
In
DOS memory management, expanded memory is a system of
bank switching that provided additional memory to
DOS programs beyond the limit of
conventional memory (640 KiB).
''Expanded memory'' is an umbrella term for several incompatible technology variants. The most widely used variant was the Expanded Memory Specification (EMS), which was developed jointly by
Lotus Software,
Intel
Intel Corporation is an American multinational corporation and technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, Santa Clara, California. It is the world's largest semiconductor chip manufacturer by revenue, and is one of the devel ...
, and
Microsoft
Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational corporation, multinational technology company, technology corporation producing Software, computer software, consumer electronics, personal computers, and related services headquartered at th ...
, so that this specification was sometimes referred to as "LIM EMS". LIM EMS had several versions. The first widely implemented version was EMS 3.2, which supported up to 8 MiB of expanded memory and uses parts of the address space normally dedicated to communication with peripherals (
upper memory) to map portions of the expanded memory. EEMS, an expanded-memory management standard competing with LIM EMS 3.x, was developed by
AST Research,
Quadram and
Ashton-Tate ("AQA"); it could map any area of the lower 1 MiB. EEMS ultimately was incorporated in LIM EMS 4.0, which supported up to 32 MiB of expanded memory and provided some support for DOS multitasking as well. IBM, however, created its own expanded-memory standard called XMA.
The use of expanded memory became common with games and business programs such as
Lotus 1-2-3 in the late 1980s through the mid-1990s, but its use declined as users switched from DOS to
protected-mode operating systems such as
Linux
Linux ( or ) is a family of open-source Unix-like operating systems based on the Linux kernel, an operating system kernel first released on September 17, 1991, by Linus Torvalds. Linux is typically packaged as a Linux distribution, which i ...
,
IBM OS/2, and
Microsoft Windows.
Background

The
8088 processor of the
IBM PC and
IBM PC/XT could address one
megabyte (MiB, or 2
20 bytes) of memory. It inherited this limit from the 20-bit external address bus of the
Intel 8086
The 8086 (also called iAPX 86) is a 16-bit microprocessor chip designed by Intel between early 1976 and June 8, 1978, when it was released. The Intel 8088, released July 1, 1979, is a slightly modified chip with an external 8-bit data bus (allow ...
. The designers of the PC allocated the lower 640
KiB ( bytes) of address space for read-write program memory (RAM), called "conventional memory", and the remaining 384 KiB of memory space was reserved for uses such as the system
BIOS, video memory, and memory on expansion peripheral boards.
Even though the
IBM PC AT, introduced in 1984, used the
80286 chip that could address up to 16 MiB of RAM as
extended memory, it could only do so in
protected mode. The scarcity of software compatible with the 286 protected mode (no standard
DOS applications could run in it) meant that the market was still open for another solution.
To fit potentially much more memory than the 384 KiB of free address space would allow, a
bank switching scheme was devised, where only selected parts of the additional memory would be accessible at any given time. Originally, a single 64 KiB (2
16 bytes) window of memory, called a
page frame, was possible; later this was made more flexible. Programs had to be written in a specific way to access expanded memory. The "window" between lower RAM and expanded RAM could be moved to different locations within the Expanded RAM.
A first attempt to use a bank switching technique was made by Tall Tree Systems with their JRAM boards,
but these did not catch on.
(Tall Tree Systems later made EMS-based boards using the same JRAM brand.)
Expanded Memory Specification (EMS)
Lotus Development,
Intel
Intel Corporation is an American multinational corporation and technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, Santa Clara, California. It is the world's largest semiconductor chip manufacturer by revenue, and is one of the devel ...
, and
Microsoft
Microsoft Corporation is an American multinational corporation, multinational technology company, technology corporation producing Software, computer software, consumer electronics, personal computers, and related services headquartered at th ...
cooperated to develop the EMS standard (aka LIM EMS). The first publicly available version of EMS, version 3.0 allowed access of up to 4 MiB of expanded memory. This was increased to 8 MiB with version 3.2 of the specification. The final version of EMS, version 4.0 increased the maximum amount of expanded memory to 32 MiB and supported additional functionality.
Microsoft thought that bank switching was an inelegant and temporary, but necessary stopgap measure. Slamming his fist on the table during an interview
Bill Gates said of expanded memory, "It's garbage! It's a
kludge! … But we're going to do it". The companies planned to launch the standard at the Spring 1985
COMDEX, with many expansion-card and software companies announcing their support.
The first public version of the EMS standard, called EMS 3.0 was released in 1985; EMS 3.0, however, saw almost no hardware implementations before being superseded by EMS 3.2.
EMS 3.2 used a 64 KiB region in the upper 384 KiB (
upper memory area) divided into four 16 KiB pages, which could be used to map portions of the expanded memory.
In turn, EMS 3.2 was improved upon by a group of three other companies: AST Research, Quadram and Ashton-Tate, which created their own Enhanced EMS (EEMS) standard. EEMS allowed any 16 KiB region in lower RAM to be mapped to expanded memory, as long as it was not associated with interrupts or dedicated I/O memory such as network or video cards. Thus, entire programs could be switched in and out of the extra RAM. EEMS also added support for two sets of mapping registers. These features were used by early DOS multitasker software such as
DESQview. Released in 1987, the LIM EMS 4.0 specification incorporated practically all features of EEMS.
