翻訳と辞書
Words near each other
・ Out of the Blue (Alison Brown album)
・ Out of the Blue (American band)
・ Out of the Blue (Blue Mitchell album)
・ Out of the Blue (Blue Raspberry album)
・ Out of the Blue (British band)
・ Out of the Blue (Claudia Carawan album)
・ Out of the Blue (Debbie Gibson album)
・ Out of the Blue (Debbie Gibson song)
・ Out of the Blue (Delta Goodrem song)
・ Out of the Blue (Donnie Iris album)
・ Out of the Blue (Electric Light Orchestra album)
・ Out of the Blue (Ferry Corsten album)
・ Out of the blue (idiom)
・ Out of the Blue (Sonny Red album)
・ Out of Many...One
Out of memory
・ Out of Mind
・ Out of Mind (Tove Lo song)
・ Out of Mind, Out of Sight
・ Out of Mind, Out of Sight (album)
・ Out of Mind, Out of Sight (Buffy the Vampire Slayer)
・ Out of Mind, Out of Sight (film)
・ Out of Mind, Out of Sight (song)
・ Out of Misery
・ Out of My Bones
・ Out of My Hair
・ Out of My Hand (film)
・ Out of My Hands
・ Out of My Hands (Green River Ordinance album)
・ Out of My Hands (Jars of Clay song)


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Out of memory : ウィキペディア英語版
Out of memory

Out of memory (OOM) is an often undesired state of computer operation where no additional memory can be allocated for use by programs or the operating system. Such a system will be unable to load any additional programs, and since many programs may load additional data into memory during execution, these will cease to function correctly. This usually occurs because all available memory, including disk swap space, has been allocated.
==History==
Historically, the out of memory condition was more common than it is now, since early computers and operating systems were limited to small amounts of physical random-access memory (RAM) due to the inability of early processors to address large amounts of memory, as well as cost considerations. Since the advent of virtual memory opened the door for the usage of swap space, the condition is much more rare. Almost all modern programs expect to be able to allocate and deallocate memory freely at run-time, and tend to fail in uncontrolled ways (crash) when that expectation is not met; older ones often allocated memory only once, checked whether they got enough to do all their work, and then expected no more to be forthcoming. Therefore, they would either fail immediately with an "out of memory" error message, or work as expected.
Early operating systems such as MS-DOS lacked support for multitasking. Programs were allocated physical memory that they could use as they needed. Physical memory was often a scarce resource, and when it was exhausted by applications such as those with Terminate and Stay Resident functionality, no further applications could be started until running applications were closed.
Modern operating systems provide virtual memory, in which processes are given a range of memory, but where the memory does not directly correspond to actual physical RAM. Virtual memory can be backed by physical RAM, a disk file via mmap, or swap space, and the operating system can move virtual memory pages around as it needs. Because virtual memory does not need to be backed by physical memory, exhaustion of it is rare, and usually there are other limits imposed by the operating system on resource consumption.
Due to Moore's law, the amount of physical memory in all computers has grown almost exponentially, although this is offset to some degree by programs and files themselves becoming larger. In some cases, a computer with virtual memory support where the majority of the loaded data resides on the hard disk may run out of physical memory but not virtual memory, thus causing excessive paging. This condition, known as thrashing, usually renders the computer unusable until some programs are closed or the machine is rebooted. Due to these reasons, an out of memory message is rarely encountered by applications with modern computers.
It is, however, still possible to encounter an OOM condition with a modern computer. The typical OOM case in modern computers happens when the operating system is unable to create any more virtual memory, because all of its potential backing devices have been filled. Operating systems' kernels such as Linux will attempt to recover from this type of OOM condition by terminating one or more processes, a mechanism known as the ''OOM Killer''.〔(【引用サイトリンク】url=http://www.oracle.com/technetwork/articles/servers-storage-dev/oom-killer-1911807.html )

抄文引用元・出典: フリー百科事典『 ウィキペディア(Wikipedia)
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