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Random access memory organizations typically are chosen for maximum reliability, based on the operation of the memory box itself without concern for the remainder of the computing system. This had led to widespread use of the 1-bit-per-chip, or related organization which uses error correcting codes to minimize the effects of failures occurring in some basic unit such as a word or double word (32 to 64 bits). Such memory boxes are used quite commonly in paged virtual memory systems where the unit for protection is really a page (4K bytes), or in a cache where the unit for protection is a block (32 to 128 bytes), not a double word. With typical high density memory chips and typical ranges of failure rates, the 1-bit-per-chip organization can often maximize page failures in a virtual memory system. For typical cases, a paged virtual memory using a page-per-chip organization can substantially improve reliability, and is potentially far superior to other organizations. This paper first describes the fundamental considerations of organization for memory systems and demonstrates the underlying problems with a simplified case. Then the reliability in terms of lost pages per megabyte due to hard failures over any time period is analyzed for a paged virtual memory organized in both ways. Normalized curves give the lost pages per Mbyte as a function of failure rate and accumulated time. Assuming reasonable failure rates can be achieved, the page-per-chip organization can be 10 to 20 times more reliable than a 1-bit-per-chip scheme.  相似文献   
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