Type your answer here... in cache memory when the CPU refer to the memory and find the word in cache it is said to be hit or produced.......
if the word is not found in cache it is in main memory it counts as a miss
The request was processed with a cache hit.
A cache hit occurs when the requested data is found in the cache memory, while a cache miss occurs when the data is not found in the cache and needs to be retrieved from the main memory. One can determine whether a cache hit or miss has occurred by checking if the requested data is present in the cache memory.
The system experienced a cache hit when retrieving the requested data.
A cache hit occurs when the requested data is found in the cache memory, resulting in faster access time. For example, if a web page is visited frequently, it may be stored in the cache, leading to a cache hit when accessed again. On the other hand, a cache miss happens when the data is not found in the cache, requiring the system to retrieve it from the main memory or disk, which takes longer.
A cache hit occurs when the data being requested is found in the cache memory, resulting in faster retrieval and improved efficiency. On the other hand, a cache miss happens when the data is not found in the cache, leading to slower retrieval from the main memory and decreased efficiency.
A cache hit occurs when the data being requested is found in the cache memory, resulting in faster retrieval and improved efficiency. On the other hand, a cache miss happens when the data is not found in the cache, leading to slower retrieval from the main memory and decreased efficiency.
Firstly, it sounds like you are asking for general definitions, rather than differential definitions, which is problematic when the definitions are differential and context specific. Cache miss: not in cache, must be loaded from the original source Cache hit: was loaded from cache (no implication of what "type" of cache was hit). cold cache: The slowest cache hit possible. The actual loading mechanism depends on the type of cache (CPU cache could refer to an L2 (or L3) hit, disk cache could refer to a RAM hit on the drive, web cache could refer to a drive cache hit) hot cache: The fastest cache hit possible. Depends on mechanism described (CPU could be L1 cache, disk could be OS cache hit, web cache could be RAM hit in cache device) Warm cache: Anything between, like L2 when L1 is hot and L3 is cold. It is a less precise term and often used to imply "hot" when the performance is closer to "cold."
The miss penalty formula used in cache memory systems is: Miss Penalty Miss Rate x Miss Time.
Cache memory is the high speed memories which are repeatedly requested by the Cache client (CPU). Whenever the requested data from the cpu is present in the cache, it directly supply the data and is known as cache hit(fast) and when the data is not accessible in cache then cache access the block of the main memory and feed to the CPU and it is termed as cache miss (slow).
The miss penalty in cache is calculated by determining the time it takes to access data from the main memory when a cache miss occurs. This time includes the latency of fetching the data from the main memory and loading it into the cache. The miss penalty is the additional time required when data is not found in the cache and needs to be retrieved from the main memory.
miss latency is the time (in cycles) the CPU waits when a miss happen in the cache. (the time needed to bring the data from the main memory to the cache).
The miss penalty in cache is calculated by multiplying the miss rate by the time it takes to access data from the main memory. This helps determine the average time it takes to retrieve data when it is not found in the cache.