* Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
[not found] ` <b14bc42a0911060423g324caedw3992061796125ea@mail.gmail.com>
@ 2009-11-07 4:41 ` vkm
2009-11-07 10:10 ` hmthalib
2009-11-09 18:27 ` Pulkit Goel
2 siblings, 0 replies; 18+ messages in thread
From: vkm @ 2009-11-07 4:41 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: nidhi mittal hada
Cc: microbit, C, simonyanix, Siddu, Rick Brown, kernelnewbies,
linux-newbie
nidhi mittal hada wrote:
> Can someone come and please clarify -- it finally
> above chain of mail raises more confusion as conflict stays till end.
>
> 1)processor 32/64 bit --
> a)data it can process at one instance --- register size --- data
> bus size --
> OR
> b)internal address bus size of processor --- if that is true then
> what abt case of pentium 36 bit address lines ---
Of course, register size
>
>
> 2)OS 32 /64 bit
> a)its virtual address space -- what os provides --- to each
> process -- which is mapped to physical address space that prcessor
> provides
>
> OR
> b)processor specifies virtual addr space ??
>
>
>
>
> 3)extra ques -- why in case of 32 bit arch -- physical memory RAM
> limitation comes of 4GB ?
2^32 = 4GB simple...
>
>
>
> On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 4:54 PM, <microbit@virginbroadband.com.au
> <mailto:microbit@virginbroadband.com.au>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> On Thu, 22 Oct 2009 23:58:20 -0700, C <a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>> wrote:
> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
> >> virtual address space.
> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
> > address to a physical address? Virtual addresses are simply what the
> > software 'sees', the processor takes these, translates them into
> > physical addresses before making any reads / writes to main
> memory. No
> > software can use a virtual address space larger than what the
> > processor specifies.
> >
> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1
> mapping
> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space
> equal to
> >> physical address space).
> >>
> > Well, I don't know much about other architectures, so I'll just
> comment
> on
> > x86.
> > When you switch to 64bit mode, you compulsorily need to have a
> 4-level
> > paging table, which translates 64-bit linear addresses (actually a
> > 48-bit linear address, since the address is subject to the canonical
> > address requirement) to (upto) 52-bit physical addresses. So
> > irrespective of what firmware you're running, linear addresses are
> > actually 64-bit, but physical addresses are not.
> >
> > (In fact, physical address space might even be larger than virtual
> > address space, when we take modes like PAE / PSE into account)
> >
> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
> amount of
> >> virtual address space to use.
> > Irrespective of what OS you're using (and whether it switches to the
> > processor mode that would utilize the 64-bit virtual address space
> > that the processor provides), the 'internal address bus' (virtual
> > address space) of the processor is what decides the maximum virtual
> > address space of any programs that run on it (OS or otherwise).
> >
> > C
> >
> > On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Rajat Jain
> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>>
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> ----Original Message----
> >> From: C [mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>]
> >> Sent: Friday, October 23, 2009 10:51 AM
> >> To: Rajat Jain
> >> Cc: simonyanix@gmail.com <mailto:simonyanix@gmail.com>; Siddu;
> Rick Brown; kernelnewbies;
> >> linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org <mailto:linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org>
> >> Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
> >>
> >>> PAE (Physical Address Extension) expands the _physical_
> address space
> >>> to > 32 bits, but the _virtual_ address space stays the same at
> >>> 32-bits, and the virtual address size is what I mentioned as
> qualifies
> >>> the processor as 32-bit or 64-bit.
> >>
> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
> >> virtual address space.
> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
> > address to a physical address?
> >
> > It purely depends on the software (OS in this
> >> case) that runs on it. Consider all of the following is
> possible on the
> >> same 32 bit processor:
> >>
> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1
> mapping
> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space
> equal to
> >> physical address space).
> >>
> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
> amount of
> >> virtual address space to use.
> >>
> >> What am I missing?
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >>
> >> Rajat
> >>
> >>
> >>>
> >>> 1. Addressable physical memory / physical address size does
> not decide
> >>> whether a processor is 32-bit / 64-bit, there is no processor
> (AFAIK)
> >>> which can address 64 bits of physical memory. I suppose
> sizeof(void*)
> >>> gives you the size of the _virtual_ address, so yes, I suppose
> that
> >>> should be 64 bits on a 64-bit processor (and using a 64-bit
> compiler)
> >>> 2. Register size does not decide whether a processor is 32-bit /
> >>> 64-bit.
> >>>
> >>> C
> >>>
> >>> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM, Rajat Jain
> >>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> Hi,
> >>>>
> >>>>> 1. The size of the processor's internal address bus (virtual
> address
> >>>>> space) is what qualifies it as a 32-bit / 64-bit processor.
> >>>>
> >>>> Well, in that sense, isn't Pentium a "36-bit" processor (since it
> >>>> gives the option of PAE to use 64 GB of memory - it must be
> having
> >>>> atleast 36 address lines)?
> >>>>
> >>>> On this topic and in this thread, we have had following
> responses to
> >>>> the question on what is called a 32-bit or 64-bit processor:
> >>>>
> >>>> 1) Addressable Physical memory (=sizeof(void*))
> >>>> 2) Register Size (=instruction size)
> >>>>
> >>>> Are the above two independent of each other? If yes, then how
> do we
> >>>> deine a processor as 32-bit / 64-bit?
> >>>>
> >>>> Thanks,
> >>>>
> >>>> Rajat
> >>
> >
> > --
> > To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
> > "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
> > Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>
>
>
> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
> >> virtual address space.
