead


+ swap page out + swap page in )

Operating System Concepts 20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Example of Demand Paging

! Memory access time = 200 nanoseconds


! Average page-fault service time = 8 milliseconds
! EAT = (1 – p) x 200 + p x (8 milliseconds)
= (1 – p) x 200 + p x 8,000,000
= 200 + p x 7,999,800
! If one access out of 1,000 causes a page fault, then
EAT = 8.2 microseconds.
This is a slowdown by a factor of 40!!
! If we want performance degradation < 10 percent
! 220 > 200 + 7,999,800 x p Þ 20 > 7,999,800 x p
! Þ p < 0.0000025
! Þ < one page fault in every 400,000 memory accesses

Operating System Concepts 21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Demand Paging Optimizations

! Swap space I/O faster than file system I/O even if on the same device
! Swap allocated in larger chunks, less management needed than file system
! Copy entire process image to swap space at process load time, then page in
and out of swap space
! Used in older BSD Unix
! Demand page in from program binary on disk, but discard rather than paging
out when freeing frame
! Used in Solaris and current BSD
! Still need to write to swap space
4 Pages not associated with a file (like stack and heap) – anonymous memory
4 Pages modified in memory but not yet written back to the file system
! Mobile systems
! Typically don’t support swapping
! Instead, demand page from file system
and reclaim read-only pages (such as code)

Operating System Concepts 22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Copy-on-Write

! Copy-on-Write (COW) allows both parent and child processes to


initially share the same pages in memory
! If either process modifies a shared page, only then is the page copied
! COW allows more efficient process creation as only modified pages
are copied
! In general, free pages are allocated from a pool of zero-fill-on-
demand pages
! Pool should always have free frames for fast demand page execution
4 Don’t want to have to free a frame as well as other processing on page fault
! Why zero-out a page before allocating it?
! vfork() variation on fork() system call has parent and child
suspend using copy-on-write address space of parent
! Designed to have child call exec()
! Very efficient
Operating System Concepts 23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Before Process 1 Modifies Page C

Operating System Concepts 24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


After Process 1 Modified Page C

Operating System Concepts 25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


What Happens if There is no Free Frame?

! Used up by process pages

! Also in demand from the kernel, I/O buffers, etc.

! How much to allocate to each?

! Page replacement – find some page in memory, but not really in use,
page it out
! Algorithm – terminate? swap out? replace the page?

! Performance – want an algorithm which will result in minimum number of


page faults

! Same page may be brought into memory several times

Operating System Concepts 26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Page Replacement

! Prevent over-allocation of memory by modifying page-fault service


routine to include page replacement
! Use modify (dirty) bit to reduce overhead of page transfers – only
modified pages are written to disk

! Page replacement completes separation between logical memory


and physical memory – large virtual memory can be provided on a
smaller physical memory

Operating System Concepts 27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Need For Page Replacement

Operating System Concepts 28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Basic Page Replacement

1. Find the location of the desired page on disk


2. Find a free frame:
! If there is a free frame, use it

! If there is no free frame, use a page replacement algorithm to select a


victim frame

4 Write victim frame to disk if dirty

3. Bring the desired page into the (newly) free frame; update the page
and frame tables

4. Continue the process by restarting the instruction that caused the


trap
! Note: now potentially 2 page transfers for page fault Þ increasing EAT

Operating System Concepts 29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Page Replacement

Operating System Concepts 30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Page and Frame Replacement Algorithms

! Frame-allocation algorithm determines


! How many frames to give each process
! Which frames to replace
! Page-replacement algorithm
! Want lowest page-fault rate on both first access and re-access
! Evaluate algorithm by running it on a particular string of memory
references (reference string) and computing the number of page
faults on that string
! String is just page numbers, not full addresses
! Repeated access to the same page does not cause a page fault
! Results depend on number of frames available
! In all our examples, the reference string of referenced page numbers
is: 7,0,1,2,0,3,0,4,2,3,0,3,0,3,2,1,2,0,1,7,0,1

Operating System Concepts 31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Graph of Page Faults Versus The Number
of Frames

Operating System Concepts 32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


First-In-First-Out (FIFO) Algorithm

! Reference string: 7,0,1,2,0,3,0,4,2,3,0,3,0,3,2,1,2,0,1,7,0,1

! 3 frames (3 pages can be in memory at a time per process)

15 page faults

! Can vary by reference string: consider 1,2,3,4,1,2,5,1,2,3,4,5


! Adding more frames can cause more page faults!
4 Belady’s Anomaly
! How to track ages of pages?
! Just use a FIFO queue

Operating System Concepts 33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


FIFO Illustrating Belady’s Anomaly

16
14
number of page faults

12
10
8
6
4
2

1 2 3 4 5 6 7
number of frames

Operating System Concepts 34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Optimal (OPT) Algorithm

! Replace page that will not be used for longest period of time

! 9 is optimal for the example

! How do you know this?

