Due to the inherent complexity of being a demand-paged virtual memory operating system, monitoring memory-related resources under Red Hat Enterprise Linux can be confusing.
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OpenVMS is a virtual memory-based, cluster operating system that runs in production and development and is used particularly in mission-critical environments.
Disk-based virtual memory used by operating systems to provide more memory than is actually available on the system.
Full Access to Virtual Memory on 64 bit Operating Systems
Application memory tuning makes more of the computer's virtual memory available to applications by making less virtual memory available to the operating system.
VMS The Virtual Memory System is an operating system developed by DEC for VAX computers.
This can be avoided by extending the virtual memory of the operating system to a maximum of 3 gigabytes.
This technology is identical to virtual memory in operating systems, in which a process "thinks" it is using a certain amount of memory, but the OS's virtual memory system allocates less physical memory.
A protected-mode, virtual memory, multitasking operating system for personal computers based on the Intel 80286, 80386, i486, and Pentium processors.
Ein Multitaskingbetriebssystem mit Protected-Modus und virtuellem Speicher für Computer, die auf Intel 80286-, 80386-, i486- und Pentium Prozessoren basieren.
Note 1: The autoinstaller utility needs up to 200 MB of virtual memory on some operating systems.
It is very important to have enough Virtual Memory (operating system virtual memory, not RAM) available to [PROD84].
VM/370 is a reimplementation of CP/CMS, and was made available in 1972 as part of IBM's "System/370 Advanced Function" announcement (which added virtual memory hardware and operating systems to the System/370 series).
Die Ankündigung der Unterstützung der Virtualisierung 1972 enthielt auch die Ankündigung des VM/370-Betriebssystems, einer Reimplementierung des CP/CMS-Systems für die S/370-Serie.
System according to any of claims 1 - 3 wherein the action of modifying and returning the data allows the user of the first operating system (102) to control a program running in the virtual memory of the second operating system (104).