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VRAM, or Video RAM, is a dual-ported variant of DRAM, or Dynamic RAM, which was once commonly used to store the frame-buffer in some graphics adaptors.

It was invented by F. Dill, D, Ling, and R. Matick at IBM Research in 1980, with a patent issued in 1985 (US Patent 4,541,075). The first commercial use of VRAM was in the high resolution graphics adapter introduced in 1986 by IBM with the PC/RT system,and set a new standard for graphics displays. Prior to this, displays consisted of simple typewriter characters on a green screen, without color, animation, nor drawing capability. VRAM changed all this, allowing the introduction of very low cost, high resoultion, high speed, color graphics. Windows and all modern applications would have been impossible in the late 1980s and 1990s without VRAM, and thus it provided a key ingredient for proliferation of the PC throughout the world at that time.

VRAM has two sets of data output pins, and thus two ports that can be used simultaneously. The first port, the DRAM port, is accessed by the host computer in a manner very similar to traditional DRAM. The second port, the video port, is typically read-only and is dedicated to providing a high bandwidth data channel for the graphics chipset.[1]

Typical DRAM arrays normally access a full row of bits (i.e. a word line) at up to 1024 bits at one time, but only use one or a few of these for actual data, the remainder being discarded. Since DRAM cells are destructively read, each bit accessed must be sensed, and re-written. Thus, 1024 sense amplifiers are typically used. VRAM operates by not discarding the excess bits which must be accessed, but making full use of them in a simple way. If each horizontal scan line of a display is mapped to a full word, then upon reading one word and latching all 1024 bits into a separate row buffer, these bits can subsequently be serially streamed to the display circuitry. This will leave access to the DRAM array free to be accessed (read or write) for many cycles, until the row buffer is almost depleted. A complete DRAM read cycle is only required to fill the row buffer, leaving most DRAM cycles available for normal accesses.

Such operation is described in the paper "All points addressable raster display memory" by R. Matick, D. Ling, S. Gupta, and F. Dill, IBM Journal of R&D, Vol 28, No. 4, July 1984, pp379–393. To use the video port, the controller first uses the DRAM port to select the row of the memory array that is to be displayed. The VRAM then copies that entire row to an internal row-buffer which is a shift-register. The controller can then continue to use the DRAM port for drawing objects on the display. Meanwhile, the controller feeds a clock called the shift clock (SCLK) to the VRAM's video port. Each SCLK pulse causes the VRAM to deliver the next datum, in strict address order, from the shift-register to the video port. For simplicity, the graphics adapter is usually designed so that the contents of a row, and therefore the contents of the shift-register, corresponds to a complete horizontal line on the display.

Through the 1990s, all computer monitors used VRAM, with the number of megabits touted as a selling point. In the late 1990s, Synchronous DRAM technologies (e.g. SDRAM)gradually became cheap, dense, and high performance enough to displace VRAM, even though it was only single-ported and some memory bits were wasted. Nevertheless, many of the VRAM concepts of internal, on-chip buffering and organization have been used and improved in modern graphics adaptors.

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