! Can’t read the future

! Used for measuring how well your algorithm performs

Operating System Concepts 35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Least Recently Used (LRU) Algorithm

! Use past knowledge rather than future

! Replace page that has not been used in the most amount of time

! Associate time of last use with each page

! 12 faults – better than FIFO but worse than OPT

! Generally good algorithm and frequently used

! But how to implement?

Operating System Concepts 36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


LRU Algorithm (Cont.)

! Counter implementation
! Every page entry has a counter; every time page is referenced through
this entry, copy the clock into the counter
! When a page needs to be changed, check counters to find smallest value
4 Search through table needed
! Stack implementation
! Keep a stack of page numbers in a double link form:
! Page referenced:
4 move it to the top
4 requires 6 pointers to be changed (for the example of reference string)
! But each update more expensive
! No search for replacement
! LRU and OPT are cases of stack algorithms that don’t have
Belady’s Anomaly
Operating System Concepts 37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Use Of A Stack to Record Most Recent
Page References

reference string
4 7 0 7 1 0 1 2 1 2 7 1 2

2 7
a b
1 2
0 1
7 0
4 4

stack stack
before after
a b

Operating System Concepts 38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


LRU Approximation Algorithms

! LRU needs special hardware and still slow


! Reference bit
! With each page associate a bit, initially = 0
! When page is referenced, bit set to 1
! Replace any page with reference bit = 0 (if one exists)
4 We do not know the order, however
! Second-chance algorithm
! Generally FIFO, plus hardware-provided reference bit
! Clock replacement
! If page to be replaced has
4 Reference bit = 0 => replace it
4 Reference bit = 1 then:
– set reference bit 0, leave page in memory
– replace next page, subject to same rules
Operating System Concepts 39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Second-Chance (clock) Page-Replacement
Algorithm

reference pages reference pages


bits bits

0 0

0 0

next 1 0
victim

1 0

0 0


1 1

1 1

circular queue of pages circular queue of pages


(a) (b)

Operating System Concepts 40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Second-Chance (clock) Page-Replacement
Algorithm

Operating System Concepts 41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Second-Chance (clock) Page-Replacement
Algorithm

F F F

F F F

F F F

F F F

Operating System Concepts 42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Enhanced Second-Chance Algorithm

! Improve algorithm by using reference bit and modify bit (if available)
in concert
! Take ordered pair (reference, modify):

! (0, 0) neither recently used nor modified => best page to replace

! (0, 1) not recently used but modified => not quite as good, must write out
before replacement

! (1, 0) recently used but clean => probably will be used again soon

! (1, 1) recently used and modified => probably will be used again soon
and need to write out before replacement

! When page replacement called for, use the clock scheme but use the
four classes replace page in lowest non-empty class
! Might need to search circular queue several times

Operating System Concepts 43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Exercise
Consider the following page reference string:

0172327103

How many page faults would occur for the following replacement algorithms,
assuming three empty frames?

Remember all frames are initially empty, so your first unique pages will all cost
one fault each.

• LRU replacement

• FIFO replacement

• Optimal replacement

• Clock (Second-chance)

Operating System Concepts 44 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Counting Algorithms

! Keep a counter of the number of references that have been made to


each page
! Not common

! Least Frequently Used (LFU) Algorithm: replaces page with smallest


count
! Most Frequently Used (MFU) Algorithm: based on the argument that
the page with the smallest count was probably just brought in and has
yet to be used

Operating System Concepts 45 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Allocation of Frames

! Each process needs minimum number of frames

! Example: IBM 370 – 6 pages to handle SS MOVE instruction:

! instruction is 6 bytes, might span 2 pages

! 2 pages to handle from

! 2 pages to handle to

! Maximum, of course, is total frames in the system

! Two major allocation schemes

! fixed allocation

! priority allocation

! And any variations …

Operating System Concepts 48 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Fixed Allocation

! Equal allocation – For example, if there are 100 frames (after


allocating frames for the OS) and 5 processes, give each process 20
frames
! Keep some as free frame buffer pool

! Proportional allocation – Allocate according to the size of process

! Dynamic as degree of multiprogramming, process sizes change


62
m = 64
si = size of process pi s1 = 10
S = å si s2 = 127
m = total number of frames 10
si a1 = × 62 ≈ 4
ai = allocation for pi = ´ m 137
S 127
a2 = × 62 ≈ 57
137
Operating System Concepts 49 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Global vs. Local Allocation

! Global replacement – process selects a replacement frame from the


set of all frames; one process can take a frame from another
! But then process execution time can vary greatly

