04 Operating System Support
04 Operating System Support
! Efficiency
!Allowing better use of computer resources
Operating System Services ! Program creation ! Program execution ! Access to I/O devices ! Controlled access to files ! System access ! Error detection and response ! Accounting
Types of Operating System ! Interactive ! Batch ! Single program (Uni-programming) ! Multi-programming (Multi-tasking)
Early Systems ! Late 1940s to mid 1950s ! No Operating System ! Programs interact directly with hardware ! Two main problems:
!Scheduling !Setup time
Simple Batch Systems ! Resident Monitor program ! Users submit jobs to operator ! Operator batches jobs ! Monitor controls sequence of events to process batch ! When one job is finished, control returns to Monitor which reads next job ! Monitor handles scheduling
! Timer
!To prevent a job monopolizing the system
! Privileged instructions
!Only executed by Monitor !e.g. I/O
! Interrupts
!Allows for relinquishing and regaining control
Multi-programmed Batch Systems ! I/O devices very slow ! When one program is waiting for I/O, another can use the CPU
Single Program
Utilization
Time Sharing Systems ! Allow users to interact directly with the computer
!i.e. Interactive
Scheduling ! Key to multi-programming ! Long term ! Medium term ! Short term ! I/O
Long Term Scheduling ! Determines which programs are submitted for processing ! i.e. controls the degree of multiprogramming ! Once submitted, a job becomes a process for the short term scheduler ! (or it becomes a swapped out job for the medium term scheduler)
Medium Term Scheduling ! Part of the swapping function (later) ! Usually based on the need to manage multi-programming ! If no virtual memory, memory management is also an issue
Short Term Scheduler ! Dispatcher ! Fine grained decisions of which job to execute next ! i.e. which job actually gets to use the processor in the next time slot
Process Scheduling
! Multi-program
!User part is sub-divided and shared among active processes
Swapping ! Problem: I/O is so slow compared with CPU that even in multi-programming system, CPU can be idle most of the time ! Solutions:
!Increase main memory
! Expensive ! Leads to larger programs
!Swapping
What is Swapping? ! Long term queue of processes stored on disk ! Processes swapped in as space becomes available ! As a process completes it is moved out of main memory ! If none of the processes in memory are ready (i.e. all I/O blocked)
!Swap out a blocked process to intermediate queue !Swap in a ready process or a new process !But swapping is an I/O process
Use of Swapping
Partitioning ! Splitting memory into sections to allocate to processes (including Operating System) ! Fixed-sized partitions
!May not be equal size !Process is fitted into smallest hole that will take it (best fit) !Some wasted memory !Leads to variable sized partitions
Fixed Partitioning
Variable Sized Partitions (1) ! Allocate exactly the required memory to a process ! This leads to a hole at the end of memory, too small to use
!Only one small hole - less waste
! When all processes are blocked, swap out a process and bring in another ! New process may be smaller than swapped out process ! Another hole
Variable Sized Partitions (2) ! Eventually have lots of holes (fragmentation) ! Solutions:
!Coalesce - Join adjacent holes into one large hole !Compaction - From time to time go through memory and move all hole into one free block (c.f. disk de-fragmentation)
Relocation ! No guarantee that process will load into the same place in memory ! Instructions contain addresses
!Locations of data !Addresses for instructions (branching)
! Logical address - relative to beginning of program ! Physical address - actual location in memory (this time) ! Automatic conversion using base address
Paging ! Split memory into equal sized, small chunks -page frames ! Split programs (processes) into equal sized small chunks - pages ! Allocate the required number page frames to a process ! Operating System maintains list of free frames ! A process does not require contiguous page frames ! Use page table to keep track
! Page fault
!Required page is not in memory !Operating System must swap in required page !May need to swap out a page to make space !Select page to throw out based on recent history
Thrashing ! Too many processes in too little memory ! Operating System spends all its time swapping ! Little or no real work is done ! Disk light is on all the time ! Solutions
!Good page replacement algorithms !Reduce number of processes running !Fit more memory
Bonus ! We do not need all of a process in memory for it to run ! We can swap in pages as required ! So - we can now run processes that are bigger than total memory available! ! Main memory is called real memory ! User/programmer sees much bigger memory - virtual memory
Translation Lookaside Buffer ! Every virtual memory reference causes two physical memory access