>
> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>
> No it doesn't... the previous poster is right. (unless we
> excessively get
> into semantics....)
> That is up to the MMU, it has absolutely nothing to do with the CPU.
> And FWIW, x86 is hardly a reference... x86, along with 8051 would
> have to
> be the biggest abonimation
> to the concept of elegant processing......
>
> -- Kris
>
>
> --
> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>
>
>
>
> --
> Thanks & Regards
> Nidhi Mittal Hada
>
>
> *Email Scanned for Virus & Dangerous Content by :*
> *www.CleanMailGateway.com*
>
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread* Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
[not found] ` <b14bc42a0911060423g324caedw3992061796125ea@mail.gmail.com>
2009-11-07 4:41 ` vkm
@ 2009-11-07 10:10 ` hmthalib
2009-11-07 10:30 ` vkm
2009-11-09 18:27 ` Pulkit Goel
2 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread
From: hmthalib @ 2009-11-07 10:10 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: nidhi mittal hada
Cc: microbit, C, simonyanix, Siddu, Rick Brown, kernelnewbies,
linux-newbie
nidhi mittal hada wrote:
> Can someone come and please clarify -- it finally
> above chain of mail raises more confusion as conflict stays till end.
>
> 1)processor 32/64 bit --
> a)data it can process at one instance --- register size --- data bus
> size --
> OR
> b)internal address bus size of processor --- if that is true then
> what abt case of pentium 36 bit address lines ---
>
A processor is called 32 bit or 64 bit depending on the width of the
data bus. not on the register size or data it can process at one instance
for example a 8 bit micro controller can have 16 bit registers.
similarly all modern processor has architecture to process more data to
increase the throughput.
>
> 2)OS 32 /64 bit
> a)its virtual address space -- what os provides --- to each process
> -- which is mapped to physical address space that prcessor provides
>
> OR
> b)processor specifies virtual addr space ??
>
>
dont confuse with virtual addr space with physical addr space . MMU will
assist the OS in this issue.
the moment the bit to enable the 64 bit mode is enabled the MMU and
other thing are extend to address 64 bit physical addr space.
>
>
> 3)extra ques -- why in case of 32 bit arch -- physical memory RAM
> limitation comes of 4GB ?
>
>
because the 32 bit can only address 2^32 address location which is 4GB
of RAM max. where 2^64 = 16 EB (exa bytes)
finally download some data sheet of different processor and read to get
how thing work
>
> On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 4:54 PM, <microbit@virginbroadband.com.au
> <mailto:microbit@virginbroadband.com.au>> wrote:
>
> Hi,
>
> On Thu, 22 Oct 2009 23:58:20 -0700, C <a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>> wrote:
> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
> >> virtual address space.
> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
> > address to a physical address? Virtual addresses are simply what the
> > software 'sees', the processor takes these, translates them into
> > physical addresses before making any reads / writes to main
> memory. No
> > software can use a virtual address space larger than what the
> > processor specifies.
> >
> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1 mapping
> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space equal to
> >> physical address space).
> >>
> > Well, I don't know much about other architectures, so I'll just
> comment
> on
> > x86.
> > When you switch to 64bit mode, you compulsorily need to have a
> 4-level
> > paging table, which translates 64-bit linear addresses (actually a
> > 48-bit linear address, since the address is subject to the canonical
> > address requirement) to (upto) 52-bit physical addresses. So
> > irrespective of what firmware you're running, linear addresses are
> > actually 64-bit, but physical addresses are not.
> >
> > (In fact, physical address space might even be larger than virtual
> > address space, when we take modes like PAE / PSE into account)
> >
> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
> amount of
> >> virtual address space to use.
> > Irrespective of what OS you're using (and whether it switches to the
> > processor mode that would utilize the 64-bit virtual address space
> > that the processor provides), the 'internal address bus' (virtual
> > address space) of the processor is what decides the maximum virtual
> > address space of any programs that run on it (OS or otherwise).
> >
> > C
> >
> > On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Rajat Jain
> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>>
> > wrote:
> >>
> >> Hi,
> >>
> >> ----Original Message----
> >> From: C [mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>]
> >> Sent: Friday, October 23, 2009 10:51 AM
> >> To: Rajat Jain
> >> Cc: simonyanix@gmail.com <mailto:simonyanix@gmail.com>; Siddu;
> Rick Brown; kernelnewbies;
> >> linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org <mailto:linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org>
> >> Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
> >>
> >>> PAE (Physical Address Extension) expands the _physical_ address
> space
> >>> to > 32 bits, but the _virtual_ address space stays the same at
> >>> 32-bits, and the virtual address size is what I mentioned as
> qualifies
> >>> the processor as 32-bit or 64-bit.
> >>
> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
> >> virtual address space.
> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
> > address to a physical address?
> >
> > It purely depends on the software (OS in this
> >> case) that runs on it. Consider all of the following is possible
> on the
> >> same 32 bit processor:
> >>
> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1 mapping
> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space equal to
> >> physical address space).
> >>
> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
> amount of
> >> virtual address space to use.
> >>
> >> What am I missing?
> >>
> >> Thanks,
> >>
> >> Rajat
> >>
> >>
> >>>
> >>> 1. Addressable physical memory / physical address size does not
> decide
> >>> whether a processor is 32-bit / 64-bit, there is no processor
> (AFAIK)
> >>> which can address 64 bits of physical memory. I suppose
> sizeof(void*)
> >>> gives you the size of the _virtual_ address, so yes, I suppose that
> >>> should be 64 bits on a 64-bit processor (and using a 64-bit
> compiler)
> >>> 2. Register size does not decide whether a processor is 32-bit /
> >>> 64-bit.
