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Os 7

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
9 views23 pages

Os 7

Uploaded by

alexkb2002online
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© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
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You are on page 1/ 23

Operating System

CSE
By
Dr. Mitul Kumar Ahirwal

Ref: Books:
“Operating system concepts” Abraham Silberschatz and Peter B Galvin
“Operating system” Andrew S. Tanenbaum
“Operating system a concept based Approach” D.M Dhamdhere 1
Process in Memory

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 2
Process State
• As a process executes, it changes state
– new: The process is being created
– running: Instructions are being executed
– waiting: The process is waiting for some event to occur
– ready: The process is waiting to be assigned to a
processor
– terminated: The process has finished execution

3
Diagram of Process State

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 4
Process Control Block (PCB)
Information associated with each process
• Process state
• Program counter
• CPU registers
• CPU scheduling information
• Memory-management information
• Accounting information – amount of CPU time used,
time limits, job or process number etc.
• I/O status information

5
Process Control Block (PCB)

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 6
CPU Switch From Process to Process

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 7
Process Scheduling
• Maximize CPU use, quickly switch processes
onto CPU for time sharing
• Process scheduler selects among available
processes for next execution on CPU
• Maintains scheduling queues of processes
– Job queue – set of all processes in the system
– Ready queue – set of all processes residing in main
memory, ready and waiting to execute
– Device queues – set of processes waiting for an I/O
device
– Processes migrate among the various queues
8
Process Representation in Linux
• Represented by the C structure task_struct
pid t pid; /* process identifier */
long state; /* state of the process */
unsigned int time slice /* scheduling information */ struct
task struct *parent; /* this process’s parent */ struct list
head children; /* this process’s children */ struct files
struct *files; /* list of open files */ struct mm struct *mm;
/* address space of this pro */

9
Ready Queue And Various I/O Device Queues

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 10
Representation of Process Scheduling

11
Type of Scheduling
Preemptive : CPU is allocated to a process for limited time

• Shortest Remaining Time First (SRTF),


• Round Robin (RR),
• Priority (preemptive version)

Non-preemptive: CPU is allocated to a process until it


terminates or switches to waiting state

• Shortest Job First (SJF)


• Priority (non-preemptive version)

12
Schedulers
• Long-term scheduler (or job scheduler) –
selects which processes should be brought into
the ready queue
• Short-term scheduler (or CPU scheduler) –
selects which process should be executed next
and allocates CPU
– Sometimes the only scheduler in a system

13
Schedulers (Cont.)
• Short-term scheduler is invoked very frequently
(milliseconds)  (must be fast)
• Long-term scheduler is invoked very infrequently
(seconds, minutes)  (may be slow)
• The long-term scheduler controls the degree of
multiprogramming
• Processes can be described as either:
– I/O-bound process – spends more time doing I/O than
computations, many short CPU bursts
– CPU-bound process – spends more time doing
computations; few very long CPU bursts 14
Addition of Medium Term Scheduling

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 15
Context Switch
• When CPU switches to another process, the system must save
the state of the old process and load the saved state for the
new process via a context switch.

• Context of a process represented in the PCB

• Context-switch time is overhead; the system does no useful


work while switching
– The more complex the OS and the PCB -> longer the context switch

• Time dependent on hardware support


– Some hardware provides multiple sets of registers per CPU ->
multiple contexts loaded at once

16
Process Creation
• Parent process create children processes, which, in turn
create other processes, forming a tree of processes
• Generally, process identified and managed via a process
identifier (pid)
• Resource sharing
– Parent and children share all resources
– Children share subset of parent’s resources
– Parent and child share no resources
• Execution
– Parent and children execute concurrently
– Parent waits until children terminate

17
Process Creation (Cont.)

• Address space
– Child duplicate of parent
– Child has a program loaded into it

• UNIX examples
– fork system call creates new process
– exec system call used after a fork to replace the
process’ memory space with a new program
18
Process Creation

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 19
C Program Forking Separate Process
#include <sys/types.h>
#include <studio.h>
#include <unistd.h>
int main()
{
pid_t pid;
/* fork another process */
pid = fork();
if (pid < 0) { /* error occurred */
fprintf(stderr, "Fork Failed");
return 1;
}
else if (pid == 0) { /* child process */
execlp("/bin/ls", "ls", NULL);
}
else { /* parent process */
/* parent will wait for the child */
wait (NULL);
printf ("Child Complete");
}
return 0;
}

20
A Tree of Processes on Solaris

Reference: Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating System Concepts – 8th Edition 21
Process Termination
• Process executes last statement and asks the operating
system to delete it (exit)
– Output data from child to parent (via wait)
– Process’ resources are deallocated by operating system

• Parent may terminate execution of children processes


(abort)
– Child has exceeded allocated resources
– Task assigned to child is no longer required
– If parent is exiting
• Some operating systems do not allow child to continue if its parent
terminates
– All children terminated - cascading termination

22
Reference:
Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2009 Operating
System Concepts – 8th Edition

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