1 / 61

A workshop by Dr. Junaid Ahmed Zubairi Visiting Associate Professor

Teaching Operating Systems With Programming and Freeware Lecture 2: Concurrency Issues, processor scheduling (Lab2 and 3). A workshop by Dr. Junaid Ahmed Zubairi Visiting Associate Professor CIT, Agriculture University, Rawalpindi. Workshop Overview. Operating Systems Course Outline

rusty
Télécharger la présentation

A workshop by Dr. Junaid Ahmed Zubairi Visiting Associate Professor

An Image/Link below is provided (as is) to download presentation Download Policy: Content on the Website is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use and may not be sold / licensed / shared on other websites without getting consent from its author. Content is provided to you AS IS for your information and personal use only. Download presentation by click this link. While downloading, if for some reason you are not able to download a presentation, the publisher may have deleted the file from their server. During download, if you can't get a presentation, the file might be deleted by the publisher.

E N D

Presentation Transcript


  1. Teaching Operating Systems With Programming and FreewareLecture 2: Concurrency Issues, processor scheduling (Lab2 and 3) A workshop by Dr. Junaid Ahmed Zubairi Visiting Associate Professor CIT, Agriculture University, Rawalpindi

  2. Workshop Overview • Operating Systems Course Outline • Topics Suited for Programming Assignments • Process Model and IPC (Lab1) • Concurrency Issues (Lab2) • Processor Scheduling (Lab3) • Disk Scheduling and RAID • Programming Project Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  3. Concurrency • Concurrent processing involves a set of two or more processes that run at the same time (apparently or physically) • Multiple applications run concurrently through Multiprogramming whereas a structured application may be a set of concurrent processes Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  4. Difficulties with Concurrency • Sharing global resources with read/write permissions • Management of allocation of resources to avoid starvation and deadlocks • Programming errors become difficult to locate (and fix) Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  5. A Simple Example void echo() { chin = getchar(); chout = chin; putchar(chout); } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  6. A Simple Example Process P1 Process P2 . . chin = getchar(); . . chin = getchar(); chout = chin; chout = chin; putchar(chout); . . putchar(chout); . . Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  7. Operating System Concerns • Keep track of active processes • Allocate and deallocate resources • Processor time • Memory • Files • I/O devices • Protect data and resources • Result of process must be independent of the speed of execution of other concurrent processes Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  8. Process Interaction • Processes unaware of each other • Processes indirectly aware of each other • Process directly aware of each other Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  9. Competition Among Processes for Resources • Mutual Exclusion • Critical sections • Only one program at a time is allowed in its critical section • Example only one process at a time is allowed to send command to the printer • Deadlock • Starvation Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  10. Cooperation Among Processes by Sharing • Writing must be mutually exclusive • Critical sections are used to provide data integrity Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  11. Cooperation Among Processes by Communication • Messages are passes • Mutual exclusion is not a control requirement • Possible to have deadlock • Each process waiting for a message from the other process • Possible to have starvation • Two processes sending message to each other while another process waits for a message Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  12. Requirements for Mutual Exclusion • Only one process at a time is allowed in the critical section for a resource • A process that halts in its non-critical section must do so without interfering with other processes • No deadlock or starvation Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  13. Requirements for Mutual Exclusion • A process must not be delayed access to a critical section when there is no other process using it • No assumptions are made about relative process speeds or number of processes • A process remains inside its critical section for a finite time only Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  14. First Attempt • Busy Waiting • Process is always checking to see if it can enter the critical section • Process can do nothing productive until it gets permission to enter its critical section Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  15. Second Attempt • Each process can examine the other’s status but cannot alter it • When a process wants to enter the critical section it checks the other processes first • If no other process is in the critical section, it sets its status for the critical section • This method does not guarantee mutual exclusion • Each process can check the flags and then proceed to enter the critical section at the same time Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  16. Third Attempt • Set flag to enter critical section before checking other processes • If another process is in the critical section when the flag is set, the process is blocked until the other process releases the critical section • Deadlock is possible when two process set their flags to enter the critical section. Now each process must wait for the other process to release the critical section Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  17. Fourth Attempt • A process sets its flag to indicate its desire to enter its critical section but is prepared to reset the flag • Other processes are checked. If they are in the critical region, the flag is reset and later set to indicate desire to enter the critical region. This is repeated until the process can enter the critical region. Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  18. Fourth Attempt • It is possible for each process to set their flag, check other processes, and reset their flags. This scenario will not last very long so it is not deadlock. It is undesirable Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  19. Correct Solution • Each process gets a turn at the critical section • If a process wants the critical section, it sets its flag and may have to wait for its turn Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  20. Mutual Exclusion:Hardware Support • Special Machine Instructions • Performed in a single instruction cycle • Not subject to interference from other instructions • Reading and writing • Reading and testing Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  21. Mutual Exclusion:Hardware Support • Test and Set Instruction boolean testset (int i) { if (i == 0) { i = 1; return true; } else { return false; } } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  22. Mutual Exclusion:Hardware Support • Exchange Instruction void exchange(int register, int memory) { int temp; temp = memory; memory = register; register = temp; } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  23. Mutual Exclusion Machine Instructions • Advantages • Applicable to any number of processes on either a single processor or multiple processors sharing main memory • It is simple