OPERATING SYSTEMS CS 3502 Fall 2017

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Presentation transcript:

OPERATING SYSTEMS CS 3502 Fall 2017 Input/Output System Chapter 9 Dr. Donghyun (David) Kim Department of Computer Science College of Computing and Software Engineering Kennesaw State University

Input/Output System Major objectives: An application’s I/O requests are sent to the I/O device. Take whatever response comes back from the device and send it to the application. Optimize the performance of processing the various I/O requests.

General I/O Issues The operating system is able to improve overall system performance if it can keep the various devices as busy as possible. It is important for the operating system to handle device interrupts as quickly as possible.

Disk Drive Mechanism

Disk Structure Disk drives are addressed as large 1-dimensional arrays of logical blocks, where the logical block is the smallest unit of transfer. The 1-dimensional array of logical blocks is mapped into the sectors of the disk sequentially. Sector 0 is the first sector of the first track on the outermost cylinder. Mapping proceeds in order through that track, then the rest of the tracks in that cylinder, and then through the rest of the cylinders from outermost to innermost.

Direct Access Storage Devices Otherwise known as DASDs Devices that can directly read or write to a specific place on a disk or drum Also known as random access storage devices Grouped into two major categories fixed read/write heads movable read/write heads

Fixed-Head Drums Developed in the early 1950s access times of 5 to 25 ms were considered fast used a drum with a capacity of 2000 bytes later increased to 4000 bytes speed was 200 rpm much faster than other drums of the time which were only 50-60 rpm By 1970 drums increased to 1 megabyte and speed of 3000 rpm

Fixed-Head Drums The device is formatted so tracks run around it Data recorded serially on each track by the read/write head positioned over it These drums were quite fast, yet expensive and did store as much as other DASDs.

Fixed-Head Disks Disks resemble phonograph record albums covered with magnetic film that has been formatted into concentric circles called tracks Data is recorded in the same manner as fixed-head drum These were very expensive and had less storage space as compared to movable-head disks but were faster.

Movable-Head Drums Consist of a few read/write heads that move from track to track to cover the entire surface of the drum Device that is least expensive has only one read/write head for the whole drum Drums with several read/write heads work faster but also cost more

Movable-Head Disks The read/write head floats over the surface of the disk Exist as individual units, as in a PC Can also be in a disk pack, which is a stack of disks

Disk Pack A typical disk pack consists of several platters that are stacked on a common central spindle, with a slight space between them so the read/write heads can move between the pairs of disks.

Architecture of M-Head Disks Each platter has two surfaces for recording, except the top and bottom Each surface is formatted with specific numbers of tracks for the data to be recorded on number of tracks varies depending on the manufacturer usually range from 200 to 800 tracks

Optical Storage Direct access storage CD-ROMs contained the first optical storage DASDs these were incompatible with most systems, as they were developed for a single system Is a major contender for the replacement of magnetic disks because it has high-density storage and durability

Function of Optical Disc Optical disc drive functions similar to the magnetic disk drive Read head is on an arm that moves forward and backward, track to track disc rotates at 200-500 rpm average seek time is 500 ms and maximum seek is 1 second transfer rate is about 150 kilobytes/second

CD Storage Capacity CD-ROM has large storage potential, more than 700 megabytes of data

Disk Structure and Organization Moving-head disk - one head per surface Fixed-head disk - one head per track Data on a disk is addressed by: Cylinder Surface Sector

Timings in a Disk Request The disk request timing is the sum of: Seek time - arm positioning delay Latency time - rotational delay Data transfer time

Read/Write To read or write data, disk device must move the arm to the appropriate track. The time to carry this out this is called Seek Time. Then, the disk device must wait for the desired sector/data to rotate into position under the head (rotational latency). Each track is recorded in units called sectors. A sector is the smallest amount of data that can be physically read or written.

Disk Track Format

Disk Access Time The disk access time can be calculated as follows: Seek time + Rotational Latency

I/O Requests In general, there may be many I/O requests sent to an I/O device at the same time. These requests may come from multiple processes or the same process.

Stages of an I/O Request

I/O Device Handling A Queue of Pending Requests A Resource Scheduler that determines the next request to execute A Mechanism to initiate the next request whenever a request completes.

