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I need some help understanding how 32 bit applications use memory on a 64 bit OS.

A 32 bit application can use 2 gb of memory on 64 bit OS, correct? Does this mean that 3 32 bit applications running in parrallel could address 6 gb of memory... Or do the 3 32 bit applications have to share the 2-4 gb of 32 bit memory that the os has?

Likewise, If I have a webservice that is compiled as 32 bits, running under IIS on a 64 bit machine. As long as a single request to that webservice always stays under 2gb of memory usage, is there any point in recompiling to 64 bit? My theory is that IIS creates a new process for each request, so the whole pool of processes will be able to make use of all the memory the 64bit machine has , 8 or 15 or 20 gig or whatever.

Let me know your thoughts, thanks

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  • Since there already is a good answer, just a comment: Yes, compiling 32bit code means the address space available to the application is limited (theoretically) to 4GB (2GB on Windows, unless you enable large address awareness). The application address space can be located anywhere within your 8 or 15 or 20 gig of memory. Consequently, several processess can coexist each having their own 2GB of address space. Sep 2, 2011 at 6:29

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Yes, the total usage of all the 32-bit programs can exceed 2 GB. So yes you can have a bunch of 32-bit processes using all the memory in a 64-bit machine.

Actually, there's a compiler option that lets 32-bit programs use up to 3GB in Windows. If performance isn't important, then there isn't much of a reason to use 64-bit.

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    It is 4GB on a 64-bit operating system. Total usage can easily exceed 2 or 4GB on a 32-bit operating system as well. The missing ingredient is virtual memory. Sep 2, 2011 at 9:41

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