Difference between revisions of "Student Built Xinu"
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| 06 || || || Process Synchronization || || || || [[Assignment: Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling|Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling]] || [[Assignment: Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling|Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling]] | | 06 || || || Process Synchronization || || || || [[Assignment: Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling|Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling]] || [[Assignment: Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling|Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling]] | ||
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− | | 07 || || || Deadlocks || || || || [[Assignment: Priority Scheduling and Process Termination|Priority Scheduling and Process Termination]] || [[Assignment: Priority Scheduling and Preemption|Priority Scheduling & Preemption | + | | 07 || || || Deadlocks || || || || [[Assignment: Priority Scheduling and Process Termination|Priority Scheduling and Process Termination]] || [[Assignment: Priority Scheduling and Preemption|Priority Scheduling & Preemption]] |
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| 08 || || || Main Memory and Virtual Memory || | | 08 || || || Main Memory and Virtual Memory || | ||
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| 09 || || || File System Interface || || || || [[Assignment: Preemption and Synchronization|Preemption & Synchronization]] | | 09 || || || File System Interface || || || || [[Assignment: Preemption and Synchronization|Preemption & Synchronization]] | ||
− | || [[Assignment: Synchronization and Interprocess Communication|Interprocess Communication]] | + | || [[Assignment: Synchronization and Interprocess Communication|Interprocess Communication]] || [[Assignment: LL/SC|LL/SC]] |
|- | |- | ||
| 10 || || || File System Implementation || | | 10 || || || File System Implementation || |
Revision as of 02:38, 5 March 2010
Contents
Overview
Having students build their own Xinu is one of the potential tracks presented for a professor that is Teaching With Xinu.
A student built operating system puts the student in the trenches of operating system development. The student will become intimately involved with the inner workings of an operating system. This will give the student a better understanding of the various systems that work together behind the scenes while an operating system is running. Operating systems topics that can be incorporated in a student built Xinu course include: memory management, scheduling, concurrent processing, device management, file systems and others.
Course Outcomes
Course development can parallel learning objectives and topics associated with many Communication and Networking courses. [1]
Topics
- Overview of operating systems
- Operating system principles
- Concurrency
- Scheduling and dispatch
- Memory management
- Device management
- Security and protection
- File systems
- Evaluating system performance
Learning Objectives
- Discuss the history of operating systems.
- Overview of the general and specific purpose of an operating system.
- Understanding concurrency and state flow diagrams.
- Understanding deadlock and starvation.
- Ability to decipher between scheduling algorithms.
- Understanding the use of memory and virtual memory.
- Characteristics of serial and parallel devices.
- Deciphering the concepts behind various file systems
- Understanding the necessity of security and locating potential system security holes
Potential Course Structure
An Operating Systems course using the below course outline or something similar will introduce students to some fundamental concepts of operating systems combined with the basics of networking and communications. Topics include: memory management, scheduling, concurrent processing, device management, file systems, networking, security, and system performance. A similar course structure is followed by Dr. Dennis Brylow at Marquette University in his sophomore level Operating Systems course. Most of the assignments where students are building Embedded Xinu are done in teams of two.
Course Outline
Week | Topics | Assignments Track One | Assignments Track Two | ||||||
01 | C (basics) and OS Structures, Processes | C Basics | C Basics | ||||||
02 | C (functions, control flow) and Processes | ||||||||
03 | C (pointers, arrays, structs) and Threads | C Structs and Pointers | C Structs and Pointers | ||||||
04 | CPU Scheduling | Synchronous Serial Driver | Synchronous Serial Driver | ||||||
05 | CPU Scheduling | ||||||||
06 | Process Synchronization | Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling | Context Switch and Non-Preemptive Scheduling | ||||||
07 | Deadlocks | Priority Scheduling and Process Termination | Priority Scheduling & Preemption | ||||||
08 | Main Memory and Virtual Memory | ||||||||
09 | File System Interface | Preemption & Synchronization | Interprocess Communication | LL/SC | |||||
10 | File System Implementation | ||||||||
11 | Mass-Storage Structure | Delta Queues | Delta Queues | ||||||
12 | I/O Systems | Heap Memory | Heap Memory | ||||||
13 | Protection, Security and Distributed System Structures | Asynchronous Device Driver | Ultra-Tiny File System | ||||||
14 | Distributed System Structures | ||||||||
15 | Distributed File Systems | Ultra-Tiny File System | Basic Networking - Ping |
Books
References
[1] Course topics and learning objectives have been adapted from the ACM's Computing Curricula 2001 Computer Science.
This work funded in part by NSF grant DUE-CCLI-0737476.