> >>>
> >>> C
> >>>
> >>> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM, Rajat Jain
> >>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>> wrote:
> >>>>
> >>>> Hi,
> >>>>
> >>>>> 1. The size of the processor's internal address bus (virtual
> address
> >>>>> space) is what qualifies it as a 32-bit / 64-bit processor.
> >>>>
> >>>> Well, in that sense, isn't Pentium a "36-bit" processor (since it
> >>>> gives the option of PAE to use 64 GB of memory - it must be having
> >>>> atleast 36 address lines)?
> >>>>
> >>>> On this topic and in this thread, we have had following
> responses to
> >>>> the question on what is called a 32-bit or 64-bit processor:
> >>>>
> >>>> 1) Addressable Physical memory (=sizeof(void*))
> >>>> 2) Register Size (=instruction size)
> >>>>
> >>>> Are the above two independent of each other? If yes, then how
> do we
> >>>> deine a processor as 32-bit / 64-bit?
> >>>>
> >>>> Thanks,
> >>>>
> >>>> Rajat
> >>
> >
> > --
> > To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
> > "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
> > Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>
>
>
> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
> >> virtual address space.
>
> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>
> No it doesn't... the previous poster is right. (unless we
> excessively get
> into semantics....)
> That is up to the MMU, it has absolutely nothing to do with the CPU.
> And FWIW, x86 is hardly a reference... x86, along with 8051 would
> have to
> be the biggest abonimation
> to the concept of elegant processing......
>
> -- Kris
>
>
> --
> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>
>
>
>
> --
> Thanks & Regards
> Nidhi Mittal Hada
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
the body of a message to majordomo@vger.kernel.org
More majordomo info at http://vger.kernel.org/majordomo-info.html
Please read the FAQ at http://www.linux-learn.org/faqs
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread* Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
2009-11-07 10:10 ` hmthalib
@ 2009-11-07 10:30 ` vkm
2009-11-07 10:49 ` hmthalib
0 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread
From: vkm @ 2009-11-07 10:30 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: hmthalib
Cc: nidhi mittal hada, microbit, C, simonyanix, Siddu, Rick Brown,
kernelnewbies, linux-newbie
hmthalib wrote:
> nidhi mittal hada wrote:
>> Can someone come and please clarify -- it finally
>> above chain of mail raises more confusion as conflict stays till end.
>>
>> 1)processor 32/64 bit --
>> a)data it can process at one instance --- register size --- data
>> bus size --
>> OR
>> b)internal address bus size of processor --- if that is true
>> then what abt case of pentium 36 bit address lines ---
>>
>
> A processor is called 32 bit or 64 bit depending on the width of the
> data bus. not on the register size or data it can process at one instance
>
> for example a 8 bit micro controller can have 16 bit registers.
> similarly all modern processor has architecture to process more data
> to increase the throughput.
What would you call pentium pro.... Its address bus is 36 bits wide, and
the external data bus is 64 bits wide
>
>
>>
>> 2)OS 32 /64 bit
>> a)its virtual address space -- what os provides --- to each
>> process -- which is mapped to physical address space that prcessor
>> provides
>> OR
>> b)processor specifies virtual addr space ??
>>
>>
>
> dont confuse with virtual addr space with physical addr space . MMU
> will assist the OS in this issue.
>
> the moment the bit to enable the 64 bit mode is enabled the MMU and
> other thing are extend to address 64 bit physical addr space.
>
>>
>>
>> 3)extra ques -- why in case of 32 bit arch -- physical memory RAM
>> limitation comes of 4GB ?
>>
>>
> because the 32 bit can only address 2^32 address location which is 4GB
> of RAM max. where 2^64 = 16 EB (exa bytes)
>
> finally download some data sheet of different processor and read to
> get how thing work
>
>>
>> On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 4:54 PM, <microbit@virginbroadband.com.au
>> <mailto:microbit@virginbroadband.com.au>> wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Thu, 22 Oct 2009 23:58:20 -0700, C <a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
>> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>> wrote:
>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the
>> size of
>> >> virtual address space.
>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>> > address to a physical address? Virtual addresses are simply
>> what the
>> > software 'sees', the processor takes these, translates them into
>> > physical addresses before making any reads / writes to main
>> memory. No
>> > software can use a virtual address space larger than what the
>> > processor specifies.
>> >
>> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1
>> mapping
>> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space
>> equal to
>> >> physical address space).
>> >>
>> > Well, I don't know much about other architectures, so I'll just
>> comment
>> on
>> > x86.
>> > When you switch to 64bit mode, you compulsorily need to have a
>> 4-level
>> > paging table, which translates 64-bit linear addresses
>> (actually a
>> > 48-bit linear address, since the address is subject to the
>> canonical
>> > address requirement) to (upto) 52-bit physical addresses. So
>> > irrespective of what firmware you're running, linear addresses
>> are
>> > actually 64-bit, but physical addresses are not.
>> >
>> > (In fact, physical address space might even be larger than
>> virtual
>> > address space, when we take modes like PAE / PSE into account)
>> >
>> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
>> amount of
>> >> virtual address space to use.
>> > Irrespective of what OS you're using (and whether it switches
>> to the
>> > processor mode that would utilize the 64-bit virtual address
>> space
>> > that the processor provides), the 'internal address bus' (virtual
>> > address space) of the processor is what decides the maximum
>> virtual
>> > address space of any programs that run on it (OS or otherwise).
