Difference between revisions of "Address space"
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− | An '''address space''' is the total [[namespace]] available for identifying discrete objects in an information-processing system. | + | An '''address space''' is the total [[namespace]] available for identifying discrete objects in an information-processing system. (These names are usually termed '[[address]]es'.) |
Most commonly, it refers to the maximum amount of [[main memory]] a given [[Central Processing Unit|CPU]] [[architecture]] can handle, but it appears in other contexts as well; e.g. the [[Internet Protocol Version 4]] has an address space of 2^32 names (from its 32-bit addresses). | Most commonly, it refers to the maximum amount of [[main memory]] a given [[Central Processing Unit|CPU]] [[architecture]] can handle, but it appears in other contexts as well; e.g. the [[Internet Protocol Version 4]] has an address space of 2^32 names (from its 32-bit addresses). |
Revision as of 10:16, 27 July 2021
An address space is the total namespace available for identifying discrete objects in an information-processing system. (These names are usually termed 'addresses'.)
Most commonly, it refers to the maximum amount of main memory a given CPU architecture can handle, but it appears in other contexts as well; e.g. the Internet Protocol Version 4 has an address space of 2^32 names (from its 32-bit addresses).