There is such a thing as I/O mapping, which decreases the amount of
usable RAM. Usually the memory is mapped to just below 4GB.
AGP GART is there for example (256MB usually), as well as other things
(PCI for example).
Thus, you usually see 3.3 up to 3.5GB of RAM.
Bernd
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Hi everyone,
Further to my last message, I tried a memory dump
in 16 bit real mode running himem.exe and emm386 and found a great improvement
compared to 32-bit protected mode using CWSDPMI (or DPMIONE which was even
worse). A total of 3.24 GB of extended RAM is detected - here is the
outp
At 01:11 PM 4/15/2005 +0100, Roberto Waldteufel wrote:
Hi All,
No I am not using Himem.Sys or Himem.exe. I am writing for 32-bit
protected mode, so I need DPMI for the flat memory model, which in theory
should enable the use of all 4 GB of RAM on my system, not just extra high
memory in the real
Hi All,
No I am not using Himem.Sys or Himem.exe. I am
writing for 32-bit protected mode, so I need DPMI for the flat memory model,
which in theory should enable the use of all 4 GB of RAM on my system, not just
extra high memory in the real mode. No such real mode high memory manager is
n
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Hi!
| Are you using a XMS driver (probably), and which one
| (HIMEM.SYS/HIMEM.EXE/FDXMS.SYS/FDXXMS.SYS) exactly?
| can you run MEM /C /P from the commandline and paste the output into
| your next email? That way you can see how much RAM the XMS driver g