Operating System Question
Consider a paging system with the page table stored in memory.
a. If a memory reference takes 50 nanoseconds, how long does a
paged memory reference take?
b. If we add TLBs, and 75 percent of all page-table references are found
in the TLBs, what is the effective memory reference time? (Assume
that finding a page-table entry in the TLBs takes 2 nanoseconds, if
the entry is present.)
Answer:
a. 400 nanoseconds: 200 nanoseconds to access the page table and 200
nanoseconds to access the word in memory.
b. Effective access time = 0.75 × (200 nanoseconds) + 0.25 × (400
nanoseconds) = 250 nanoseconds.
Consider the following segment table:
Segment Base Length
0 219 600
1 2300 14
2 90 100
3 1327 580
4 1952 96
What are the physical addresses for the following logical addresses?
a. 0,430
b. 1,10
c. 2,500
d. 3,400
e. 4,112
Answer:
a. 219 + 430 = 649
b. 2300 + 10 = 2310
c. illegal reference, trap to operating system
d. 1327 + 400 = 1727
e. illegal reference, trap to operating system
232 bytes. The computer has 218 bytes of physical memory. The virtual
memory is implemented by paging, and the page size is 4096 bytes.
A user process generates the virtual address 11123456. Explain how
the system establishes the corresponding physical location. Distinguish
between software and hardware operations.
Answer:
The virtual address in binary form is
0001 0001 0001 0010 0011 0100 0101 0110
Since the page size is 212, the page table size is 220. Therefore the loworder
12 bits “0100 0101 0110” are used as the displacement into the page,
while the remaining 20 bits “0001 0001 0001 0010 0011” are used as the
displacement in the page table.
What is the cause of thrashing? How does the system detect thrashing?
Once it detects thrashing, what can the system do to eliminate this
problem?
Answer:
Thrashing is caused by underallocation of the minimum number of
pages required by a process, forcing it to continuously page fault. The
system can detect thrashing by evaluating the level of CPU utilization as compared to the level of multiprogramming. It can be eliminated by
reducing the level of multiprogramming.
Consider a system that allocates pages of different sizes to its processes.
What are the advantages of such a paging scheme? What modifications
to the virtual memory system provide this functionality?
Answer:
The programcould have a large code segment or use large-sized arrays
as data. These portions of the program could be allocated to larger pages,
thereby decreasing the memory overheads associated with a page table.
The virtual memory system would then have to maintain multiple free
lists of pages for the different sizes and also needs to havemore complex
code for address translation to take into account different page sizes.