In computing, a logical address is the address at which an item (memory cell, storage element, network host) appears to reside from the perspective of an executing application program.
A logical address may be different from the physical address due to the operation of an address translator or mapping function. Such mapping functions may be, in the case of a computer memory architecture, a memory management unit (MMU) between the CPU and the memory bus.
There may be more than one level of mapping. For example, on multiprocessor configurations of the IBM S/360, S/370 and successors, IBM distinguishes among
Computer memory
editThe physical address of computer memory banks may be mapped to different logical addresses for various purposes.
In a system supporting virtual memory, there may actually not be any physical memory mapped to a logical address until an access is attempted. The access triggers special functions of the operating system which reprogram the MMU to map the address to some physical memory, perhaps writing the old contents of that memory to disk and reading back from disk what the memory should contain at the new logical address. In this case, the logical address may be referred to as a virtual address.
Notes
edit- ^ 8192 bytes for z/Architectural mode
- ^ The prefix is the block number of a 4096[a] byte
References
edit- ^ "Multisystem Operation" (PDF). IBM System/360 Principles of Operation (PDF). Systems Reference Library (Eighth ed.). September 1968. p. 18. A22-6821-7. Retrieved July 21, 2024.
The relocation procedure applies to the first 4,096 bytes of storage. This area contains all permanent storage assignments and, generally, has special significance to supervisory programs. The relocation is accomplished by inserting a 12-bit prefix in each address which has the high-order 12 bits set to zero and hence, pertains to location 0-4095.
- ^ "Prefixing in the z/Architecture Architectural Mode" (PDF). z/Architecture Principles of Operation (PDF) (Fourteenth ed.). May 2022. p. 3-21–3-23. SA22-7832-13. Retrieved July 21, 2024.
Prefixing provides the ability to assign the block of real addresses containing assigned storage locations to a different block in absolute storage for each CPU, thus permitting more than one CPU sharing main storage to operate concurrently with a minimum of interference, especially in the processing of interruptions.