! But greater throughput, so more common

! Local replacement – each process selects from only its own set of
allocated frames
! More consistent per-process performance

! But possibly underutilized memory

Operating System Concepts 50 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Reclaiming Pages

! A strategy to implement global page-replacement policy

! Motivation: All memory requests are satisfied from the free-frame


list, rather than waiting for the list to drop to zero before we begin
selecting pages for replacement

! Page replacement is triggered when the list falls below a certain


threshold

! This strategy attempts to ensure there is always sufficient free


memory to satisfy new requests

Operating System Concepts 51 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Non-Uniform Memory Access (NUMA)

! So far all memory accessed equally

! Many systems are NUMA – speed of access to memory varies

! E.g., Consider system boards containing CPUs and memory,


interconnected over a system bus

! NUMA multiprocessing architecture

Operating System Concepts 53 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Non-Uniform Memory Access (Cont.)

! Optimal performance comes from allocating memory “close to” the


CPU on which the thread is scheduled
! And modifying the scheduler to schedule the thread on the same system
board when possible

! E.g., Solved by creating lgroups on Solaris

4 Structure to track CPU / Memory low latency groups

4 Used scheduler and pager

4 When possible, schedule all threads of a process and allocate all memory for
that process within the lgroup

Operating System Concepts 54 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Thrashing

! If a process does not have “enough” frames, the page-fault rate is


very high
! Page fault to get frame

! Replace existing frame

! But, quickly need replaced frame back

! More processes have page faults

! This leads to:

4 Low CPU utilization

4 Operating system thinking that it needs to increase the degree of


multiprogramming

4 Another process added to the system

Operating System Concepts 55 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Thrashing (Cont.)

! Thrashing. A process is busy swapping pages in and out

Operating System Concepts 56 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Demand Paging and Thrashing

! Why does demand paging work?

! Locality model

! Process migrates from one locality to another

! Localities may overlap

! Why does thrashing occur?

S size of locality > total memory size

! Limit effects by using local or priority page replacement

Operating System Concepts 57 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Locality In A Memory-Reference Pattern
34

32

30

28
memory address

26

24

22
page numbers

20

18

execution time

Operating System Concepts 58 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Working-Set Model

! D º working-set window º a fixed number of page references

! E.g., 10,000 instructions

! WSSi (working set of Process Pi) = total number of pages referenced


in the most recent D (varies in time)

Operating System Concepts 59 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Working-Set Model (Cont.)

! Working-set window (D) and locality

! if D too small will not encompass entire locality

! if D too large will encompass several localities

! if D = ¥ Þ will encompass entire program

! D = S WSSi º total demand frames

! Approximation of locality

! m º total number of available frames

! if D > m Þ Thrashing

! One policy: if D > m, then suspend or swap out one of the processes

Operating System Concepts 60 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


“à” : reference page

! D=2
Fig from Feitelson
Operating System Concepts 61 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne61
©2018
D=6

Operating System Concepts 62 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne62


©2018
Keeping Track of the Working Set

! Approximate with interval timer + a reference bit

! Example: D = 10,000

! Timer interrupts after every 5000 time units

! Keep in memory 2 bits for each page

! Whenever a timer interrupts, copy and sets the values of all reference
bits to 0

! If one of the bits in memory = 1 Þ page in working set

! Why this is not completely accurate?

! Improvement = 10 bits and interrupt every 1000 time units

Operating System Concepts 63 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Page-Fault Frequency

! More direct approach than WSS

! Establish “acceptable” page-fault frequency (PFF) rate and use local


replacement policy
! If actual rate too low, process loses frame

! If actual rate too high, process gains frame


page-fault rate

increase number
of frames
upper bound

lower bound
decrease number
of frames

number of frames
Operating System Concepts 64 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Working Sets and Page Fault Rates

! Direct relationship between working set of a process and its page-


fault rate
! Working set changes over time

! Peaks and valleys over time

Operating System Concepts 65 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Allocating Kernel Memory

! Treated differently from user memory

! Often allocated from a free-memory pool

! Kernel requests memory for structures of varying sizes

! Some kernel memory needs to be contiguous

4 E.g., for device I/O

Operating System Concepts 66 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Buddy System (power-of-2 Allocator)

! Allocates memory from fixed-size segment consisting of physically-


contiguous pages
! Memory allocated using power-of-2 allocator
! Satisfies requests in units sized as power of 2
! Request rounded up to next highest power of 2
! When smaller allocation needed than is available, current chunk split into
two buddies of next-lower power of 2
4 Continue until appropriate sized chunk available
! For example, assume 256KB chunk available, kernel requests 21KB
! Split into AL and AR of 128KB each
4 One further divided into BL and BR of 64KB
– One further into CL and CR of 32KB each – one used to satisfy request