>> >
>> > C
>> >
>> > On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Rajat Jain
>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>>
>> > wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Hi,
>> >>
>> >> ----Original Message----
>> >> From: C [mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
>> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>]
>> >> Sent: Friday, October 23, 2009 10:51 AM
>> >> To: Rajat Jain
>> >> Cc: simonyanix@gmail.com <mailto:simonyanix@gmail.com>; Siddu;
>> Rick Brown; kernelnewbies;
>> >> linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org
>> <mailto:linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org>
>> >> Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
>> >>
>> >>> PAE (Physical Address Extension) expands the _physical_ address
>> space
>> >>> to > 32 bits, but the _virtual_ address space stays the same at
>> >>> 32-bits, and the virtual address size is what I mentioned as
>> qualifies
>> >>> the processor as 32-bit or 64-bit.
>> >>
>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the
>> size of
>> >> virtual address space.
>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>> > address to a physical address?
>> >
>> > It purely depends on the software (OS in this
>> >> case) that runs on it. Consider all of the following is possible
>> on the
>> >> same 32 bit processor:
>> >>
>> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1
>> mapping
>> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space
>> equal to
>> >> physical address space).
>> >>
>> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
>> amount of
>> >> virtual address space to use.
>> >>
>> >> What am I missing?
>> >>
>> >> Thanks,
>> >>
>> >> Rajat
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>>
>> >>> 1. Addressable physical memory / physical address size does not
>> decide
>> >>> whether a processor is 32-bit / 64-bit, there is no processor
>> (AFAIK)
>> >>> which can address 64 bits of physical memory. I suppose
>> sizeof(void*)
>> >>> gives you the size of the _virtual_ address, so yes, I
>> suppose that
>> >>> should be 64 bits on a 64-bit processor (and using a 64-bit
>> compiler)
>> >>> 2. Register size does not decide whether a processor is
>> 32-bit /
>> >>> 64-bit.
>> >>>
>> >>> C
>> >>>
>> >>> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM, Rajat Jain
>> >>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>>
>> wrote:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Hi,
>> >>>>
>> >>>>> 1. The size of the processor's internal address bus (virtual
>> address
>> >>>>> space) is what qualifies it as a 32-bit / 64-bit processor.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Well, in that sense, isn't Pentium a "36-bit" processor
>> (since it
>> >>>> gives the option of PAE to use 64 GB of memory - it must be
>> having
>> >>>> atleast 36 address lines)?
>> >>>>
>> >>>> On this topic and in this thread, we have had following
>> responses to
>> >>>> the question on what is called a 32-bit or 64-bit processor:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> 1) Addressable Physical memory (=sizeof(void*))
>> >>>> 2) Register Size (=instruction size)
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Are the above two independent of each other? If yes, then how
>> do we
>> >>>> deine a processor as 32-bit / 64-bit?
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Thanks,
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Rajat
>> >>
>> >
>> > --
>> > To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>> > "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
>> > Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>
>>
>>
>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the
>> size of
>> >> virtual address space.
>>
>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>>
>> No it doesn't... the previous poster is right. (unless we
>> excessively get
>> into semantics....)
>> That is up to the MMU, it has absolutely nothing to do with the CPU.
>> And FWIW, x86 is hardly a reference... x86, along with 8051 would
>> have to
>> be the biggest abonimation
>> to the concept of elegant processing......
>>
>> -- Kris
>>
>>
>> --
>> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
>> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>
>>
>>
>>
>> --
>> Thanks & Regards
>> Nidhi Mittal Hada
>
>
> --
> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>
>
>
> Email Scanned for Virus & Dangerous Content by : www.CleanMailGateway.com
>
>
--
To unsubscribe from this list: send the line "unsubscribe linux-newbie" in
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
2009-11-07 10:30 ` vkm
@ 2009-11-07 10:49 ` hmthalib
0 siblings, 0 replies; 18+ messages in thread
From: hmthalib @ 2009-11-07 10:49 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: viral.vkm
Cc: nidhi mittal hada, microbit, C, simonyanix, Siddu, Rick Brown,
kernelnewbies, linux-newbie
vkm wrote:
>
>
> hmthalib wrote:
>> nidhi mittal hada wrote:
>>> Can someone come and please clarify -- it finally
>>> above chain of mail raises more confusion as conflict stays till end.
>>>
>>> 1)processor 32/64 bit --
>>> a)data it can process at one instance --- register size --- data
>>> bus size --
>>> OR
>>> b)internal address bus size of processor --- if that is true
>>> then what abt case of pentium 36 bit address lines ---
>>>
>>
>> A processor is called 32 bit or 64 bit depending on the width of the
>> data bus. not on the register size or data it can process at one instance
>>
>> for example a 8 bit micro controller can have 16 bit registers.
>> similarly all modern processor has architecture to process more data
>> to increase the throughput.
>
> What would you call pentium pro.... Its address bus is 36 bits wide, and
> the external data bus is 64 bits wide
Oh, you mean I am saying pentium pro as processor, I didn't meant that.
so to make clear i will use term SoC today what we get from the
semiconductor vendor is SoC may be you have ARM, PowerPC, x86, ia64, AMD
, etc... what ever you buy from market is a SoC.
your actual processor will site in one corner or your SoC, where there
will be other peripherals along the actual processor, because of Multi
core core era we call it as core , did you got it now.
A processor is just has ALU, Register, control unit, PC , etc.. it is
where the actual processing takes palace. there will be data/addr bus
connecting all the needed modules which also connects the main memory
directly or though cache. when data is move to any registers form memory
at a time a 32bit processor will move 32bit to a register. even the
register is 64bit or 128bit wide the data will be done in multiple
processor cycles.
