Difference between revisions of "Memory page"
Botinki Kira (talk | contribs) m (Robot: Cosmetic changes) |
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gcc -o getpagesize getpagesize.c | gcc -o getpagesize getpagesize.c | ||
</pre> | </pre> | ||
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| + | You can get the page size in GNU/Linux from a terminal or shell: | ||
| + | getconf PAGE_SIZE | ||
[[Category:Definitions]] | [[Category:Definitions]] | ||
Latest revision as of 10:42, 23 November 2011
Memory page is a range of consecutive addresses in the virtual address space whose size is a power of two. Those virtual addresses are translated in a corresponding range of consecutive physical addresses. The memory referenced by such a range is called a page.
Size of memory page is architecture and operating system dependant. On an x86 and x86_64 hardware, memory page is equal to 4KB. On an Intel Itanium (IA64) memory page size is 16KB.
You can get the actual value on your Linux/UNIX system with the getpagesize-Syscall. Here is a C Program that prints the pagesize on your system :
#include <unistd.h>
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char* argv[])
{
long sz = sysconf(_SC_PAGESIZE);
printf("memory pagesize on this box : %i\n", sz);
return 0;
}
compile with :
gcc -o getpagesize getpagesize.c
You can get the page size in GNU/Linux from a terminal or shell:
getconf PAGE_SIZE