!Fetch page table entry !Fetch data
TLB Operation
Segmentation ! Paging is not (usually) visible to the programmer ! Segmentation is visible to the programmer ! Usually different segments allocated to program and data ! May be a number of program and data segments
Advantages of Segmentation ! Simplifies handling of growing data structures ! Allows programs to be altered and recompiled independently, without relinking and re-loading ! Lends itself to sharing among processes ! Lends itself to protection ! Some systems combine segmentation with paging
Pentium II
! Hardware for segmentation and paging ! Unsegmented unpaged
! virtual address = physical address ! Low complexity ! High performance
! Unsegmented paged
! Memory viewed as paged linear address space ! Protection and management via paging ! Berkeley UNIX
! Segmented unpaged
! Collection of local address spaces ! Protection to single byte level ! Translation table needed is on chip when segment is in memory
! Segmented paged
! Segmentation used to define logical memory partitions subject to access control ! Paging manages allocation of memory within partitions ! Unix System V
Pentium II Segmentation ! Each virtual address is 16-bit segment and 32-bit offset ! 2 bits of segment are protection mechanism ! 14 bits specify segment ! Unsegmented virtual memory 232 = 4Gbytes ! Segmented 246=64 terabytes
!Can be larger depends on which process is active !Half (8K segments of 4Gbytes) is global !Half is local and distinct for each process
!Use TLB holding 32 page table entries !Two page sizes available 4k or 4M
! Data exchanged between processor and main memory via cache ! Logical cache organization
!On cache miss, ARM supplies address directly to cache as well as TLB
Large pages
Small pages
Sections and supersections allow mapping of large region of memory with single TLB entry Additional access control mechanisms Two level translation table held in main memory
! Small pages use 1KB subpages ! Large pages use 16KB subpages
MMU
! First-level table holds section and supersection translations, and pointers to second-level tables ! Second-level tables: Hold both large and small page translations ! Translates virtual to physical addresses ! Derives and checks access permission ! After TLB miss ! Section-mapped access only requires first-level fetch ! Page-mapped access requires second-level fetch
ARM Virtual Memory Address Translation for Small Pages ! Single L1 page table
!4K 32-bit entries !Each L1 entry points to L2 page table
! Similar procedure for large pages ! Sections and supersection only use L1 page table
Cacheable (C) bit Can memory region be mapped through cache? Domain not Global (nG) Shared (S) SBZ
! Collection of memory regions ! Access control can be applied on the basis of domain ! Translation marked as global (0), or process specific (1)? ! Translation is for not-shared (0), or shared (1) memory? ! Should be zero
! Together with B and C bits, control accesses to caches ! How write buffer is used ! If memory region is shareable
! Must be kept coherent
! Bits [1:0] = 00
!Virtual addresses unmapped !Attempts to access generate translation fault
! Bits [1:0] = 01
!Physical address of L2 page table which specifies how associated virtual address range is mapped
L2 Table Small and Large Pages ! For memory structured into pages ! L1 page entry bits [31:10] point to a L2 page table ! Small pages
!L2 entry holds 20-bit pointer to base address of 4-KB page in main memory
! Large pages
!Virtual address includes 12-bit index to L1 table and an 8-bit index to L2 table !64-KB large pages have 16 bit page index portion !Four-bit overlap between page index field and L2 table index field !Page table entries in L2 page table replicated 16 times !L2 page table reduced from 256 entries to 16 if all refer to large pages !L2 page can service mixed large and small pages
! Sections
! L1 entry Bits [31:20] hold 12-bit pointer to 1-MB section
! For supersections
! L1 bits [31:24] hold 8-bit pointer to base of the 16-MB section
Access Control
! ! ! Region of memory can be designated as no access, read only, or read/ write Region can be designated privileged access (operating Systems) only Domain
! Collection of sections and/or pages with particular access permissions ! 16 ! Multiple processes can use same translation tables while maintaining some protection from each other ! Page table entry and TLB entry contain domain field ! Two-bit field in the Domain Access Control Register controls access to each domain ! Whole memory areas can be swapped very efficiently ! Must observe permissions of individual sections and/or pages in domain ! Control domain behavior
! !
Clients
Managers
! Sections and pages in domain access ! Bypass access permissions for table entries in domain
Programs can be
Required Reading ! Stallings chapter 8 ! Stallings, W. [2004] Operating Systems, Pearson ! Loads of Web sites on Operating Systems