To know more about memory management which done in modern CPU though MMU
check the below link
http://duartes.org/gustavo/blog/post/anatomy-of-a-program-in-memory
>>
>>
>>>
>>> 2)OS 32 /64 bit
>>> a)its virtual address space -- what os provides --- to each
>>> process -- which is mapped to physical address space that prcessor
>>> provides
>>> OR
>>> b)processor specifies virtual addr space ??
>>>
>>>
>>
>> dont confuse with virtual addr space with physical addr space . MMU
>> will assist the OS in this issue.
>>
>> the moment the bit to enable the 64 bit mode is enabled the MMU and
>> other thing are extend to address 64 bit physical addr space.
>>
>>>
>>>
>>> 3)extra ques -- why in case of 32 bit arch -- physical memory RAM
>>> limitation comes of 4GB ?
>>>
>>>
>> because the 32 bit can only address 2^32 address location which is 4GB
>> of RAM max. where 2^64 = 16 EB (exa bytes)
>>
>> finally download some data sheet of different processor and read to
>> get how thing work
>>
>>>
>>> On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 4:54 PM, <microbit@virginbroadband.com.au
>>> <mailto:microbit@virginbroadband.com.au>> wrote:
>>>
>>> Hi,
>>>
>>> On Thu, 22 Oct 2009 23:58:20 -0700, C <a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
>>> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>> wrote:
>>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the
>>> size of
>>> >> virtual address space.
>>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>>> > address to a physical address? Virtual addresses are simply
>>> what the
>>> > software 'sees', the processor takes these, translates them into
>>> > physical addresses before making any reads / writes to main
>>> memory. No
>>> > software can use a virtual address space larger than what the
>>> > processor specifies.
>>> >
>>> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1
>>> mapping
>>> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space
>>> equal to
>>> >> physical address space).
>>> >>
>>> > Well, I don't know much about other architectures, so I'll just
>>> comment
>>> on
>>> > x86.
>>> > When you switch to 64bit mode, you compulsorily need to have a
>>> 4-level
>>> > paging table, which translates 64-bit linear addresses
>>> (actually a
>>> > 48-bit linear address, since the address is subject to the
>>> canonical
>>> > address requirement) to (upto) 52-bit physical addresses. So
>>> > irrespective of what firmware you're running, linear addresses
>>> are
>>> > actually 64-bit, but physical addresses are not.
>>> >
>>> > (In fact, physical address space might even be larger than
>>> virtual
>>> > address space, when we take modes like PAE / PSE into account)
>>> >
>>> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
>>> amount of
>>> >> virtual address space to use.
>>> > Irrespective of what OS you're using (and whether it switches
>>> to the
>>> > processor mode that would utilize the 64-bit virtual address
>>> space
>>> > that the processor provides), the 'internal address bus' (virtual
>>> > address space) of the processor is what decides the maximum
>>> virtual
>>> > address space of any programs that run on it (OS or otherwise).
>>> >
>>> > C
>>> >
>>> > On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Rajat Jain
>>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>>
>>> > wrote:
>>> >>
>>> >> Hi,
>>> >>
>>> >> ----Original Message----
>>> >> From: C [mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com
>>> <mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com>]
>>> >> Sent: Friday, October 23, 2009 10:51 AM
>>> >> To: Rajat Jain
>>> >> Cc: simonyanix@gmail.com <mailto:simonyanix@gmail.com>; Siddu;
>>> Rick Brown; kernelnewbies;
>>> >> linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org
>>> <mailto:linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org>
>>> >> Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
>>> >>
>>> >>> PAE (Physical Address Extension) expands the _physical_ address
>>> space
>>> >>> to > 32 bits, but the _virtual_ address space stays the same at
>>> >>> 32-bits, and the virtual address size is what I mentioned as
>>> qualifies
>>> >>> the processor as 32-bit or 64-bit.
>>> >>
>>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the
>>> size of
>>> >> virtual address space.
>>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>>> > address to a physical address?
>>> >
>>> > It purely depends on the software (OS in this
>>> >> case) that runs on it. Consider all of the following is possible
>>> on the
>>> >> same 32 bit processor:
>>> >>
>>> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1
>>> mapping
>>> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space
>>> equal to
>>> >> physical address space).
>>> >>
>>> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different
>>> amount of
>>> >> virtual address space to use.
>>> >>
>>> >> What am I missing?
>>> >>
>>> >> Thanks,
>>> >>
>>> >> Rajat
>>> >>
>>> >>
>>> >>>
>>> >>> 1. Addressable physical memory / physical address size does not
>>> decide
>>> >>> whether a processor is 32-bit / 64-bit, there is no processor
>>> (AFAIK)
>>> >>> which can address 64 bits of physical memory. I suppose
>>> sizeof(void*)
>>> >>> gives you the size of the _virtual_ address, so yes, I
>>> suppose that
>>> >>> should be 64 bits on a 64-bit processor (and using a 64-bit
>>> compiler)
>>> >>> 2. Register size does not decide whether a processor is
>>> 32-bit /
>>> >>> 64-bit.
>>> >>>
>>> >>> C
>>> >>>
>>> >>> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM, Rajat Jain
>>> >>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com <mailto:Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>>
>>> wrote:
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Hi,
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>>> 1. The size of the processor's internal address bus (virtual
>>> address
>>> >>>>> space) is what qualifies it as a 32-bit / 64-bit processor.
