Chapter 1: Introduction

Similar documents
Operating Systems Fundamentals. What is an Operating System? Focus. Computer System Components. Chapter 1: Introduction

Module 1: Introduction

ECE397A Operating Systems. Chapter 1: Introduction

Introduction. What is an Operating System? A Modern Computer System. Computer System Components. What is an Operating System?

Operating System: an Overview. Lucia Dwi Krisnawati, MA

Module 1: Introduction

Chapter 1: Introduction. What is an Operating System? Overview Course (contd.) How do I spend my time? Computer System Components

Module 1: Introduction. What is an Operating System?

Chapter 1: Introduction

OPERATING SYSTEMS UNIT - 1

Introduction to Operating Systems

CS6401- Operating System QUESTION BANK UNIT-I

Course Content. 07-Feb-17 Faculty of Computer Science & Engineering 1 BK TP.HCM

Introduction. TDDI04, K. Arvidsson, IDA, Linköpings universitet Contents. What is an Operating System (OS)?

Operating Systems: Lecture 1. Introduction

Operating Systems Course 2 nd semester 2016/2017 Chapter 1: Introduction

UNIT I OPERATING SYSTEMS OVERVIEW

Operating Systems. studykorner.org

Chapter 1: Introduction. Operating System Concepts 9 th Edit9on

Chapter 1: Introduction

Computer-System Organization (cont.)

Lecture 1 Introduction (Chapter 1 of Textbook)

1. Operating System Concepts

Chapter 1: Introduction. Operating System Concepts 8th Edition,

European University of Lefke. Instructor: Dr. Arif SARI

Introduction to Operating System

Part I Overview Chapter 1: Introduction

Operating System Review

To provide a grand tour of the major operating systems components To provide coverage of basic computer system organization

CSC 453 Operating Systems

Chapter 1: Introduction Dr. Ali Fanian. Operating System Concepts 9 th Edit9on

DM510 Operating Systems. Jacob Aae Mikkelsen

Some popular Operating Systems include Linux Operating System, Windows Operating System, VMS, OS/400, AIX, z/os, etc.

Introduction CHAPTER. Practice Exercises. 1.1 What are the three main purposes of an operating system? Answer: The three main puropses are:

Free books. Introduction to Operating System Concepts. What is an Operating System? Specialist Software for CS2S501

Introduction to Computer Systems and Operating Systems

Operating Systems Part M10 Introduction to OS, SW Interrupts, Supervisory Call. Florina Ciorba 16/23 October 2015

CHAPTER-1: INTRODUCTION TO OPERATING SYSTEM:

Overview of Operating Systems

ROEVER ENGINEERING COLLEGE, PERAMBALUR DEPARTMENT OF INFORMATION TECHNOLOGY OPERATING SYSTEMS QUESTION BANK UNIT-I

Principles of Operating Systems CS 446/646

Chapter-1: Exercise Solution

Topics: Early systems and OS overview Skim Chapters 1-2 of SGG Read Chapter 1 of USP CS 3733 Operating Systems

Overview of Operating Systems

Types and Functions of Win Operating Systems

Operating Systems. Introduction & Overview. Outline for today s lecture. Administrivia. ITS 225: Operating Systems. Lecture 1

MODULE 1. INTRODUCTION: COMPUTER & OPERATING SYSTEMS

OPERATING SYSTEMS TOTAL : 45 REFERENCE BOOKS

Chap. 1) Introduction

Operating Systems. Lecture Course in Autumn Term 2015 University of Birmingham. Eike Ritter. September 22, 2015

NETW3005 Operating Systems Lecture 1: Introduction and history of O/Ss

OPERATING- SYSTEM CONCEPTS

UNIT I PROCESSES AND THREADS

Course Details. Operating Systems with C/C++ Course Details. What is an Operating System?

CS370 Operating Systems

Chapter 1: Introduction. Operating System Concepts 9 th Edit9on

OPERATING SYSTEM OVERVIEW

OPERATING SYSTEM. Functions of Operating System:

Operating Systems. Computer Science & Information Technology (CS) Rank under AIR 100

