J
jrobles428
Hi All,
In yesteryears, to block a physical memory segment from ever being
accessed from Windows 3.x, one would enter the following:
EMMExclude=<paragraph-range>
Default: None
Purpose: Specifies a range of memory that Windows will not
scan to find unused address space. This has the
side effect of turning off the RAM and ROM search
code for the range. The range (two paragraph
values separated by a hyphen) must be between A000
and EFFF. This scanning can interfere with some
adapters that use the same memory area. The
starting value is rounded down and the ending
value is rounded up to a multiple of 16K. For
example, you could set EMMExclude=C800-CFFF to
prevent Windows from scanning the addresses
C800:0000 through CFFF:000F. You can specify more
than one range by including more than one
EMMExclude line.
To change: Use Notepad to edit the SYSTEM.INI file.
My questions is, HOW DO YOU DO IT IN WINDOWS XP?
In yesteryears, to block a physical memory segment from ever being
accessed from Windows 3.x, one would enter the following:
EMMExclude=<paragraph-range>
Default: None
Purpose: Specifies a range of memory that Windows will not
scan to find unused address space. This has the
side effect of turning off the RAM and ROM search
code for the range. The range (two paragraph
values separated by a hyphen) must be between A000
and EFFF. This scanning can interfere with some
adapters that use the same memory area. The
starting value is rounded down and the ending
value is rounded up to a multiple of 16K. For
example, you could set EMMExclude=C800-CFFF to
prevent Windows from scanning the addresses
C800:0000 through CFFF:000F. You can specify more
than one range by including more than one
EMMExclude line.
To change: Use Notepad to edit the SYSTEM.INI file.
My questions is, HOW DO YOU DO IT IN WINDOWS XP?