Process Synchronization
Processes can execute concurrently
• May be interrupted at any time, partially completing execution
Concurrent access to shared data may result in data
inconsistency
Maintaining data consistency requires mechanisms to ensure the
orderly execution of cooperating processes
We illustrated in chapter 4 the problem when we considered the
Bounded Buffer problem with use of a counter that is updated
concurrently by the producer and consumer,. Which lead to race
condition.
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.1 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Race Condition
Processes P0 and P1 are creating child processes using the fork()
system call
Race condition on kernel variable next_available_pid which
represents the next available process identifier (pid)
Unless there is a mechanism to prevent P0 and P1 from accessing the
variable next_available_pid the same pid could be assigned to
two different processes!
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Critical Section Problem
Consider system of n processes {p0, p1, … pn-1}
Each process has critical section segment of code
• Process may be changing common variables, updating table,
writing file, etc.
• When one process in critical section, no other may be in its
critical section
Critical section problem is to design protocol to solve this
Each process must ask permission to enter critical section in entry
section, may follow critical section with exit section, then
remainder section
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Critical Section
General structure of process Pi
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Critical-Section Problem (Cont.)
Requirements for solution to critical-section problem
1. Mutual Exclusion - If process Pi is executing in its critical section,
then no other processes can be executing in their critical sections
2. Progress - If no process is executing in its critical section and there
exist some processes that wish to enter their critical section, then the
selection of the process that will enter the critical section next cannot
be postponed indefinitely
3. Bounded Waiting - A bound must exist on the number of times that
other processes are allowed to enter their critical sections after a
process has made a request to enter its critical section and before that
request is granted
• Assume that each process executes at a nonzero speed
• No assumption concerning relative speed of the n processes
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Interrupt-based Solution
Entry section: disable interrupts
Exit section: enable interrupts
Will this solve the problem?
• What if the critical section is code that runs for an hour?
• Can some processes starve – never enter their critical section.
• What if there are two CPUs?
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Software Solution 1
Two process solution
Assume that the load and store machine-language
instructions are atomic; that is, cannot be interrupted
The two processes share one variable:
• int turn;
The variable turn indicates whose turn it is to enter the
critical section
initially, the value of turn is set to i
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Algorithm for Process Pi
while (true){
while (turn = = j);
/* critical section */
turn = j;
/* remainder section */
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Correctness of the Software Solution
Mutual exclusion is preserved
Pi enters critical section only if:
turn = i
and turn cannot be both 0 and 1 at the same time
What about the Progress requirement?
What about the Bounded-waiting requirement?
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Peterson’s Solution
Two process solution
Assume that the load and store machine-language
instructions are atomic; that is, cannot be interrupted
The two processes share two variables:
• int turn;
• boolean flag[2]
The variable turn indicates whose turn it is to enter the
critical section
The flag array is used to indicate if a process is ready to
enter the critical section.
• flag[i] = true implies that process Pi is ready!
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Algorithm for Process Pi
while (true){
flag[i] = true;
turn = j;
while (flag[j] && turn = = j)
;
/* critical section */
flag[i] = false;
/* remainder section */
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Correctness of Peterson’s Solution
Provable that the three CS requirement are met:
1. Mutual exclusion is preserved
Pi enters CS only if:
either flag[j] = false or turn = i
2. Progress requirement is satisfied
3. Bounded-waiting requirement is met
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Peterson’s Solution and Modern Architecture
Although useful for demonstrating an algorithm, Peterson’s
Solution is not guaranteed to work on modern architectures.
• To improve performance, processors and/or compilers may
reorder operations that have no dependencies
Understanding why it will not work is useful for better
understanding race conditions.
For single-threaded this is ok as the result will always be the
same.
For multithreaded the reordering may produce inconsistent or
unexpected results!
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Modern Architecture Example
Two threads share the data:
boolean flag = false;
int x = 0;
Thread 1 performs
while (!flag)
;
print x
Thread 2 performs
x = 100;
flag = true
What is the expected output?
100
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Modern Architecture Example (Cont.)
However, since the variables flag and x are independent
of each other, the instructions:
flag = true;
x = 100;
for Thread 2 may be reordered
If this occurs, the output may be 0!
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Peterson’s Solution Revisited
The effects of instruction reordering in Peterson’s Solution
This allows both processes to be in their critical section at the same
time!
To ensure that Peterson’s solution will work correctly on modern
computer architecture we must use Memory Barrier.
