On Sat, Dec 28, 2013 at 1:23 PM, S Suresh <[email protected]> wrote:
> All, > > I have in the impression that , difference between 32bit/64bit hardware & > OS is handling of physicall address (means handling greater memory size. > (2^32 address bus for 32 bit machine, 2^64 bit address bus for 64bit > machine) > > [...] > > There are few questions in my mind which is not clear to me. > > 1) what is the diff between 32 bit & 64 bit machine. where we can see the > real use cases of 64 bit machine? > I do not have much experience with Ubuntu, so I will limit my answer specifically to the topic of 32-bit vs 64-bit. There are three pieces that need to fall into place before you can call your system fully 64-bit: 1. The Hardware - this means you can install and use more than 4 GB RAM. This is the biggest advantage of going for a 64 bit machine in the first place. In addition to higher supported RAM, the processor's general purpose registers are 64 bits big, meaning they are capable of larger computations in the processor, stack pushes and pops can happen at 64 bits at a time and stuff like that. 2. The Operating System - The OS, standing is it does between the hardware and the user, needs to use the additional address bits the hardware makes available. As with most processor / hardware improvements, OSes typically lag quite a bit in supporting the new features. Without an OS that specifically supports 64 bit memory access, you will not be able to use the additional memory even on a 64 bit hardware. So this is pretty important. 3. Your software needs to be compiled for 64 bit - Finally, given how these hardware and operating systems are designed to be backward compatible, you can continue to write 32 bit programs to run on them. And usually they will run just fine - perhaps even without any performance penalties. However there are some benefits for moving to 64 bit sooner rather than later - C long variables will now become 64 bit so you can do more efficient larger integer math (if you care about such things), and such stuff. But the main reason most of us should move to 64 bit is that over time all key libraries and systems would have moved to 64 bit and you will really have no choice. So better make the move now itself. _______________________________________________ ILUGC Mailing List: http://www.ae.iitm.ac.in/mailman/listinfo/ilugc ILUGC Mailing List Guidelines: http://ilugc.in/mailinglist-guidelines