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Well, in that sense, isn't Pentium a "36-bit" processor
>>> (since it
>>> >>>> gives the option of PAE to use 64 GB of memory - it must be
>>> having
>>> >>>> atleast 36 address lines)?
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> On this topic and in this thread, we have had following
>>> responses to
>>> >>>> the question on what is called a 32-bit or 64-bit processor:
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> 1) Addressable Physical memory (=sizeof(void*))
>>> >>>> 2) Register Size (=instruction size)
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Are the above two independent of each other? If yes, then how
>>> do we
>>> >>>> deine a processor as 32-bit / 64-bit?
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Thanks,
>>> >>>>
>>> >>>> Rajat
>>> >>
>>> >
>>> > --
>>> > To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>>> > "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>>> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
>>> > Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the
>>> size of
>>> >> virtual address space.
>>>
>>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>>>
>>> No it doesn't... the previous poster is right. (unless we
>>> excessively get
>>> into semantics....)
>>> That is up to the MMU, it has absolutely nothing to do with the CPU.
>>> And FWIW, x86 is hardly a reference... x86, along with 8051 would
>>> have to
>>> be the biggest abonimation
>>> to the concept of elegant processing......
>>>
>>> -- Kris
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>>> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>>> <mailto:ecartis@nl.linux.org>
>>> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>>
>>> --
>>> Thanks & Regards
>>> Nidhi Mittal Hada
>>
>>
>> --
>> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>
>>
>>
>> Email Scanned for Virus & Dangerous Content by : www.CleanMailGateway.com
>>
>>
>
--
Regards,
Mohamed Thalib H
--
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^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread
* Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
[not found] ` <b14bc42a0911060423g324caedw3992061796125ea@mail.gmail.com>
2009-11-07 4:41 ` vkm
2009-11-07 10:10 ` hmthalib
@ 2009-11-09 18:27 ` Pulkit Goel
2009-11-10 2:09 ` Microbit_P43000
2 siblings, 1 reply; 18+ messages in thread
From: Pulkit Goel @ 2009-11-09 18:27 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: nidhi mittal hada
Cc: microbit, C, simonyanix, Siddu, Rick Brown, kernelnewbies,
linux-newbie
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 7386 bytes --]
Hi,
*1) *a) Processor 32/64 bit defines by :::* Data bus Size*
b) In Pentium 36 bit Adddress, Basically a PAE, Which is Introduced
First by Intel to handle the Demand of RAM more than 4GB, in Heavy
Applications.
*2)* a) 64OS not Run On 32bit Processor, But 32bit OS run on 64Bit Processor
by Downgarding its Efficiency of Databus By latching only 32 bit data on
64bit bus by Inserting 32'b0* in MSB of 64Bus...
Processor Generate *Logical* Address, which is Mapped into *Virtual* which
in turn Mapped into *Physical*., At low Level For LOW MEMORY Logical Address
Directly Mapped to Virtual Address, OS Provides Virtual Address space to a
Process,
*3)* *If* Address Bus Size is 32Bit then Possible no. of Permutation that of
Address Formed are 2^32 = 4.098 GB.
*Reagrds:*
Pulkit Goel
*mail:* vipulkit.goel@gmail.com
On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 5:53 PM, nidhi mittal hada
<nidhimittal19@gmail.com>wrote:
> Can someone come and please clarify -- it finally
> above chain of mail raises more confusion as conflict stays till end.
>
> 1)processor 32/64 bit --
> a)data it can process at one instance --- register size --- data bus
> size --
> OR
> b)internal address bus size of processor --- if that is true then what
> abt case of pentium 36 bit address lines ---
>
>
> 2)OS 32 /64 bit
> a)its virtual address space -- what os provides --- to each process --
> which is mapped to physical address space that prcessor provides
>
> OR
> b)processor specifies virtual addr space ??
>
>
>
>
> 3)extra ques -- why in case of 32 bit arch -- physical memory RAM
> limitation comes of 4GB ?
>
>
>
> On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 4:54 PM, <microbit@virginbroadband.com.au> wrote:
>
>> Hi,
>>
>> On Thu, 22 Oct 2009 23:58:20 -0700, C <a.la.kaarta@gmail.com> wrote:
>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
>> >> virtual address space.
>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>> > address to a physical address? Virtual addresses are simply what the
>> > software 'sees', the processor takes these, translates them into
>> > physical addresses before making any reads / writes to main memory. No
>> > software can use a virtual address space larger than what the
>> > processor specifies.
>> >
>> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1 mapping
>> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space equal to
>> >> physical address space).
>> >>
>> > Well, I don't know much about other architectures, so I'll just comment
>> on
>> > x86.
>> > When you switch to 64bit mode, you compulsorily need to have a 4-level
>> > paging table, which translates 64-bit linear addresses (actually a
>> > 48-bit linear address, since the address is subject to the canonical
>> > address requirement) to (upto) 52-bit physical addresses. So
>> > irrespective of what firmware you're running, linear addresses are
>> > actually 64-bit, but physical addresses are not.
>> >
>> > (In fact, physical address space might even be larger than virtual
>> > address space, when we take modes like PAE / PSE into account)
>> >
>> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different amount of
>> >> virtual address space to use.
>> > Irrespective of what OS you're using (and whether it switches to the
>> > processor mode that would utilize the 64-bit virtual address space
>> > that the processor provides), the 'internal address bus' (virtual
>> > address space) of the processor is what decides the maximum virtual
>> > address space of any programs that run on it (OS or otherwise).
