{"title":" 6.828: Operating System Engineering (14)","width":"100%","description":"\u666e\u901a\u306b\u8003\u3048\u3066\u9032\u6357\u60aa\u3044\u3002\u307e\u3060\u4e00\u30b3\u30de\u76ee\u306a\u306e\u306b 14th \u3060\u3057\u3002 \u3048\u3048\u3068 segmentation and paging \u3068\u304b\u51fa\u3066\u307e\u3059\u306d\u3002\u3068\u308a\u3042\u3048\u305a\u3069\u3093\u3069\u3093\u8aad\u307f\u307e\u3059\u3002 Exercise 7. Use QEMU and GDB to trace into the JOS kernel and find where the new virtual-to-physical mapping takes effect. Then examine the Global Descriptor Table (GDT) that the code uses to achieve this effect, and ma\u2026","image_url":null,"published":"2011-06-28 22:28:13","provider_name":"Hatena Blog","author_name":"yamanetoshi","blog_title":"yamanetoshi's diary","url":"https://yamanetoshi.hatenablog.com/entry/20110628/1309267693","html":"<iframe src=\"https://hatenablog-parts.com/embed?url=https%3A%2F%2Fyamanetoshi.hatenablog.com%2Fentry%2F20110628%2F1309267693\" title=\" 6.828: Operating System Engineering (14) - yamanetoshi&#39;s diary\" class=\"embed-card embed-blogcard\" scrolling=\"no\" frameborder=\"0\" style=\"display: block; width: 100%; height: 190px; max-width: 500px; margin: 10px 0px;\"></iframe>","blog_url":"https://yamanetoshi.hatenablog.com/","height":"190","provider_url":"https://hatena.blog","categories":["kernel"],"type":"rich","author_url":"https://blog.hatena.ne.jp/yamanetoshi/","version":"1.0"}