From docs :
Note. Basic data exclude the term unreasonable because it is confusing. There are no "nasty" virtual memory page errors. Page errors caused, triggered, triggered, or encountered. Of course, you can free the memory back to the kernel in various ways (using the vm_deallocate, munmap, or sbrk functions). Kernel Data describes this as "turning an object into an error."
Is a basic data error essentially a memory page error? I have only a slight idea of what a memory page is. I believe that this is a kind of “piece of code in memory” that is necessary for executing procedures, etc., And as the application starts, fragments of code are absorbed into the memory as “pages” and discarded because they are not needed anymore. Probably 99% wrong;)
Is anyone
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