I/O Request Queueing

I/O Performance Optimization I/O processing is much slower than CPU processing. Every physical disk I/O has a dramatic impact on system performance To improve I/O performance: Reduce the number of I/O requests Carry out buffering and/or caching I/O Scheduling

Buffering and Caching The I/O system should make the physical I/O requests as big as possible. This will reduce the number of physical I/O requests by the buffering factor used. The application's logical I/O requests should copy data to/from a large memory buffer. The physical I/O requests then transfer the entire buffer.

I/O Scheduling For most devices, a FCFS (First-Come-First-Serve) scheduling algorithm is appropriate. For example, one wants the segments of a music file to be played in sequential order. For some devices (disks especially), the order in which requests are processed is not inherently constrained by the device characteristics.

I/O Scheduling (Cont.) On a typical system, there will be pending disk I/O requests from many different Processes. The correct functioning of these processes usually does not depend on the order in which the disk I/O operations actually occur. Thus, the Resource Scheduler attempts to optimize performance for devices such as disks.

Context Switching in I/O In CPU scheduling, the context-switch time is relatively small with respect to the service time In I/O scheduling the context-switch time is relatively large with respect to the service time The time to move the R/W head between cylinders is much greater than the time it takes to read or write to a cylinder

Goal of Disk Scheduling In any disk system with a moving read/write head, the seek time between cylinders takes a significant amount of time This traveling head time should be minimized

An Analogy Traveling service person --- a technician who has to service requests from several clients in a geographical area Normally the service person spends more time driving than actually carrying out the service tasks

Purpose of Disk Scheduling Select a disk request from the queue of I/O requests Decide when to process this I/O request

Issues in Disk Scheduling Throughput - the number of disk requests that are completed in some period Fairness - some disk requests may have to wait a relatively long time before being served A totally fair system would ensure that the mean response time of the disk requests is the same for all processes

Goal of Disk Scheduling? High Throughput Fairness There is a trade-off between total system throughput and fairness

State-Dependent Behavior The current position of the read/write head (i.e., the state of the disk) affects the response time of the next request

Disk Scheduling Algorithms For moving-head disk, disk scheduling algorithms are needed to minimize seek time FCFS scheduling: first-come-first-served SSTF scheduling: shortest-seek-time-first SCAN scheduling C-SCAN scheduling: circular SCAN LOOK scheduling C-LOOK scheduling

Disk Scheduling Algorithms Several algorithms exist to schedule the servicing of disk I/O requests. Given the following disk request sequence for a disk with 100 tracks: 44, 20, 95, 4, 50, 52, 47, 61, 87, 25 Head pointer 50 (current position of R/W heads)

FCFS Scheduling FCFS scheduling service I/O requests in the order in which they arrive. It is, of course, the simplest scheduling algorithm and actually does no scheduling. It serves as a useful baseline to compare other scheduling algorithms.

FCFS Scheduling Example

Another Example with FCFS Illustration shows total head movement of 640 cylinders.

SSTF Selects the request with the minimum seek time from the current head position. SSTF scheduling is a form of SJF scheduling; may cause starvation of some requests. Illustration shows total head movement of 152 cylinders (or tracks).

SSTF Scheduling Example

Another Example with SSTF

SCAN The disk arm starts at one end of the disk, and moves toward the other end, servicing requests until it gets to the other end of the disk, where the head movement is reversed and servicing continues. Sometimes called the elevator algorithm. Illustration shows total head movement of 136 cylinders.

Example with SCAN Scheduling

Another Example with SCAN

C-SCAN A variant of SCAN Provides a more uniform wait time than SCAN. The head moves from one end of the disk to the other. servicing requests as it goes. When it reaches the other end, however, it immediately returns to the beginning of the disk, without servicing any requests on the return trip.

Example with C-SCAN

C-LOOK Variant of C-SCAN Disk arm only travels as far as the last request in each direction, then reverses direction immediately, without first going all the way to the end of the disk.

Problem Set Page 257 – Problems 1, 3, 4, 6. Study performance of Disk Scheduling Algorithms under different situation / metrics Why is it important to scale up system-bus and device speeds as CPU speed increases?