Chapter 5. Memory Management
5-9
MMU Overview
5.1.3 Address Translation Mechanisms
PowerPC processors support the following three types of address translation:
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Page address translationTranslates the page frame address for a 4-Kbyte page size
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Block address translationTranslates the block number for blocks that range in size
from 128 Kbytes to 256 Mbytes.
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Real addressing mode address translationWhen address translation is disabled,
the physical address is identical to the effective address.
Figure 5-4 shows the three address translation mechanisms provided by the MMUs. The
segment descriptors shown in the Tgure control the page address translation mechanism.
When an access uses page address translation, the appropriate segment descriptor is
required. In 32-bit implementations, the appropriate segment descriptor is selected from the
16 on-chip segment registers by the four highest-order effective address bits.
A control bit in the corresponding segment descriptor then determines if the access is to
memory (memory-mapped) or to the direct-store interface space. Note that the direct-store
interface was present in the architecture only for compatibility with existing I/O devices
that used this interface. However, it is being removed from the architecture, and the
MPC7400 does not support it. When an access is determined to be to the direct-store
interface space, the MPC7400 takes a DSI exception if it is a data access (see Section 4.6.3,
òDSI Exception (0x00300)ó), and takes an ISI exception if it is an instruction access (see
Section 4.6.4, òISI Exception (0x00400)ó).
For memory accesses translated by a segment descriptor, the interim virtual address is
generated using the information in the segment descriptor. Page address translation
corresponds to the conversion of this virtual address into the 32-bit physical address used
by the memory subsystem. In most cases, the physical address for the page resides in an
on-chip TLB and is available for quick access. However, if the page address translation
misses in the on-chip TLB, the MMU causes a search of the page tables in memory (using
the virtual address information and a hashing function) to locate the required physical
address.
Because blocks are larger than pages, there are fewer upper-order effective address bits to
be translated into physical address bits (more low-order address bits (at least 17) are
untranslated to form the offset into a block) for block address translation. Also, instead of
segment descriptors and a TLB, block address translations use the on-chip BAT registers as
a BAT array. If an effective address matches the corresponding Teld of a BAT register, the
information in the BAT register is used to generate the physical address; in this case, the
results of the page translation (occurring in parallel) are ignored.