A new feature added in LIM EMS 4.0 was that EMS boards could have multiple sets of page-mapping registers (up to 64 sets). This allowed a primitive form of DOS
multitasking. The caveat was, however, that the standard did not specify how many register sets a board should have, so there was great variability between hardware implementations in this respect.
The Expanded Memory Specification (EMS) is the specification describing the use of expanded memory. EMS functions are accessible through software
interrupt 67h. Programs using EMS must first establish the presence of an installed expanded memory manager (EMM) by checking for a device driver with the device name EMMXXXX0.
Expanded Memory Adapter (XMA)
IBM developed their own memory standard called Expanded Memory Adapter (XMA); the IBM DOS driver for it was XMAEM.SYS. Unlike EMS, the IBM expansion boards could be addressed both using an expanded memory model and as
extended memory.
The expanded memory hardware interface used by XMA boards is, however, incompatible with EMS,
but a XMA2EMS.SYS driver provided EMS emulation for XMA boards.
XMA boards were first introduced for the 1986 (revamped) models of the
3270 PC
The IBM 3270 PC (IBM System Unit 5271), released in October 1983, is an IBM PC XT containing additional hardware that, in combination with software, can emulate the behaviour of an IBM 3270 terminal. It can therefore be used both as a standalon ...
.
Implementations
Expansion boards
This insertion of a memory window into the peripheral address space could originally be accomplished only through specific expansion boards, plugged into the
ISA
Isa or ISA may refer to:
Places
* Isa, Amur Oblast, Russia
* Isa, Kagoshima, Japan
* Isa, Nigeria
* Isa District, Kagoshima, former district in Japan
* Isa Town, middle class town located in Bahrain
* Mount Isa, Queensland, Australia
* Mount Is ...
expansion bus of the computer. Famous 1980s expanded memory boards were
AST RAMpage, IBM PS/2 80286 Memory Expansion Option,
AT&T Expanded Memory Adapter and the
Intel
Intel Corporation is an American multinational corporation and technology company headquartered in Santa Clara, California, Santa Clara, California. It is the world's largest semiconductor chip manufacturer by revenue, and is one of the devel ...
Above Board. Given the price of RAM during the period, up to several hundred dollars per MiB, and the quality and reputation of the above brand names, an expanded memory board was very expensive.
Motherboard chipsets
Later, some
motherboard chipsets of
Intel 80286-based computers implemented an expanded memory scheme that did not require add-on boards, notably the
NEAT chipset. Typically, software switches determined how much memory should be used as ''expanded memory'' and how much should be used as ''
extended memory''.
Device drivers
An expanded-memory board, being a hardware peripheral, needed a software
device driver, which exported its services. Such a device driver was called expanded-memory manager. Its name was variable; the previously mentioned boards used REMM.SYS (AST), PS2EMM.SYS (IBM), AEMM.SYS (AT&T) and EMM.SYS (Intel) respectively. Later, the expression became associated with software-only solutions requiring the
Intel 80386 processor, for example
Quarterdeck's
QEMM,
Qualitas'
386MAX or the default
EMM386 in MS-DOS, PC DOS and DR-DOS.
Software emulation
Beginning in 1986, the built-in memory management features of
Intel 80386 processor freely modeled the address space when running legacy real-mode software, making hardware solutions unnecessary. Expanded memory could be simulated in software.
The first software expanded-memory ''management'' (emulation) program was
CEMM, available in September 1986 as a utility for the
Compaq Deskpro 386. A popular and well-featured commercial solution was Quarterdeck's QEMM. A contender was Qualitas'
386MAX. Functionality was later incorporated into
MS-DOS 4.01
MS-DOS ( ; acronym for Microsoft Disk Operating System, also known as Microsoft DOS) is an operating system for x86-based personal computers mostly developed by Microsoft. Collectively, MS-DOS, its rebranding as IBM PC DOS, and a few oper ...
in 1989 and into
DR DOS 5.0 in 1990, as
EMM386.
Software expanded-memory managers in general offered additional, but closely related functionality. Notably, they allowed using parts of the
upper memory area (UMA) (the upper 384 KiB of real-mode address space) called ''upper memory blocks'' (UMBs) and provided tools for loading small programs, typically
TSRs inside ("LOADHI" or "LOADHIGH").
Interaction between
extended memory, expanded-memory emulation and DOS extenders ended up being regulated by the XMS,
Virtual Control Program Interface (VCPI),
DOS Protected Mode Interface (DPMI) and
DOS Protected Mode Services (DPMS) specifications.
Certain emulation programs, colloquially known as LIMulators, did not rely on motherboard or 80386 features at all. Instead, they reserved 64 KiB of the base RAM for the expanded memory window, where they copied data to and from either extended memory or the hard disk when application programs requested page switches. This was programmatically easy to implement, but performance was low. This technique was offered by AboveDisk from Above Software and by several
shareware programs.
It is also possible to emulate EMS by using XMS memory on 286 CPUs using 3rd party utilities like EMM286 (.SYS driver).
Decline
Expanded Memory usage decli