:: * On 64-bit Windows, obviously the same applies. Except that if a process is flagged as `LARGEADDRESSAWARE`, it gets access to the full 4 GiB address space instead of 3, as the kernel does not need to be mapped within the 4 GiB address space (during an interrupt, the processor switches back to long mode and the kernel can access its own memory which is mapped outside of what the process is aware of). | :: * On 64-bit Windows, obviously the same applies. Except that if a process is flagged as `LARGEADDRESSAWARE`, it gets access to the full 4 GiB address space instead of 3, as the kernel does not need to be mapped within the 4 GiB address space (during an interrupt, the processor switches back to long mode and the kernel can access its own memory which is mapped outside of what the process is aware of). |