1 / 24

Course Information

Learn classic and current OS literature, gain experience in OS research, and develop projects that lead to publishable results. Prerequisites: COP 4610, knowledge of UNIX environment, proficiency in C.

mmacleod
Télécharger la présentation

Course Information

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. Course Information Dr. Eggen COP 6711 Advanced Operating Systems Adopted from FSU’s Adv OS course – Andy Wang

  2. Contact Information • Dr. Eggen (ree@unf.edu) • Office: 15/3223 Matthews Building • Office hours: • TR 1-3:45 PM, after class, also by appointments • Class website: http://www.unf.edu/public/cop6611/ree

  3. Objectives • Learn classic and current OS literature • Gain experience in doing OS research • Develop projects that lead to publishable results

  4. Prerequisites • COP 4610 (operating systems) • Knowledge of the UNIX environment • Proficiency in C

  5. Course Materials • Lecture notes and papers • Posted on the class website • No required textbooks

  6. Recommended Textbooks • Tanenbaum and Van Steen, Distributed Systems Principles and Paradigms • Singhal and Shivaratri, Advanced Concepts in Operating Systems

  7. Background Textbooks • Tanenbaum, Modern Operating Systems • Silberschatz, Galvin, Gagne, Operating System Concepts • Nutt, Operating Systems: A Modern Perspective • Stallings, Operating Systems

  8. Kernel-Hacking Aids • Nutt, Kernel Projects for Linux • Kernighan, Ritchie, The C Programming Language • Maxwell, Linux Core Kernel Commentary • Corbet, Rubini, and Kroah-Hartman, Linux Device Drivers

  9. Grading • Paper summaries and critiques 16% • Project updates 8% • Project/Project reports 25% • Peer evaluation of projects 3% • Quizzes 16% • Exam 1 16% • Final 16%

  10. Side Note: Research Cycle • Having an idea • 2 months later • Submit a grant proposal to NSF • 6 months later • Funded • 3 months later • Prototype built • Submit to WIP • 6 months later • Evaluation done • WIP published • 3 months later • Submit to a conference • 6 months later • Paper published

  11. Critiques • One due each week • In class, for each paper • Please include your name, homework number, submission date, paper title, publication venue • 11 summaries

  12. Critiques • Need to contain the following sections • Summary • Problems/existing & new approaches/results • Intriguing aspects of the paper • Observations/trends/assumptions/techniques • How can the research be improved? • Techniques/experiments/handling of corner cases and assumptions

  13. Project • You need to develop a project in teams of two or three • It should take about at least 100 to 120 hours • Goal: • Publishable results

  14. Some Example Projects • Feasibility of using sound cues for debugging operating systems • Feasibility study of applying economic models for distributed resource management • Feasibility study of life-long storage of sensory inputs

  15. Some Example Projects (cont) • Modify Linux kernel • Change scheduling algorithm • Change resource management • Write new device handler • Obtain and program a raspberry pi ~ $40

  16. Types of Papers • Survey papers • Position papers • Simulation papers • Measurement papers • System papers

  17. Weekly Project Reports • Per person • Demonstrate steady progress • Papers read • Obstacles encountered • New ideas • Software pieces built • Experiments

  18. Project Proposal • Due on the 5th week • Group presentation • All team members are required to participate • 2-page written proposal • Motivation • The state-of-the-art • Methodology • Expected results • Show stoppers • Plan B • Timeline

  19. Project Proposal Include: • 5-10 references • Division of labor amongst teams

  20. Project Presentation • During the last two weeks of the course? • 12 to 15-page (max) written paper due by the last lecture (double column, single-space, 10-pt font) • Critiques on other projects, not including yours

  21. Exams • In-class and closed-book, unless specified otherwise • Essays and short answers • Open research questions

  22. Entrance Knowledge • Make sure that you have the necessary background • COP4610

  23. Overall Expectations • Not like an undergraduate course • Need to take your own initiative • Lots of time spent on reading, writing, and working on your project • Need to limit your course load

  24. A Few Words on Plagiarism • Please don’t plagiarize; that means • No cutting and pasting • No Wiki references • No paraphrasing, moving prepositional phrases around, replacing verbs, etc. • Dire consequences; potential loss of • Grade, assistantship, on-campus jobs, student VISA, dormitory

More Related