Demand Paging

Demand paging

Demand paging is a virtual memory management method used in computer operating systems. It involves copying a disk page into physical memory only when it is accessed and not already in memory, resulting in page faults. This technique allows processes to start execution without any pages in physical memory and gradually loads the necessary pages as they are needed.

3 courses cover this concept

CS 140: Operating Systems

Stanford University

Spring 2020

This course provides an in-depth understanding of the basic facilities provided by modern operating systems. It's structured into three major sections: concurrency, memory management, and file systems, followed by some smaller topics like virtual machines. The class includes one problem set and four programming projects based on the Pintos kernel, requiring a significant commitment of time.

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CS 111 Operating Systems Principles

Stanford University

Autumn 2022

An introductory course to operating systems, CS 111 builds upon programming experience to explore how operating systems function. The course provides an understanding of OS design challenges, such as filesystems, system calls, concurrency, virtual memory, demand paging, and others. Knowledge in C/C++ and Unix/Linux environment is prerequisite.

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CS 162: Operating Systems and Systems Programming

UC Berkeley

Fall 2022

This course introduces operating systems design and related concepts. It covers topics like memory allocation, file systems, basic networking, transactions, and security. The course requires foundational knowledge in data structures, assembly language, C programming, and debugging. It aims to improve students' skills in debugging large programs and computational problem solving.

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