As pages are swapped back and forth between an external storage device and the
physical memory, the relationship between any one logical address and its
corresponding physical address may change many times.
Your HP emulator will let you run a paged, dynamic system, but the analyzer will
not be able to provide support for such features as symbolic addresses, or display of
corresponding source files. The deMMUer cannot detect changes in the MMU
mappings. The longer the system runs, the further out of date the deMMUer will
become. Of course, the analyzer will still be able to show activity captured at
physical addresses. By experimenting with several starting points for the inverse
assembler, you can obtain a trace list with activity inverse assembled into an
equivalent assembly language listing (display trace
disassemble_from_line_number <NO.> [low_word]).
Where Is The MMU?
The MMU is located between the CPU core and the external address bus. The
program counter always contains logical address values. When the MMU is turned
off, the program counter value is placed directly on the address bus to access an
address in physical memory. When the MMU is turned on, the MMU accepts the
logical address value and translates it (by using its translation tables) to a physical
address. The physical address from the MMU is placed on the processor address
bus.
Chapter 10: Using Memory Management
Understanding Emulation and Analysis Of The Memory Management Unit
373
Summary of Contents for 64783A
Page 30: ...xxx ...
Page 31: ...Part 1 Quick Start Guide 1 ...
Page 33: ...1 Getting Started 3 ...
Page 70: ...40 ...
Page 75: ...Part 2 Using The Emulator 45 ...
Page 140: ...110 ...
Page 141: ...4 Using the Emulator How to control the processor and view system resources 111 ...
Page 227: ...5 Using the Emulation Bus Analyzer How to record program execution in real time 197 ...
Page 290: ...260 ...
Page 331: ...8 Configuring the Emulator 301 ...
Page 382: ...352 ...
Page 383: ...9 Solving Problems What to do when the emulator doesn t behave as expected 353 ...
Page 397: ...Part 3 Reference 367 ...
Page 399: ...10 Using Memory Management Understanding logical and physical emulation and analysis 369 ...
Page 429: ...11 Emulator Commands The command syntax reference for the emulator softkey interface 399 ...
Page 443: ...copy Chapter 11 Emulator Commands copy 413 ...
Page 451: ...display Chapter 11 Emulator Commands display 421 ...
Page 457: ...DISPLAY MEMORY Chapter 11 Emulator Commands DISPLAY MEMORY 427 ...
Page 461: ...DISPLAY MMU Chapter 11 Emulator Commands DISPLAY MMU 431 ...
Page 464: ...DISPLAY TRACE Chapter 11 Emulator Commands DISPLAY TRACE 434 ...
Page 480: ...modify Chapter 11 Emulator Commands modify 450 ...
Page 501: ...set Chapter 11 Emulator Commands set 471 ...
Page 514: ... SYMB Chapter 11 Emulator Commands SYMB 484 ...
Page 582: ...552 ...
Page 583: ...13 Setting X Resources 553 ...
Page 598: ...568 ...
Page 606: ...576 ...
Page 613: ...16 Specifications and Characteristics 583 ...
Page 627: ...Part 4 Concept Guide 597 ...
Page 629: ...17 X Resources and the Graphical User Interface 599 ...
Page 639: ...Part 5 Installation and Service Guide 609 ...
Page 697: ...19 Installation and Service 667 ...
Page 746: ...Chapter 19 Installation and Service Verifying the Installation 716 ...
Page 755: ...20 Installing Updating Emulator Firmware 725 ...
Page 762: ...732 ...
Page 778: ...748 ...
Page 810: ...X server 554 604 X Window System 54 Index 780 ...