Talk:Page address register

Latest comment: 1 year ago by Guy Harris in topic Notability of page address registers

Notability of page address registers edit

At least one way in which the concept of page address registers is notable is that a number of machines that implement demand paging do not do so with an in-memory page table; instead, they have a fixed set of registers that map virtual to physical addresses, provide a "page not present" indication, and may also provide a "write protected" indication. Several early machines mentioned in Memory paging § History do so (Atlas, SDS 940, IBM M44/44X, the modified IBM System/360 Model 40 used with CP-40 and, if I remember correctly, the IBM Spectra 70/46. In addition, the "Sun MMU" used in the Sun-1/Sun-1U machines, the Sun-2 machines, the Sun-3 machines prior to the Sun-3x machines, and the Sun-4 machines prior to the Sun-4m and Sun-4d machines was built from static RAM separate from CPU main memory, so they could be considered as having a large set of page address registers. Guy Harris (talk) 08:41, 7 August 2022 (UTC)Reply