and therefore easy to verify • It can be used to support multiple critical sections Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  24. Mutual Exclusion Machine Instructions • Disadvantages • Busy-waiting consumes processor time • Starvation is possible when a process leaves a critical section and more than one process is waiting. • Deadlock • If a low priority process has the critical region and a higher priority process needs it , the higher priority process will obtain the processor to wait for the critical region Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  25. Semaphores • Special variable called a semaphore is used for signaling • If a process is waiting for a signal, it is suspended until that signal is sent • Wait and signal operations cannot be interrupted • Queue is used to hold processes waiting on the semaphore Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  26. Semaphores • Semaphore is a variable that has an integer value • May be initialized to a nonnegative number • Wait operation decrements the semaphore value • Signal operation increments semaphore value Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  27. Wait Pseudocode • struct semaphore { • int count; • queueType queue; • } • void wait(semaphore s) • { • s.count--; • if (s.count < 0) • { • place this process in s.queue; • block this process • } • } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  28. Signal Pseudocode • void signal(semaphore s) • { • s.count++; • if (s.count <= 0) • { • remove a process P from s.queue; • place process P on ready list; • } • } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  29. Semaphore Example • Semaphore door=1; • Process p1 executes wait (door), the final value of door=0 and p1 enters the critical section • Process p2 now executes wait (door), the value of door = -1 and p2 is blocked outside the critical section Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  30. Semaphore Example • Process p1 completes its critical section and executes signal (door), thus incrementing door to 0. When a signal operation results in a value less than the initial value (1), it means some processes are sleeping on this semaphore. Thus the system will wake up the process at the head of the queue (i.e. p2) Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  31. Using BACI • BACI (Ben-Ari Concurrent Interpreter) is developed to help in teaching concurrency • Obtain and install BACI from http://www.mines.edu/fs_home/tcamp/baci/ • BACI supports C, Pascal and C++ • It is originally based on Pascal • BACI uses some special concurrent constructs Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  32. Using BACI • Multiple blocks can be run concurrently by using cobegin {…} construct • cobegin construct appears in the main function and all processes listed within cobegin{…} start running at the same time • BACI includes semaphores, binary semaphores and monitors Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  33. Using BACI • initialsem(sem,int) initializes the semaphore sem to the value int • p(sem) and wait(sem) calls decrement sem by one if sem is greater than zero and block the caller if sem is already zero • v(sem) or signal(sem) calls increment sem by 1 or wake up a process if sem is found to be zero • empty(sem) returns true if there are no processes waiting on sem and false otherwise Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  34. Using BACI • atomic keyword:  if a function is defined as atomic, then the function is non-preemptible. • void suspend ( void ): puts the calling thread to sleep. • void revive ( int process_id ): revives the process with the given id. • int which_proc( void ): returns the process number of the current thread. • int random (int range): returns a "randomly chosen" integer between 0 and range -1, inclusive Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  35. Example Source Code • semaphore door; • void coordinate() { • initialsem(door,1); • } • void myturn() { • int ct; • wait(door); • cout<<"MANGO: My turn is now\n"; • signal(door); • } • void yourturn() { • wait(door); • cout<<"APPLE: No it is my turn\n"; • signal(door); • } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  36. Example Source Code • void theirturn() { • wait(door); • cout<<"ORANGE: No it is now my game\n"; • signal(door); • } • void main() { • coordinate(); • cobegin { • myturn(); • yourturn(); • theirturn(); • } Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  37. How to Run the Program • Enter and save the sample source code in a file whose name ends in .cm • Use “bacc filename” to compile and obtain a pcode file whose name ends in .pco • Run the interpreter by using “bainterp filename” Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  38. Programming Assignment 1 Lab 2 • Modify the example program by defining a global variable int count. The critical section in each function will modify the count based on user input. Show , with displayed messages, how one process acquires the critical section and the other process blocks for the critical section Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  39. Barbershop Problem Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  40. Barbershop Problem • The number of barber chairs is 3 so the semaphore chair will be initialized to 3 • Only four customers can sit on the sofa so the semaphore sofa will be initialized to 4 • Complete the barbershop program (limit chairs to 1, sofa to 3, customers to 5 and barbers to 1) • Use messages to see what is going on and don’t panic on barber’s deadlock condition as far as it does not stop the customers from getting haircut Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  41. Readers/Writers Problem • Any number of readers may simultaneously read the file • Only one writer at a time may write to the file • If a writer is writing to the file, no reader may read it • It is left as an exercise problem for the participants Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  42. Processor Scheduling Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  43. Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  44. Short-Term Scheduling • Known as the dispatcher • Executes most frequently • Invoked when an event occurs • Clock interrupts • I/O interrupts • Operating system calls • Signals Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  45. Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  46. Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  47. Decision Mode • Nonpreemptive • Once a process is in the running state, it will continue until it terminates or blocks itself for I/O • Preemptive • Currently running process may be interrupted and moved to the Ready state by the operating system • Allows for better service since any one process cannot monopolize the processor for very long Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  48. Process Scheduling Example Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  49. 5 0 10 15 20 First-Come-First-Served(FCFS) • Each process joins the Ready queue • When the current process ceases to execute, the oldest process in the Ready queue is selected 1 2 3 4 5 Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

  50. First-Come-First-Served(FCFS) • A short process may have to wait a very long time before it can execute • Favors CPU-bound processes • I/O processes have to wait until CPU-bound process completes Operating Systems Workshop CIT, Arid Agriculture University Aug 2002

More Related