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Introduction to Operating Systems J. H. Wang Sep. 15, 2010.

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Presentation on theme: "Introduction to Operating Systems J. H. Wang Sep. 15, 2010."— Presentation transcript:

1 Introduction to Operating Systems J. H. Wang Sep. 15, 2010

2 Instructor and TA Instructor –Jenq-Haur Wang ( 王正豪 ) –Assistant Professor, CSIE, NTUT –Office: R1534, Technology Building –E-mail: jhwang@csie.ntut.edu.twjhwang@csie.ntut.edu.tw –Homepage: http://www.ntut.edu.tw/~jhwang/http://www.ntut.edu.tw/~jhwang/ –Tel: ext. 4238 –Office Hour: 15:10-17:00 on Tuesdays, 10:10-12:00am on Thursdays TA –(TBD)

3 Course Overview Course: Operating Systems Time: 9:10-12:00am on Wednesdays Classroom: R334, Technology Building Prerequisite: Data Structures, Computer Organization Course webpage: http://www.ntut.edu.tw/~jhwang/OS/ http://www.ntut.edu.tw/~jhwang/OS/

4 Target Students For those who –May not major in CSIE during undergraduate studies, but are interested in operating systems, and –Are familiar with basic data structures, computer organization, and a high-level programming language, and –Are preparing to investigate more details in selected topics and recent developments in modern operating systems

5 Resources Textbook: Operating System Concepts, 8th ed., by Abraham Silberschatz, Peter Baer Galvin, and Greg Gagne, John Wiley & Sons, Inc. (International Student Edition, imported by 新月 ) –http://codex.cs.yale.edu/avi/os-book/http://codex.cs.yale.edu/avi/os-book/ –(Both 7th edition and Java edition are also acceptable) References: – Understanding the Linux Kernel, 3rd ed., by Daniel P. Bovet and Marco Cesati, O'Reilly, 2005 – Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms, 2nd ed., by Andrew S. Tanenbaum and Maarten van Steen, Prentice-Hall, 2006. – Modern Operating Systems, 3rd ed., by Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Prentice-Hall, 2007. –Papers from related conference proceedings or journals

6 Teaching Lectures Homework (and program) assignments –Homeworks should be turned in within two weeks Mid-term exam One term project: system development or paper presentation

7 Grading Policy (Tentative) Grading policy –About 5 written (and possibly programming) exercises: 40% –Midterm exam: 30% –One final project or paper presentation: 30%

8 Course Description Introduction to basic components in operating systems –Process management and coordination –Memory management –Storage management Advanced topics (dependent on schedule) –Distributed systems –Special-purpose systems –Case studies and recent developments

9 Outline & Schedule Outline –Basics (Ch. 1-2) Introduction System structures –Process management (Ch. 3-7) Process concept Multithreaded programming Process scheduling Synchronization Deadlocks –Memory management (Ch. 8-9) Memory management strategies Virtual memory management

10 Outline & Schedule (Cont’) Outline (cont’d) –Storage management (Ch. 10-13) File system Secondary storage structure I/O systems –System protection and security (Ch. 14-15) –Distributed systems (Ch. 16-18) Distributed operating systems Distributed file systems Distributed synchronization –Special purpose systems (Ch. 19-20) Real-time systems Multimedia systems –Case studies (Ch. 21-23)

11 Outline & Schedule (Cont’) (Tentative) Schedule –Basics: 2-3 wks –Process management: 5-6 wks –Memory management: 3-4 wks –Storage management: 3-4 wks –Advance topics: 1-2 wks (if time permits)

12 More on the Term Project Programming of selected OS components –CPU scheduling, disk scheduling, deadlock avoidance, memory page replacement algorithms,... Survey of recent developments in OS on various platforms –For example, Windows 7, Android, … Presentation of academic papers (conference proceedings, journals) –OS: ACM SOSP, USENIX OSDI, … –Distributed systems: ACM PODC, ICDCS, …

13 Thanks for Your Attention!


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