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Memory Barrier
Memory model are the memory guarantees a computer
architecture makes to application programs.
Memory models may be either:
• Strongly ordered – where a memory modification of one
processor is immediately visible to all other processors.
• Weakly ordered – where a memory modification of one
processor may not be immediately visible to all other
processors.
A memory barrier is an instruction that forces any change in
memory to be propagated (made visible) to all other processors.
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Memory Barrier Instructions
When a memory barrier instruction is performed, the system
ensures that all loads and stores are completed before any
subsequent load or store operations are performed.
Therefore, even if instructions were reordered, the memory
barrier ensures that the store operations are completed in
memory and visible to other processors before future load or
store operations are performed.
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Memory Barrier Example
Returning to the example of slides 6.17 - 6.18
We could add a memory barrier to the following instructions
to ensure Thread 1 outputs 100:
Thread 1 now performs
while (!flag)
memory_barrier();
print x
Thread 2 now performs
x = 100;
memory_barrier();
flag = true
For Thread 1 we are guaranteed that that the value of flag
is loaded before the value of x.
For Thread 2 we ensure that the assignment to x occurs
before the assignment flag.
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Mutex Locks
Previous solutions are complicated and generally inaccessible to
application programmers
OS designers build software tools to solve critical section problem
Simplest is mutex lock
• Boolean variable indicating if lock is available or not
Protect a critical section by
• First acquire() a lock
• Then release() the lock
Calls to acquire() and release() must be atomic
• Usually implemented via hardware atomic instructions such as
compare-and-swap.
But this solution requires busy waiting
• This lock therefore called a spinlock
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Solution to CS Problem Using Mutex Locks
while (true) {
acquire lock
critical section
release lock
remainder section
}
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Semaphore
Synchronization tool that provides more sophisticated ways
(than Mutex locks) for processes to synchronize their activities.
Semaphore S – integer variable
Can only be accessed via two indivisible (atomic) operations
• wait() and signal()
Originally called P() and V()
Definition of the wait() operation
wait(S) {
while (S <= 0)
; // busy wait
S--;
}
Definition of the signal() operation
signal(S) {
S++;
}
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Semaphore (Cont.)
Counting semaphore – integer value can range over
an unrestricted domain
Binary semaphore – integer value can range only
between 0 and 1
• Same as a mutex lock
Can implement a counting semaphore S as a binary
semaphore
With semaphores we can solve various synchronization
problems
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Semaphore Usage Example
Solution to the CS Problem
• Create a semaphore “mutex” initialized to 1
wait(mutex);
CS
signal(mutex);
Consider P1 and P2 that with two statements S1 and S2 and
the requirement that S1 to happen before S2
• Create a semaphore “synch” initialized to 0
P1:
S1;
signal(synch);
P2:
wait(synch);
S2;
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Semaphore Implementation
Must guarantee that no two processes can execute the wait()
and signal() on the same semaphore at the same time
Thus, the implementation becomes the critical section problem
where the wait and signal code are placed in the critical
section
Could now have busy waiting in critical section implementation
• But implementation code is short
• Little busy waiting if critical section rarely occupied
Note that applications may spend lots of time in critical sections
and therefore this is not a good solution
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Semaphore Implementation with no Busy waiting
With each semaphore there is an associated waiting queue
Each entry in a waiting queue has two data items:
• Value (of type integer)
• Pointer to next record in the list
Two operations:
• block – place the process invoking the operation on the
appropriate waiting queue
• wakeup – remove one of processes in the waiting queue
and place it in the ready queue
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Implementation with no Busy waiting (Cont.)
Waiting queue
typedef struct {
int value;
struct process *list;
} semaphore;
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Implementation with no Busy waiting (Cont.)
wait(semaphore *S) {
S->value--;
if (S->value < 0) {
add this process to S->list;
block();
}
}
signal(semaphore *S) {
S->value++;
if (S->value <= 0) {
remove a process P from S->list;
wakeup(P);
}
}
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Problems with Semaphores
Incorrect use of semaphore operations:
• signal(mutex) …. wait(mutex)
• wait(mutex) … wait(mutex)
• Omitting of wait (mutex) and/or signal (mutex)
These – and others – are examples of what can occur when
semaphores and other synchronization tools are used
incorrectly.
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Solution to Producer – Consumer
using Semaphore
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Reader – Writer’s Solution
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018
Operating System Concepts – 10th Edition 6.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2018