Lecture 9: MIMD Architectures

CS30002: Operating Systems. Arobinda Gupta Spring 2017

Operating System Concepts Rab Nawaz Khan Jadoon

CS6401- OPERATING SYSTEM

CHAPTER 1 - INTRODUCTION. Jacob Aae Mikk elsen

CS370 Operating Systems

UNIT-I MAINFRAME SYSTEMS

Chapter 1: Introduction

Introduction CHAPTER. Exercises

Operating Systems CS3502 Spring 2018

Chapter 1: Introduction

COSC243 Part 2: Operating Systems

CSE Opera+ng System Principles

7/20/2008. What Operating Systems Do Computer-System Organization

OPERATING SYSTEMS. Prescribed Text Book Operating System Principles, Seventh Edition By Abraham Silberschatz, Peter Baer Galvin and Greg Gagne

OPERATING SYSTEMS: Lesson 1: Introduction to Operating Systems

Chapter 1: Introduction. Chapter 1: Introduction

Computer-System Architecture (cont.) Symmetrically Constructed Clusters (cont.) Advantages: 1. Greater computational power by running applications

SYED AMMAL ENGINEERING COLLEGE CS6401- OPERATING SYSTEM


Module 1 Introduction/OS Overview

Lecture 9: MIMD Architectures

PART -A. UNIT -1 INTRODUCTION TO OPERATING SYSTEMS, SYSTEM STRUCTURES: What operating

UNIT 1 JAGANNATH UNIVERSITY UNIT 2. Define Operating system and its functions. Explain different types of Operating System

TOPIC 1. Following are some of important functions of an operating System. Memory Management. Processor Management. Device Management.

Part I Introduction Hardware and OS Review

1.1 Introduction. Fig.1.1 Abstract view of the components of a computer system.

UNIT 1. INTRODUCTION: COMPUTER & OPERATING SYSTEMS

Uniprocessor Scheduling. Basic Concepts Scheduling Criteria Scheduling Algorithms. Three level scheduling

CS420: Operating Systems

Operating System. Operating Systems Structure Chapter 2. Services Provided by the OS. Evolution of an Operating System

OPERATING SYSTEMS OVERVIEW

Chapter 1 Introduction

Contents. Today's Topic: Introduction to Operating Systems

Introduction to Operating Systems (Part II)

Fundamental of digital computer

Introduction CHAPTER. Review Questions

Chapter 14 Operating Systems

Chapter 14 Operating Systems

Module 20: Multi-core Computing Multi-processor Scheduling Lecture 39: Multi-processor Scheduling. The Lecture Contains: User Control.

Chapter 1 Computer System Overview

Transcription:

Chapter 1: Introduction What is an Operating System? Mainframe Systems Desktop Systems Multiprocessor Systems Distributed Systems Clustered System Real -Time Systems Handheld Systems Computing Environments 1.1 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. 1.2 1

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). 1.3 Abstract View of System Components 1.4 2

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). 1.5 Mainframe Systems 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 pack to monitor 1.6 3

Memory Layout for a Simple Batch System 1.7 Multiprogrammed Batch Systems Several jobs are kept in main memory at the same time, and the CPU is multiplexed among them. 1.8 4

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. 1.9 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 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 from the user s keyboard. On-line system must be available for users to access data and code. 1.10 5

Desktop 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. May run several different types of operating systems (Windows, MacOS, UNIX, Linux) 1.11 Parallel Systems Multiprocessor systems with more than on 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 1.12 6

Parallel Systems (Cont.) Symmetric multiprocessing (SMP) Each processor runs and 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 allocated work to slave processors. More common in extremely large systems 1.13 Symmetric Multiprocessing Architecture 1.14 7

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 highspeed buses or telephone lines. Advantages of distributed systems. Resources Sharing Computation speed up load sharing Reliability Communications 1.15 Distributed Systems (cont) Requires networking infrastructure. Local area networks (LAN) or Wide area networks (WAN) May be either client-server or peer-to-peer systems. 1.16 8

General Structure of Client-Server 1.17 Clustered Systems Clustering allows two or more systems to share storage. Provides high reliability. Asymmetric clustering: one server runs the application while other servers standby. Symmetric clustering: all N hosts are running the application. 1.18 9

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. Real-Time systems may be either hard or soft real-time. 1.19 Real-Time Systems (Cont.) Hard real-time: 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 Limited utility in industrial control of robotics Useful in applications (multimedia, virtual reality) requiring advanced operating-system features. 1.20 10

Handheld Systems Personal Digital Assistants (PDAs) Cellular telephones Issues: Limited memory Slow processors Small display screens. 1.21 Migration of Operating-System Concepts and Features 1.22 11

Computing Environments Traditional computing Web-Based Computing Embedded Computing 1.23 12

This document was created with Win2PDF available at http://www.daneprairie.com. The unregistered version of Win2PDF is for evaluation or non-commercial use only.