>> >
>> > C
>> >
>> > On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Rajat Jain <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>
>> > wrote:
>> >>
>> >> Hi,
>> >>
>> >> ----Original Message----
>> >> From: C [mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com]
>> >> Sent: Friday, October 23, 2009 10:51 AM
>> >> To: Rajat Jain
>> >> Cc: simonyanix@gmail.com; Siddu; Rick Brown; kernelnewbies;
>> >> linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org
>> >> Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
>> >>
>> >>> PAE (Physical Address Extension) expands the _physical_ address space
>> >>> to > 32 bits, but the _virtual_ address space stays the same at
>> >>> 32-bits, and the virtual address size is what I mentioned as qualifies
>> >>> the processor as 32-bit or 64-bit.
>> >>
>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
>> >> virtual address space.
>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>> > address to a physical address?
>> >
>> > It purely depends on the software (OS in this
>> >> case) that runs on it. Consider all of the following is possible on the
>> >> same 32 bit processor:
>> >>
>> >> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1 mapping
>> >> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space equal to
>> >> physical address space).
>> >>
>> >> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different amount of
>> >> virtual address space to use.
>> >>
>> >> What am I missing?
>> >>
>> >> Thanks,
>> >>
>> >> Rajat
>> >>
>> >>
>> >>>
>> >>> 1. Addressable physical memory / physical address size does not decide
>> >>> whether a processor is 32-bit / 64-bit, there is no processor (AFAIK)
>> >>> which can address 64 bits of physical memory. I suppose sizeof(void*)
>> >>> gives you the size of the _virtual_ address, so yes, I suppose that
>> >>> should be 64 bits on a 64-bit processor (and using a 64-bit compiler)
>> >>> 2. Register size does not decide whether a processor is 32-bit /
>> >>> 64-bit.
>> >>>
>> >>> C
>> >>>
>> >>> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM, Rajat Jain
>> >>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com> wrote:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Hi,
>> >>>>
>> >>>>> 1. The size of the processor's internal address bus (virtual address
>> >>>>> space) is what qualifies it as a 32-bit / 64-bit processor.
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Well, in that sense, isn't Pentium a "36-bit" processor (since it
>> >>>> gives the option of PAE to use 64 GB of memory - it must be having
>> >>>> atleast 36 address lines)?
>> >>>>
>> >>>> On this topic and in this thread, we have had following responses to
>> >>>> the question on what is called a 32-bit or 64-bit processor:
>> >>>>
>> >>>> 1) Addressable Physical memory (=sizeof(void*))
>> >>>> 2) Register Size (=instruction size)
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Are the above two independent of each other? If yes, then how do we
>> >>>> deine a processor as 32-bit / 64-bit?
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Thanks,
>> >>>>
>> >>>> Rajat
>> >>
>> >
>> > --
>> > To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>> > "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>> > Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>
>>
>>
>> >> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
>> >> virtual address space.
>>
>> > Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
>>
>> No it doesn't... the previous poster is right. (unless we excessively get
>> into semantics....)
>> That is up to the MMU, it has absolutely nothing to do with the CPU.
>> And FWIW, x86 is hardly a reference... x86, along with 8051 would have to
>> be the biggest abonimation
>> to the concept of elegant processing......
>>
>> -- Kris
>>
>>
>> --
>> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
>> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
>> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>>
>>
>
>
> --
> Thanks & Regards
> Nidhi Mittal Hada
>
[-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 10067 bytes --]
^ permalink raw reply [flat|nested] 18+ messages in thread* RE: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
2009-11-09 18:27 ` Pulkit Goel
@ 2009-11-10 2:09 ` Microbit_P43000
0 siblings, 0 replies; 18+ messages in thread
From: Microbit_P43000 @ 2009-11-10 2:09 UTC (permalink / raw)
To: 'Pulkit Goel', 'nidhi mittal hada'
Cc: 'C', simonyanix, 'Siddu', 'Rick Brown',
'kernelnewbies', linux-newbie
Hi,
What you posted below might hold true for the specific case of Intel CPUs. But that's
about it....
The Intel "assumptions" fail on many other CPUs....
Perhaps agree to disagree ? If you only code on x86 PCs, then your assertion just
*happens* to be correct....
Conversely - a square is a rectangle, but rectangles are not *necessarily* a square !
We can go round and round I guess....
Best Regards,
Kris
________________________________________
From: Pulkit Goel [mailto:vipulkit.goel@gmail.com]
Sent: Tuesday, 10 November 2009 5:27 AM
To: nidhi mittal hada
Cc: microbit@virginbroadband.com.au; C; simonyanix@gmail.com; Siddu; Rick Brown;
kernelnewbies; linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org
Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
Hi,
1) a) Processor 32/64 bit defines by ::: Data bus Size
b) In Pentium 36 bit Adddress, Basically a PAE, Which is Introduced First by Intel to
handle the Demand of RAM more than 4GB, in Heavy Applications.
2) a) 64OS not Run On 32bit Processor, But 32bit OS run on 64Bit Processor by Downgarding
its Efficiency of Databus By latching only 32 bit data on 64bit bus by Inserting 32'b0* in
MSB of 64Bus...
Processor Generate Logical Address, which is Mapped into Virtual which in turn Mapped into
Physical., At low Level For LOW MEMORY Logical Address Directly Mapped to Virtual
Address, OS Provides Virtual Address space to a Process,
3) If Address Bus Size is 32Bit then Possible no. of Permutation that of Address Formed
are 2^32 = 4.098 GB.
Reagrds:
Pulkit Goel
mail: vipulkit.goel@gmail.com
On Fri, Nov 6, 2009 at 5:53 PM, nidhi mittal hada <nidhimittal19@gmail.com> wrote:
Can someone come and please clarify -- it finally
above chain of mail raises more confusion as conflict stays till end.
