I have been studying Operating Systems Concepts and the book I am referring to is Operating System Concepts by Peter B. Galvin, Greg Gagne and Abraham Silberschatz.
In the chapter of Virtual Memory, book starts to talk about Paging and number of memory access it would require for the system to read data stored in a particular frame in memory given a logical address. The author states that when Page Table is present in Main Memory, system would need two memory accesses to read data stored in a frame. The first access is made to the page table to read the correct frame number and the next access is for reading the byte/word from the frame.
After a few sections, the book talks about Demand Paging and page fault. Author state that in case of no page fault, one memory access is needed and in case of a page fault, we will consider Page Fault Service time (which comprises of swap in time, swap out time, one memory access etc.) and presents readers with the formula
Effective Access Time = (1-p) x one memory access time + p x page fault service time
where p = page fault rate
I cannot wrap my head around why the author suggests that, in case of no page fault, only one memory access will be needed. Applying the line of thought used with standard paging scheme earlier introduced by same author(s), we should need one memory access to read page table and another to read the data from frame.
Is it because we are talking about the time frame after the access to page table is made? Then why the same standard of calculation not applies to standard version of paging?
The fundamental source of your problem is that you are reading a book that is only fit for lining a cat box. What you are describing is nonsensical gibberish that textbooks use to create confusion among students. This is not a case of over simplification because the authors apparently throw in a nonsensical formula for access times.
A formula like this
is total bovine fecal waste matter with no basis in reality.
The processor has to translate logical addresses to physical addresses using the page tables. Assuming that there is no caching in the CPU, the CPU has read the page table for each memory access.
The number reads depends upon the page table format used by the CPU.
Let's suppose your process has a multi-level page table. In that case the CPU has to make a read for each level of the table.
If you have a CPU that has separate linear system and user page tables, with the user tables in logical addresses, each access to the system space requires one memory read and each access to the user space requires at least two memory accesses and might, in fact, trigger a page fault. The first read is to system page table to find the user page table entry. The second read is to the user page table. The third is to the data.
In reality, every CPU on the planet does page table caching so separate reads are not required (all the time).
It sounds like the book is not being consistent in its BS.
The reality is that logical memory translation requires a number of steps. However, what those steps are depends upon the state of the processor, something that is unpredictable. These steps take place transparently behind the scenes and you do not even need to grasp all of them to understand operating systems.
What you need to know in the real world is that the CPU translates logical addresses to physical addresses. If the CPU is unable to make that translation, it triggers a page fault.