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Operating Systems One-month project

In the second project you will design and implement appropriate support for multiprogramming. You will extend the system calls to handle process management and inter-process communication primitives. You will add this to the coded first project. Make sure you correct all the deficiencies in your first project before starting the second project. This solution for project1 will be covered as part of next week’s recitation.

Nachos is currently a uniprogramming environment. We will have to alter Nachos so that each process is maintained in its own system thread. We will have to take care of memory allocation and de-allocation. We will also consider all the data and synchronization dependencies between threads. You will first design the solution before coding. Here are the details:

  1. Alter your general exceptions (non-system call exceptions) to finish the thread instead of halting the system. This will be important, as a run time exception should not cause the operating system to shut down. You will most likely have to revisit this code several times before your project is complete. There are several synchronization issues you will have to handle during thread exit.
  2. Implement multiprogramming. The code we have given you is restricted to running one user program at a time. You will need to make some changes to addrspace.h, and addrspace.cc in order to convert the system from uniprogramming to multiprogramming. You will need to:
    • Come up with a way of allocating physical memory frames so that multiple programs can be loaded into memory at once.
    • Provide a way of copying data to/from the kernel from/to the user’s virtual address space.
    • Properly handling freeing address space when a user program finishes.
    • It is very important to alter the user program loader algorithm such that it handles frames of information. Currently, memory space allocation assumes that a process is loaded into a contiguous section of memory. Once multiprogramming is active, memory will no longer appear contiguous in nature. If you do not correct the routine, it is most likely that loading another user program will corrupt the operating system.
  3. Implement the SpaceID Exec(char *name) system call. Exec starts a new user program running within a new system thread. You will need to examine the “StartProcess” function in progtest.cc in order to figure out how to set up user space inside a system thread. Exec should return –1 on failure; else it should return the “Process SpaceID” of the user level program it just created. (Note: SpaceIDs can be kept track of in a similar manner to OpenFileIDs of your project 1, except that you will want to keep track of them outside the thread.)
  4. Implement the int Join(SpaceID id) and void Exit(int exitCode) system calls. Join will wait and block on a “Process SpaceID” as noted in its parameter. Exit returns an exit code to whoever is doing a join. The exit code is 0 if a program successfully completes another value if there is an error. The exit code parameter is set via the exitcode parameter. Join returns the exit code for the process it is blocking on, -1 if the join fails. A user program can only join to processes that are directly created by the Exec system call. You can not join to other processes or to yourself. You will have to use semaphores inside your system calls to coordinate Joining and Exiting user processes. You will observe that this can be modeled as sleeping barber IPC (inter process communication).
  5. Implement the int CreateSemaphore(char *name, int semval) system call. From the execv system call that you implemented in Project1 you would have realized that we will have to update start.s and syscall.h to add the new system call signatures. You will create a container at the system level that can hold upto 10 named semaphores. The CreateSemaphore system call will return 0 on success and –1 on failure. The CreateSemaphore system call will fail if there are not enough free spots in the container, the name is null, or the initial semaphore value is less than 0. (You should reuse the Semaphore class which is implemented in the source code)
  6. Implement int wait(char *name) and int signal(char *name) system calls. Make sure you follow the wait and signal as the mnemonics for these two and not down and up or P and V. The name parameter is the name of the semaphore. Both system calls return 0 on success and –1 on failure. Failure can occur if the user gives an illegal semaphore name (one that has not been created).
  7. Implement a simple shell program to test your new system calls implemented as above. The shell should take a command at a time, and run the appropriate user program. The shell should “Join” on each program “Exec”ed, waiting for the program to exit. On return from the Join, print the exit code if it is anything other than 0 (normal execution). Also, design the shell such that it can run program in the background. Any command starting with character (&) should run in the background. (Ex:&create will run the test program create program in the background.)
  8. Solve the Dining Philosopher problem discussed in your text book. Use Semaphore you designed for realizing mutual exclusion and synchronization among the philosophers.
  9. [Tanenbaum] A student majoring in anthropology and minoring in computer science has embarked on a research project to see if African baboons can be taught about deadlocks. He locates a deep canyon and fastens a rope across it, so the baboons can cross hand-over-hand. Several baboons can cross at the same time, provided that they are all going in the same direction. If eastward moving and westward moving baboons ever get onto the rope at the same time, a deadlock will result (the baboons will get stuck in the middle) because it is impossible for one baboon to climb over another one while suspended over the canyon. If a baboon wants to cross the canyon, it must check to see that no other baboon is cur­rently crossing in the opposite direction. Write a program using semaphores that avoids deadlock. Do not worry about a series of eastward moving baboons holding up the westward moving baboons indefi­nitely.
  10. Documentation (10%) Includes internal documentation, and external documentation as described in Project1. Create a READE file and place in the code directory. Tar your code and submit it as one file. Follow the directions given in Project1. We plan to run automatic plagiarism detection software to detect any copied projects. The consequences are quite unpleasant for academic dishonesty. So work on your own and not in groups. This is not a group project. No late projects will be accepted.

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Source:  OpenStax, Operating systems. OpenStax CNX. Aug 13, 2009 Download for free at http://cnx.org/content/col10785/1.2
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