1)processor 32/64 bit --
a)data it can process at one instance --- register size --- data bus size --
OR
b)internal address bus size of processor --- if that is true then what abt case of
pentium 36 bit address lines ---
2)OS 32 /64 bit
a)its virtual address space -- what os provides --- to each process -- which is mapped
to physical address space that prcessor provides
OR
b)processor specifies virtual addr space ??
3)extra ques -- why in case of 32 bit arch -- physical memory RAM limitation comes of 4GB
?
On Fri, Oct 23, 2009 at 4:54 PM, <microbit@virginbroadband.com.au> wrote:
Hi,
On Thu, 22 Oct 2009 23:58:20 -0700, C <a.la.kaarta@gmail.com> wrote:
>> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
>> virtual address space.
> Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
> address to a physical address? Virtual addresses are simply what the
> software 'sees', the processor takes these, translates them into
> physical addresses before making any reads / writes to main memory. No
> software can use a virtual address space larger than what the
> processor specifies.
>
>> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1 mapping
>> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space equal to
>> physical address space).
>>
> Well, I don't know much about other architectures, so I'll just comment
on
> x86.
> When you switch to 64bit mode, you compulsorily need to have a 4-level
> paging table, which translates 64-bit linear addresses (actually a
> 48-bit linear address, since the address is subject to the canonical
> address requirement) to (upto) 52-bit physical addresses. So
> irrespective of what firmware you're running, linear addresses are
> actually 64-bit, but physical addresses are not.
>
> (In fact, physical address space might even be larger than virtual
> address space, when we take modes like PAE / PSE into account)
>
>> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different amount of
>> virtual address space to use.
> Irrespective of what OS you're using (and whether it switches to the
> processor mode that would utilize the 64-bit virtual address space
> that the processor provides), the 'internal address bus' (virtual
> address space) of the processor is what decides the maximum virtual
> address space of any programs that run on it (OS or otherwise).
>
> C
>
> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 11:23 PM, Rajat Jain <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com>
> wrote:
>>
>> Hi,
>>
>> ----Original Message----
>> From: C [mailto:a.la.kaarta@gmail.com]
>> Sent: Friday, October 23, 2009 10:51 AM
>> To: Rajat Jain
>> Cc: simonyanix@gmail.com; Siddu; Rick Brown; kernelnewbies;
>> linux-newbie@vger.kernel.org
>> Subject: Re: 32 bit processors / 64 bit processors
>>
>>> PAE (Physical Address Extension) expands the _physical_ address space
>>> to > 32 bits, but the _virtual_ address space stays the same at
>>> 32-bits, and the virtual address size is what I mentioned as qualifies
>>> the processor as 32-bit or 64-bit.
>>
>> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
>> virtual address space.
> Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
> address to a physical address?
>
> It purely depends on the software (OS in this
>> case) that runs on it. Consider all of the following is possible on the
>> same 32 bit processor:
>>
>> 1) User may run a firmware on the processor that gives a 1-1 mapping
>> from virtual to physical (thus making virtual address space equal to
>> physical address space).
>>
>> 2) Users may be running different OS(s) that give different amount of
>> virtual address space to use.
>>
>> What am I missing?
>>
>> Thanks,
>>
>> Rajat
>>
>>
>>>
>>> 1. Addressable physical memory / physical address size does not decide
>>> whether a processor is 32-bit / 64-bit, there is no processor (AFAIK)
>>> which can address 64 bits of physical memory. I suppose sizeof(void*)
>>> gives you the size of the _virtual_ address, so yes, I suppose that
>>> should be 64 bits on a 64-bit processor (and using a 64-bit compiler)
>>> 2. Register size does not decide whether a processor is 32-bit /
>>> 64-bit.
>>>
>>> C
>>>
>>> On Thu, Oct 22, 2009 at 10:05 PM, Rajat Jain
>>> <Rajat.Jain@infogain.com> wrote:
>>>>
>>>> Hi,
>>>>
>>>>> 1. The size of the processor's internal address bus (virtual address
>>>>> space) is what qualifies it as a 32-bit / 64-bit processor.
>>>>
>>>> Well, in that sense, isn't Pentium a "36-bit" processor (since it
>>>> gives the option of PAE to use 64 GB of memory - it must be having
>>>> atleast 36 address lines)?
>>>>
>>>> On this topic and in this thread, we have had following responses to
>>>> the question on what is called a 32-bit or 64-bit processor:
>>>>
>>>> 1) Addressable Physical memory (=sizeof(void*))
>>>> 2) Register Size (=instruction size)
>>>>
>>>> Are the above two independent of each other? If yes, then how do we
>>>> deine a processor as 32-bit / 64-bit?
>>>>
>>>> Thanks,
>>>>
>>>> Rajat
>>
>
> --
> To unsubscribe from this list: send an email with
> "unsubscribe kernelnewbies" to ecartis@nl.linux.org
> Please read the FAQ at http://kernelnewbies.org/FAQ
>> Well, IMHO the processor does not decide or even know the size of
>> virtual address space.
> Ofcourse it does. How else do you think it translates a virtual
No it doesn't... the previous poster is right. (unless we excessively get
into semantics....)
That is up to the MMU, it has absolutely nothing to do with the CPU.
And FWIW, x86 is hardly a reference... x86, along with 8051 would have to
be the biggest abonimation
to the concept of elegant processing......
-- Kris
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Thanks & Regards
Nidhi Mittal Hada
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