Operating Systems
Presented by
Dr.SUCHIT PANDA,
Professor
DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTERSCIENCE AND ENGINEERING
VISAKHA INSTITUTE OF ENGINEERING & TECHNOLOGY
Operating System Concepts 1.1 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Module 1: Introduction
• What is an operating system?
• Simple Batch Systems
• Multiprogramming Batched Systems
• Time-Sharing Systems
• Personal-Computer Systems
• Parallel Systems
• Distributed Systems
• Real -Time Systems
Operating System Concepts 1.2 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
What is an Operating System?
• A program that acts as an intermediary between a
user of a computer and the computer hardware.
• Operating system goals:
– Execute user programs and make solving user
problems easier.
– Make the computer system convenient to use.
• Use the computer hardware in an efficient manner.
Operating System Concepts 1.3 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Computer System Components
1. Hardware – provides basic computing
resources (CPU, memory, I/O devices).
2. Operating system – controls and coordinates
the use of the hardware among the various
application programs for the various users.
3. Applications programs – define the ways in
which the system resources are used to solve the
computing problems of the users (compilers,
database systems, video games, business
programs).
4. Users (people, machines, other computers).
Operating System Concepts 1.4 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Abstract View of System Components
Operating System Concepts 1.5 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Operating System Definitions
• Resource allocator – manages and allocates
resources.
• Control program – controls the execution of user
programs and operations of I/O devices .
• Kernel – the one program running at all times (all
else being application programs).
Operating System Concepts 1.6 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Simple Batch Systems
• Hire an operator
• User operator
• Add a card reader
• Reduce setup time by batching similar jobs
• Automatic job sequencing – automatically transfers
control from one job to another. First rudimentary
operating system.
• Resident monitor
– initial control in monitor
– control transfers to job
– when job completes control transfers back to
monitor
Operating System Concepts 1.7 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Memory Layout for a Simple Batch
System
Operating System Concepts 1.8 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Control Cards
• Problems
1. How does the monitor know about the nature of
the job (e.g., Fortran versus Assembly) or which
program to execute?
2. How does the monitor distinguish
(a) job from job?
(b) data from program?
• Solution
– Introduce control cards
Operating System Concepts 1.9 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Control Cards (Cont.)
• Special cards that tell the resident monitor which
programs to run
$JOB
$FTN
$RUN
$DATA
$END
• Special characters distinguish control cards from
data or program cards:
$ in column 1
// in column 1 and 2
709 in column1
Operating System Concepts 1.10 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Control Cards (Cont.)
• Parts of resident monitor
– Control card interpreter – responsible for reading
and carrying out instructions on the cards.
– Loader – loads systems programs and applications
programs into memory.
– Device drivers – know special characteristics and
properties for each of the system’s I/O devices.
• Problem: Slow Performance – I/O and CPU could not
overlap ; card reader very slow.
• Solution: Off-line operation – speed up computation by
loading jobs into memory from tapes and card reading
and line printing done off-line.
Operating System Concepts 1.11 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Spooling
• Overlap I/O of one job with computation of another
job. While executing one job, the OS.
– Reads next job from card reader into a storage
area on the disk (job queue).
– Outputs printout of previous job from disk to
printer.
• Job pool – data structure that allows the OS to
select which job to run next in order to increase
CPU utilization.
Operating System Concepts 1.12 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Multiprogrammed Batch Systems
Several jobs are kept in main memory at the same time,
and the
CPU is multiplexed among them.
Operating System Concepts 1.13 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
OS Features Needed for
Multiprogramming
• I/O routine supplied by the system.
• Memory management – the system must allocate
the memory to several jobs.
• CPU scheduling – the system must choose among
several jobs ready to run.
• Allocation of devices.
Operating System Concepts 1.14 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Time-Sharing Systems–Interactive
Computing
• The CPU is multiplexed among several jobs that are
kept in memory and on disk (the CPU is allocated to
a job only if the job is in memory).
• A job is swapped in and out of memory to the disk.
• On-line communication between the user and the
system is provided; when the operating system
finishes the execution of one command, it seeks the
next “control statement” not from a card reader, but
rather from the user’s keyboard.
• On-line system must be available for users to
access data and code.
Operating System Concepts 1.15 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Personal-Computer Systems
• Personal computers – computer system dedicated to
a single user.
• I/O devices – keyboards, mice, display screens,
small printers.
• User convenience and responsiveness.
• Can adopt technology developed for larger operating
system’ often individuals have sole use of computer
and do not need advanced CPU utilization of
protection features.
Operating System Concepts 1.16 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Migration of Operating-System Concepts and
Features
Operating System Concepts 1.17 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Parallel Systems
• Multiprocessor systems with more than one CPU in
close communication.
• Tightly coupled system – processors share memory
and a clock; communication usually takes place
through the shared memory.
• Advantages of parallel system:
– Increased throughput
– Economical
– Increased reliability
graceful degradation
fail-soft systems
Operating System Concepts 1.18 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Parallel Systems (Cont.)
• Symmetric multiprocessing (SMP)
– Each processor runs an identical copy of the
operating system.
– Many processes can run at once without
performance deterioration.
– Most modern operating systems support SMP
• Asymmetric multiprocessing
– Each processor is assigned a specific task;
master processor schedules and allocates work
to slave processors.
– More common in extremely large systems
Operating System Concepts 1.19 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Symmetric Multiprocessing
Architecture
Operating System Concepts 1.20 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Real-Time Systems
• Often used as a control device in a dedicated application
such as controlling scientific experiments, medical
imaging systems, industrial control systems, and some
display systems.
• Well-defined fixed-time constraints.
• Hard real-time system.
– Secondary storage limited or absent, data stored in
short-term memory, or read-only memory (ROM)
– Conflicts with time-sharing systems, not supported by
general-purpose operating systems.
• Soft real-time system
– Limited utility in industrial control or robotics
– Useful in applications (multimedia, virtual reality)
requiring advanced operating-system features.
Operating System Concepts 1.21 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Distributed Systems
• Distribute the computation among several physical
processors.
• Loosely coupled system – each processor has its
own local memory; processors communicate with
one another through various communications lines,
such as high-speed buses or telephone lines.
• Advantages of distributed systems.
– Resources Sharing
– Computation speed up – load sharing
– Reliability
– Communications
Operating System Concepts 1.22 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999
Distributed Systems (Cont.)
• Network Operating System
– provides file sharing
– provides communication scheme
– runs independently from other computers on the
network
• Distributed Operating System
– less autonomy between computers
– gives the impression there is a single operating
system controlling the network.
Operating System Concepts 1.23 Silberschatz and Galvin 1999