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Revision as of 07:13, 14 March 2011 editRuud Koot (talk | contribs)31,416 edits Category:DOS memory management← Previous edit Revision as of 21:07, 14 March 2011 edit undoWtshymanski (talk | contribs)Extended confirmed users76,111 edits copyeidt; not an 8088 limitation, but an IBM PC limitationNext edit →
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'''Loadhigh''' (abbreviated 'lh') is an internal ] ] that is used to load a program into the ] (UMA) instead of ]. Due to limitations of the early ] architecture, MS-DOS (and other ]-compatible ]s of the day) suffered from what was known as the ]. The size of this memory area (640 ]s), known as ] was fixed and independent of the amount of system memory actually installed. Later, as DOS-based configurations came to be equipped with more and more memory, various schemas were developed to support extra memory (see also ], ] and ]), but conventional memory was still an issue due to compatibility issues. It was a scarce resource as many applications demanded a large part of this basic memory fragment at run-time. Therefore, it was often necessary to move some ] programs like the ] driver or the ] disk caching driver prior to running a memory-hungry application. This was achieved by using loadhigh called with the program's name as the parameter. '''Loadhigh''' (abbreviated 'lh') is an internal ] ] that is used to load a program into the ] (UMA) instead of ]. Due to design of the ] MS-DOS suffered from what was known as the ]. The size of this memory area, known as ] was fixed and independent of the amount of system memory actually installed. Later, as DOS-based configurations came to be equipped with more and more memory, various schemas were developed to support extra memory (see also ], ] and ]), but conventional memory was still an issue due to compatibility issues. It was a scarce resource as many applications demanded a large part of this basic memory fragment at run-time. Therefore, it was often necessary to move some ] programs like the ] driver or the ] disk caching driver prior to running a memory-hungry application. This was achieved by using loadhigh called with the program's name as the parameter.


The equivalent of loadhigh for ]s is DEVICEHIGH (usable only within ]). The equivalent of loadhigh for ]s is DEVICEHIGH (usable only within ]).

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Loadhigh (abbreviated 'lh') is an internal MS-DOS command that is used to load a program into the upper memory area (UMA) instead of conventional memory. Due to design of the IBM PC MS-DOS suffered from what was known as the 640 KiB barrier. The size of this memory area, known as conventional memory was fixed and independent of the amount of system memory actually installed. Later, as DOS-based configurations came to be equipped with more and more memory, various schemas were developed to support extra memory (see also XMS, EMS and DOS extender), but conventional memory was still an issue due to compatibility issues. It was a scarce resource as many applications demanded a large part of this basic memory fragment at run-time. Therefore, it was often necessary to move some TSR programs like the mouse driver or the SMARTDRV disk caching driver prior to running a memory-hungry application. This was achieved by using loadhigh called with the program's name as the parameter.

The equivalent of loadhigh for device drivers is DEVICEHIGH (usable only within CONFIG.SYS).

After the introduction of modern operating systems (stemming from MS-DOS) which run in protected mode, support an unsegmented (flat) memory model and do not ultimately suffer from the 640 kB constraint, loadhigh and other methods of freeing conventional memory have become obsolete and this command is no longer recognized within the command interpreter of newer Windows operating systems.

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