help.hlp (Table of Contents; Topic list)
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MEM--Examples
Syntax  Notes
────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────────
 
                               MEM──Examples
 
Getting general program and memory information
 
Suppose your system has both expanded memory and extended memory. To display
a summary of your system's total memory──conventional, expanded, extended,
and upper──and to display a list of programs currently loaded into memory,
type the following command:
 
    mem /classify
 
The results might look similar to the following:
 
Modules using memory below 1 MB:
 
  Name           Total       =   Conventional   +   Upper Memory
  ────────  ────────────────   ────────────────   ────────────────
  SYSTEM      16,477   (16K)     16,461   (16K)         16    (0K)
  SETVER         784    (1K)        784    (1K)          0    (0K)
  HIMEM        1,168    (1K)      1,168    (1K)          0    (0K)
  EMM386       3,120    (3K)      3,120    (3K)          0    (0K)
  USPI14       9,120    (9K)      9,120    (9K)          0    (0K)
  COMMAND      3,680    (4K)      3,680    (4K)          0    (0K)
  SMARTDRV    37,680   (37K)     21,280   (21K)     16,400   (16K)
  MOUSE       17,088   (17K)     17,088   (17K)          0    (0K)
  NETBEUI     42,432   (41K)     41,760   (41K)        672    (1K)
  REDIR       86,064   (84K)     76,128   (74K)      9,936   (10K)
  ANARKEY     14,384   (14K)          0    (0K)     14,384   (14K)
  ZPOWER       4,368    (4K)          0    (0K)      4,368    (4K)
  ANSI         4,208    (4K)          0    (0K)      4,208    (4K)
  DRVSPACE    36,848   (36K)          0    (0K)     36,848   (36K)
  PROTMAN        128    (0K)          0    (0K)        128    (0K)
  EXP16        9,056    (9K)          0    (0K)      9,056    (9K)
  WORKGRP      4,368    (4K)          0    (0K)      4,368    (4K)
  RAMDRIVE     1,312    (1K)          0    (0K)      1,312    (1K)
  Free       472,464  (461K)    464,448  (454K)      8,016    (8K)
 
Memory Summary:
 
  Type of Memory       Total   =    Used    +    Free
  ────────────────  ──────────   ──────────   ──────────
  Conventional         655,360      190,912      464,448
  Upper                109,712      101,696        8,016
  Reserved             393,216      393,216            0
  Extended (XMS)    15,618,928   12,424,048    3,194,880
  ────────────────  ──────────   ──────────   ──────────
  Total memory      16,777,216   13,109,872    3,667,344
 
  Total under 1 MB     765,072      292,608      472,464
 
  Largest executable program size        464,352   (453K)
  Largest free upper memory block          7,888     (8K)
  MS-DOS is resident in the high memory area.
 
"Reserved" is the memory located on add-on boards such as video adapter
boards. "Largest executable program size" is the largest contiguous block of
conventional memory available for a program. "Largest free upper memory
block" is the largest area of upper memory available for a program. "MS-DOS
is resident in the high memory area" indicates that MS-DOS is running in the
first 64K of extended memory rather than in conventional memory.
 
Getting information about a specific program
 
To find out what memory a specific program module has allocated, use the MEM
/MODULE command. For example, to find out what memory the WIN386 module has
allocated, you would type the following command:
 
    mem /module win386
 
If you were running WIN386, the results might look similar to the
following:
 
WIN386 is using the following memory:
 
  Segment  Region       Total        Type
  ──────-  ──────  ────────────────  ────────
   0081D                 80    (0K)  Data
   02EF8                384    (0K)  Environment
   02F10             89,856   (88K)  Program
   0D4D0       1         96    (0K)  Data
   0D611       1      7,888    (8K)  Data
   0EFFE       2         32    (0K)  Data
                   ────────────────
  Total Size: 98,336   (96K)
 
Some program modules, such as WIN386, allocate more than one area of memory.
The MEM /MODULE command displays all the areas of memory allocated by the
specified program, and shows the segment address and size of each
allocation. For upper memory blocks, MEM /MODULE also shows the region
number. The Type column shows how the program is using that particular area
of memory. The "total size," in this case 98,336 bytes (96K), shows the
total amount of memory allocated by MS-DOS for the specified program.
 
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