! Advantage: quickly coalesce unused chunks into larger chunk


! Disadvantage: fragmentation
Operating System Concepts 67 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Buddy System Allocator

physically contiguous pages

256 KB

128 KB 128 KB
A A
L R

64 KB 64 KB
B B
L R

32 KB 32 KB
C C
L R

Operating System Concepts 68 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Other Considerations

! Pre-paging

! Page size

! TLB reach

! Program structure

! I/O interlock and page locking

Operating System Concepts 73 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Pre-paging

! To reduce the large number of page faults that occurs at process


startup
! Pre-page all or some of the pages a process will need, before they
are referenced

! But if pre-paged pages are unused, I/O and memory was wasted

! Assume s pages are pre-paged and α of the pages is used

! Is cost of s * α save pages faults > or < than the cost of pre-paging
s * (1- α) unnecessary pages?

! α near zero Þ pre-paging loses

Operating System Concepts 74 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Page Size

! Sometimes OS designers have a choice of page size


! Especially if running on custom-built CPU
! Page size selection must take into consideration:
! Fragmentation
! Page table size
! Resolution
! I/O overhead
! Number of page faults
! Locality
! TLB size and effectiveness
! Always power of 2, usually in the range 212 (4,096 bytes) to 222
(4,194,304 bytes)
! On average, growing over time

Operating System Concepts 75 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


TLB Reach

! 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

! Otherwise there is a high degree of page faults

! Increase the Page Size

! This may lead to an increase in fragmentation as not all applications


require a large page size

! Provide Multiple Page Sizes

! This allows applications that require larger page sizes the opportunity to
use them without an increase in fragmentation

Operating System Concepts 76 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Example of a Program Structure

! Program structure

! int[128,128] data;

! Each row is stored in one page


! Program 1

for (j = 0; j <128; j++)


for (i = 0; i < 128; i++)
data[i,j] = 0;
128 x 128 = 16,384 page faults

! Program 2
for (i = 0; i < 128; i++)
for (j = 0; j < 128; j++)
data[i,j] = 0;
128 page faults

Operating System Concepts 77 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


I/O Interlock

! I/O Interlock – Pages must sometimes be locked into memory

! Consider I/O – Pages that are used for copying a file from a device
must be locked from being selected for eviction by a page
replacement algorithm

! Pinning of pages to lock into memory

Operating System Concepts 78 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Summary

! Virtual memory abstracts physical memory into an extremely large


uniform array of storage.
! The benefits of virtual memory include the following: (1) a program
can be larger than physical memory, (2) a program does not need to
be entirely in memory, (3) processes can share memory, and (4)
processes can be created more efficiently.

! Demand paging is a technique whereby pages are loaded only when


they are demanded during program execution. Pages that are never
demanded are thus never loaded into memory.

! A page fault occurs when a page that is currently not in memory is


accessed. The page must be brought from the backing store into an
available page frame in memory.

Operating System Concepts 86 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Summary (Cont.)

! Copy-on-write allows a child process to share the same address


space as its parent. If either the child or the parent process writes
(modifies) a page, a copy of the page is made.
! When available memory runs low, a page-replacement algorithm
selects an existing page in memory to replace with a new page.
Page-replacement algorithms include FIFO, optimal, and LRU. Pure
LRU algorithms are impractical to implement, and most systems
instead use LRU-approximation algorithms.

! Global page-replacement algorithms select a page from any process


in the system for replacement, while local page-replacement
algorithms select a page from the faulting process.

! Thrashing occurs when a system spends more time paging than


executing.

Operating System Concepts 87 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Summary (Cont.)

! A locality represents a set of pages that are actively used together.


As a process executes, it moves from locality to locality. A working
set is based on locality and is defined as the set of pages currently in
use by a process.
! Memory compression is a memory-management technique that com-
presses a number of pages into a single page. Compressed memory
is an alternative to paging and is used on mobile systems that do not
support paging.

! Kernel memory is allocated differently than user-mode processes; it is


allocated in contiguous chunks of varying sizes. Two common
techniques for allocating kernel memory are (1) the buddy system
and (2) slab allocation.

Operating System Concepts 88 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


Summary (Cont.)

! TLB reach refers to the amount of memory accessible from the TLB
and is equal to the number of entries in the TLB multiplied by the
page size. One technique for increasing TLB reach is to increase the
size of pages.
! Linux, Windows, and Solaris manage virtual memory similarly,
using demand paging and copy-on-write, among other features. Each
system also uses a variation of LRU approximation known as the
clock algorithm.

Operating System Concepts 89 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018


End of Chapter 10

Operating System Concepts Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018

You might also like