Physical Address Extension

memory management feature

In computing, Physical Address Extension (PAE) is a processor feature to enable 32-bit IA-32 central processing units (CPUs) to access physical address space larger than 4 gigabytes by extending the paging schema .[1] It allows up to 64 gigabytes of system memory to be addressed by a 32-bit processor.[2]

PAE was first introduced with the Intel 32-bit processor Pentium Pro.[2] Since then it has been a feature on all Intel processors except some Pentium M mobile processors.[2] Athlon or K7 is the first processor from AMD supported PAE. Now all AMD processors support PAE.[2] In addition to processor support, PAE requires the operating system (OS) to support it.[3] Windows 2000 was the first OS to support PAE.[3]

Desktop Processors

change
Processors Physical Addressing Bit Width
Intel Pentium Pro/Pentium II/Pentium III/Pentium II Celeron/Celeron 36 bits
Intel Pentium 4/Pentium 4 Celeron/Pentium D/Celeron D 36 bits
Intel Core 2/Pentium Dual-Core/Celeron 36 bits
Intel Core i3/i5/i7/Celeron/Pentium 36/39 bits
AMD Athlon 64/Athlon X2/Sempron/Sempron X2 40 bits
AMD Athlon/Athlon II/Sempron/Sempron X2 48 bits
AMD C-50 36 bits
AMD APU A4/A5/A6/A8/Athlon/Sempron 48 bits

References

change
  1. "Physical Address Extension". Windows Dev Center. Retrieved 31 December 2014.
  2. 2.0 2.1 2.2 2.3 Eric Hammersley, Professional VMware Server (Indianapolis, IN: Wrox/Wiley Pub., 2007), p. 13
  3. 3.0 3.1 "Microsoft Partners With Sequent for High-End Windows 2000." Computergram International. 1999. HighBeam Research. (December 31, 2014). http://www.highbeam.com/doc/1G1-54714335.html Archived 2016-04-21 at the Wayback Machine