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1 Chapter 12 File Management Patricia Roy Manatee Community College, Venice, FL ©2008, Prentice Hall Operating Systems: Internals and Design Principles,

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Presentation on theme: "1 Chapter 12 File Management Patricia Roy Manatee Community College, Venice, FL ©2008, Prentice Hall Operating Systems: Internals and Design Principles,"— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Chapter 12 File Management Patricia Roy Manatee Community College, Venice, FL ©2008, Prentice Hall Operating Systems: Internals and Design Principles, 6/E William Stallings

2 2 File Management File management system consists of system utility programs that run as privileged applications Concerned with secondary storage Long-term existence Shared between processes Structure (internal or directories)

3 3 File Attributes Possible file attributes

4 4 File System Calls Principle Win32 API functions for file I/O Second column gives nearest UNIX equivalent

5 5 Files System Software Architecture

6 6 Elements of File Management

7 7 File Management Functions Identify and locate a selected file Use a directory to describe the location of all files plus their attributes On a shared system describe user access control

8 8 Criteria for File Organization Quick random access –Needed when accessing a single record Ease of update Economy of storage –Should be minimum redundancy in the data –Redundancy can be used to speed access such as an index Simple maintenance Reliability

9 9 The Pile

10 10 The Sequential File

11 11 Indexed Sequential File

12 12 Indexed File

13 13 File Organization The Direct or Hashed File –Directly access a block at a known address –Key field required for each record

14 14 Performance

15 15 File Directories Contains information about files –Attributes –Location –Ownership Directory itself is a file owned by the operating system Provides mapping between file names and the files themselves

16 16 Information Elements of a File Directory

17 17 Information Elements of a File Directory

18 18 Hierarchical, or Tree-Structured Directory Master directory with user directories underneath it Each user directory may have subdirectories and files as entries

19 19 Tree-Structured Directory

20 20 Example of Tree-Structured Directory

21 21 Hierarchical, or Tree-Structured Directory Files can be located by following a path from the root, or master, directory down various branches –This is the pathname for the file Can have several files with the same file name as long as they have unique path names Current directory is the working directory Files are referenced relative to the working directory

22 22 Directory System Calls Principle Win32 API functions for directory management Second column gives nearest UNIX equivalent, when one exists

23 23 File Sharing In multiuser system, allow files to be shared among users Two issues –Access rights (read, write, execute) –Management of simultaneous access (cf. interprocess communication, mutual exclusion)

24 24 Access Matrix

25 25 Access Control List

26 26 Capability Lists

27 27 File System Implementation A possible file system layout

28 28 Secondary Storage Management Space must be allocated to files Must keep track of the space available for allocation

29 29 Disk Space Management Dark line (left hand scale) gives data rate of a disk Dotted line (right hand scale) gives disk space efficiency All files 2KB Block size

30 30 Contiguous Allocation Single set of blocks is allocated to a file at the time of creation Only a single entry in the file allocation table –Starting block and length of the file External fragmentation will occur –Need to perform compaction

31 31 Contiguous File Allocation

32 32 Contiguous File Allocation

33 33 Chained Allocation Allocation on basis of individual block Each block contains a pointer to the next block in the chain Only single entry in the file allocation table –Starting block and length of file

34 34 Chained Allocation No external fragmentation Best for sequential files No accommodation of the principle of locality

35 35 Chained Allocation

36 36 Chained Allocation

37 37 Indexed Allocation File allocation table contains a separate one- level index for each file The index has one entry for each portion allocated to the file The file allocation table contains block number for the index

38 38 Indexed Allocation

39 39 The MS-DOS File System (1) The MS-DOS directory entry

40 40 The MS-DOS File System (2) Maximum partition for different block sizes The empty boxes represent forbidden combinations

41 41 Inodes Index node Control structure that contains key information for a particular file: attributes and location of blocks

42 42 FreeBSD File Allocation

43 43 UNIX Directories and Inodes

44 44 The UNIX File System The steps in looking up /usr/ast/mbox

45 45 Shared Files (1) File system containing a shared file

46 46 Shared Files (2) (a) Situation prior to linking (b) After the link is created (c) After the original owner removes the file

47 47 Windows 2000 (1) The NTFS master file table

48 48 Windows 2000 (2) An MFT record for a three-run, nine-block file

49 49 Windows 2000 (3) A file that requires three MFT records to store its runs

50 50 Linux Virtual File System Uniform file system interface to user processes Represents any conceivable file systems general feature and behavior Assumes files are objects that share basic properties regardless of the target file system

51 51 Linux Virtual File System Context

52 52 Linux Virtual File System Concept


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