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1 Case Study 1: UNIX and LINUX Chapter 10 10.1 History of unix 10.2 Overview of unix 10.3 Processes in unix 10.4 Memory management in unix 10.5 Input/output.

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Presentation on theme: "1 Case Study 1: UNIX and LINUX Chapter 10 10.1 History of unix 10.2 Overview of unix 10.3 Processes in unix 10.4 Memory management in unix 10.5 Input/output."— Presentation transcript:

1 1 Case Study 1: UNIX and LINUX Chapter 10 10.1 History of unix 10.2 Overview of unix 10.3 Processes in unix 10.4 Memory management in unix 10.5 Input/output in unix 10.6 The unix file system 10.7 Security in unix

2 2 UNIX The layers of a UNIX system. User Interface

3 3 UNIX Utility Programs A few of the more common UNIX utility programs required by POSIX

4 4 UNIX Kernel Approximate structure of generic UNIX kernel

5 5 Processes in UNIX Process creation in UNIX.

6 6 POSIX The signals required by POSIX.

7 7 System Calls for Process Management s is an error code pid is a process ID residual is the remaining time from the previous alarm

8 8 POSIX Shell A highly simplified shell

9 9 Threads in POSIX The principal POSIX thread calls.

10 10 The ls Command Steps in executing the command ls type to the shell

11 11 Flags for Linux clone Bits in the sharing_flags bitmap

12 12 UNIX Scheduler The UNIX scheduler is based on a multilevel queue structure

13 13 Booting UNIX The sequences of processes used to boot some systems cp

14 14 Handling Memory Process A's virtual address space Physical memory Process B's virtual address space Process A Process B

15 15 Sharing Files Two processes can share a mapped file. A new file mapped simultaneously into two processes

16 16 System Calls for Memory Management s is an error code b and addr are memory addresses len is a length prot controls protection flags are miscellaneous bits fd is a file descriptor offset is a file offset

17 17 Paging in UNIX The core map in 4BSD. The core map has an entry for each page

18 18 Paging in Linux (1) Linux uses three-level page tables

19 19 Paging in Linux (2) Operation of the buddy algorithm. Buddy algorithm

20 20 Networking Use of sockets for networking

21 21 Terminal Management The main POSIX calls for managing the terminal

22 22 UNIX I/O (1) Some of the fields of a typical cdevsw table

23 23 UNIX I/O (2) The UNIX I/O system in BSD

24 24 Streams An example of streams in System V

25 25 The UNIX File System (1) Some important directories found in most UNIX systems

26 26 The UNIX File System (2) Before linking. After linking. (a) Before linking. (b) After linking

27 27 The UNIX File System (3) Separate file systems After mounting (a) (b) (a) Before mounting. (b) After mounting

28 28 Locking Files (a) File with one lock (b) Addition of a second lock (c) A third lock

29 29 System Calls for File Management s is an error code fd is a file descriptor position is a file offset

30 30 The lstat System Call Fields returned by the lstat system call.

31 31 System Calls for Directory Management s is an error code dir identifies a directory stream dirent is a directory entry

32 32 UNIX File System (1) Disk layout in classical UNIX systems

33 33 UNIX File System (2) Directory entry fields. Structure of the i-node

34 34 UNIX File System (3) The relation between the file descriptor table, the open file description

35 35 UNIX File System (4) A BSD directory with three files The same directory after the file voluminous has been removed

36 36 The Linux File System Layout of the Linux Ex2 file system.

37 37 Network File System (1) Examples of remote mounted file systems Directories are shown as squares, files as circles

38 38 Network File System (2) The NFS layer structure. The NFS layer structure

39 39 Security in UNIX Some examples of file protection modes

40 40 System Calls for File Protection s is an error code uid and gid are the UID and GID, respectively


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