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OS Structure

Operating system structures can take various forms: 1) MS-DOS had a simple structure without modules, while UNIX was divided into systems programs and a kernel containing core functions. 2) Later systems adopted a layered approach with different levels built upon lower levels, from hardware at the bottom to user interfaces at the top. 3) Microkernel systems move more functionality out of the kernel into user space, relying on message passing between modules. Virtual machines take this a step further by treating hardware and the kernel as virtual.

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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
51 views

OS Structure

Operating system structures can take various forms: 1) MS-DOS had a simple structure without modules, while UNIX was divided into systems programs and a kernel containing core functions. 2) Later systems adopted a layered approach with different levels built upon lower levels, from hardware at the bottom to user interfaces at the top. 3) Microkernel systems move more functionality out of the kernel into user space, relying on message passing between modules. Virtual machines take this a step further by treating hardware and the kernel as virtual.

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Rexline S J
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© © All Rights Reserved
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Download as PPTX, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Operating-System Structures

OS Simple Structure

• MS-DOS – written to provide the most functionality in the


least space
– Not divided into modules

– Although MS-DOS has some structure, its interfaces and


levels of functionality are not well separated
MS-DOS Layer Structure
Layered Approach

 The operating system is divided into a number of layers (levels), each


built on top of lower layers.
 The bottom layer (layer 0), is the hardware;

 the highest (layer N) is the user interface.


 With modularity, layers are selected such that each uses functions
(operations) and services of only lower-level layers
Layered Operating System
Traditional UNIX System Structure
UNIX
• UNIX – limited by hardware functionality, the original UNIX operating system
had limited structuring. The UNIX OS consists of two separable parts
– Systems programs

– The kernel

• Consists of everything below the system-call interface and above the


physical hardware
• Provides the file system, CPU scheduling, memory management, and
other operating-system functions; a large number of functions for one
level
Microkernel System Structure
• Moves as much from the kernel into “user” space
• Communication takes place between user modules using message passing
• Benefits:
– Easier to extend a microkernel
– Easier to port the operating system to new architectures
– More reliable (less code is running in kernel mode)
– More secure

• Detriments:
– Performance overhead of user space to kernel space communication
Mac OS X Structure
Virtual Machines

• A virtual machine takes the layered approach to its logical conclusion.


It treats hardware and the operating system kernel as though they
were all hardware
• A virtual machine provides an interface identical to the underlying
bare hardware
• The operating system host creates the illusion that a process has its
own processor and (virtual memory)
• Each guest provided with a (virtual) copy of underlying computer
Virtual Machines

Non-virtual Machine Virtual Machine

(a) Nonvirtual machine (b) virtual machine


Virtual Machine

In a Virtual Machine - each process "seems" to execute on its own


processor with its own memory, devices, etc.
· The resources of the physical machine are shared. Virtual devices
are sliced out of the physical ones. Virtual disks are subsets of
physical ones.
· Useful for running different OS simultaneously on the same
machine.
· Protection is excellent, but no sharing possible.
· Virtual privileged instructions are trapped.

12
VMware Architecture
Thank You

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