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You are provided with memory traces to use with your simulator. Each trace is a real recording of a running program, taken from the SPEC benchmarks. Real traces are enormously big: billions and billions of memory accesses. However, a relatively small trace will be more than enough to keep you busy. Each trace only consists of one million memory accesses taken from the beginning of each program. The traces are:
gcc. trace
swim. trace
bzip. trace
sixpack. trace
Each trace is a series of lines, each listing a hexadecimal memory address followed by R or W to indicate a read or a write. For example:
0041f7a0 R
13f5e2c0 R
05e78900 R
004758a0 R
31348900 W
Note, to scan in one memory access in this format, you can use fscanf() as in the following:
unsigned addr;
char rw;
... fscanf(file,"%x %c",&addr,&rw);
Simulator Requirements
Your job is to build a simulator that reads a memory trace and simulates the action of a virtual memory system with a single level page table. Your simulator should keep track of what pages are loaded into memory. As it processes each memory event from the trace, it should check to see if the corresponding page is loaded. If not, it should choose a page to remove from memory. If the page to be replaced is "dirty" (that is, previous accesses to it included a Write access), it must be saved to disk. Finally, the new page is to be loaded into memory from disk, and the page table is updated. Assume that all pages and page frames are 4 KB (4096 bytes).
Of course, this is just a simulation of the page table, so you do not actually need to read and write data from disk. Just keep track of what pages are loaded. When a simulated disk read or write must occur, simply increment a counter to keep track of disk reads and writes, respectively.
Implement the following page replacement algorithms:
lru: least recently used.
clk: Clock
opt: optimal page replacement.
[Optional, for extra credit] VMS' second chance page replacement policy. You can find
its description in the textbook (page 249) and a more detailed description at the end of
this document.
Structure and write your simulator in any reasonable manner. You may need additional data structures to keep track of which pages need to be replaced depending on the algorithm implementation. Think carefully about which data structures you are going to use and make a reasonable decision.
You need to follow strict requirements on the interface to your simulator so that we will be able to test and grade your work in an efficient manner. The simulator (called memsim) should take the following arguments:
memsim
The first argument gives the name of the memory trace file to use. The second argument gives the number of page frames in the simulated memory. The third argument gives the page replacement algorithm to use. The fourth argument may be "debug" or "quiet" (explained below.)
If the fourth argument is "quiet", then the simulator should run silently with no output until the very end, at which point it should print out a few simple statistics like this (follow the format as closely as possible):
total memory frames: 12
events in trace: 1002050
total disk reads: 1751
total disk writes: 932
If the fourth argument is "debug", then the simulator should print out messages displaying the details of each event in the trace. You may use any format for this output, it is simply there to help you debug and test your code.
Use a separate functions for each algorithm, i. e.: your program must declare the following high level functions: lru(), clk(), opt() (and vms(), if implemented).

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