Title: Operating Systems
1Operating Systems
2What Does An Operating System Do?
- Manages the hardware and software resources of
the system. In a desktop computer, these
resources include such things as the processor,
memory, disk space, etc. - Provides a stable, consistent way for
applications to deal with the hardware without
having to know all the details of the hardware.
3Operating systems
Application
The operating system acts a a shell around the
hardware. The applications software need an
operating system to work, and users need the
applications software to interact with the
hardware via the operating system.
Operating system
User
Hardware
Application
Application
User
User
4Popular Operating Systems
- UNIX
- Linux
- Windows 2000
- Windows XP
- Windows 2003
- Macintosh OS X
5What Kinds Are There?
- Real-time operating system (RTOS) - Real-time
operating systems are used to control machinery,
scientific instruments and industrial systems. An
RTOS typically has very little user-interface
capability, and no end-user utilities. - Single-user, single task - Operating system
designed to manage the computer so that one user
can effectively do one thing at a time. The Palm
OS for Palm handheld computers is a good example
of a modern single-user, single-task operating
system.
6What Kinds Are There?
- Single-user, multi-tasking - Type of operating
system most people use on their desktop and
laptop computers today. - Multi-user - A multi-user operating system allows
many different users to take advantage of the
computer's resources simultaneously. The
operating system must make sure that the
requirements of the various users are balanced,
and that each of the programs they are using has
sufficient and separate resources
7Networked is not Multi-user
- Most modern operating systems can exist in a
network. - A user on one computer on the network can connect
to shared directory/folder on another computer. - However this does not necessarily make the
operating system multi-user. - A user connected to a shared resource on another
computer is not actually using any of that
computers CPU or memory.
8Networked is not Multi-user
- Using this yardstick UNIX/Linux is considered
multi-user. - When a user on another computer connects to a
UNIX computer using telnet or X-Windows then that
user is actually using CPU and memory resources
on the UNIX computer. - UNIX/Linux can also function as a networked
computer when running services such as NFS or
Samba.
9Networked is not Multi-user
- Like UNIX, Windows can function as a networked
computer. - When the File and Printer Sharing Service is
enabled, users on other computers on the network
can connect to shared folders and printers. - Users connected to those shared resources are not
actually utilising the CPU or memory of the
computer housing the shares.
10Networked is not Multi-user
- Here are some features of Windows that may
qualify it as a multi-user OS. - Windows XP has a switch user function, a second
user can log onto Windows XP while leaving most
of the first users programs running. - Windows 2000/2003 Server has a telnet server,
similar to the telnet service in UNIX. - Windows 2000/2003 Server can function as a
terminal services server, users connected as
terminal services clients will actually be using
the CPU and memory of the Windows server.
11History of UNIX
- Late 1960s UNIX designed by Ken Thomson of ATT
Bell Laboratories. - 1973 - UNIX rewritten in the C-language by Dennis
Ritchie, and distributed for a small fee to
universities. - 1976 - First commercial version, UNIX Version 6,
developed by ATT. - 1980 - Berkeley Software Distribution (BSD) UNIX
produced.
12History of LINUX
- 1985 - Richard Stallman releases his GNU (aka
"GNU is Not Unix") Manifesto thus starting the
open source revolution. - 1987 - Andrew Tannenbaum creates MINIX, a small,
highly portable Unix clone for educational/academi
c purposes. - Sep 1991 Linus Torvalds releases Linux version
0.01's source code. It isnt an independent OS
due to the fact that it still needs MINIX to
compile.
13History of LINUX
- Dec 1991 Linux v0.11 released as a standalone
operating system with floppy disk support. - 1993 Slackware Linux v1.00 released by Patrick
Volkerding. - 1994 RedHat Linux v1.00 released.
- 1996 Debian Linux v1.00 released.
14Red Hat Linux Screen Shot
15History of Windows
- 1975 Microsoft founded by Bill Gates and Paul
Allen. - 1981 MS-DOS v1.0 released.
- 1985 Windows v1.0 released as a GUI running on
top of MS-DOS. - 1992 Windows for Workgroups v3.11 released with
integrated network capability. - 1992 NT 3.1 released, MS-DOS independent.
16History of Windows
- 1994 NT 3.5 released, 32-bit processing.
- 1995 Windows 95 released as an upgrade to
Windows 3.11. - 1998 Windows 98 released.
- 2000 Windows 2000 released.
- 2001 Windows XP released, 64-bit version
available. - 2003 Windows Server 2003 released.
17What is Macintosh OS X
- Mac OS X is a super-modern operating system that
combines the power and stability of UNIX with the
legendary elegance of the Macintosh.Mac OS X
features a stunning new user interface called
Aqua, making work and play on the Mac even more
intuitive for new users, while providing
powerful, customizable tools for professionals.
At the foundation of Mac OS X lies an
industrial-strength UNIX-based core operating
system that delivers unprecedented stability and
performance. - Quote from http//www.apple.com/macosx/techspecs
18Macintosh OS X Screen Shot