Title: Virtual Memory cont
1Virtual Memory contd.File System Interface
2Thrashing
- If a process does not have enough pages, the
page-fault rate is very high. This leads to - Low CPU utilization.
- Operating system thinks that it needs to increase
the degree of multiprogramming. - Another process added to the system.
- Thrashing ? a process is busy swapping pages in
and out.
3Thrashing
- Why does paging work?Locality model
- Process migrates from one locality to another.
- Localities may overlap.
- Why does thrashing occur?? size of locality gt
total memory size
4Locality in Memory-Reference Pattern
5Working-Set Model
- ? ? working-set window ? a fixed number of page
references. - WSSi (working set of Process Pi) total number
of pages referenced in the most recent ? (varies
in time) - if ? too small will not encompass entire
locality. - if ? too large will encompass several localities.
- if ? ? ? will encompass entire program.
- D ? WSSi ? total demand frames
- if D gt m ? Thrashing
- Policy if D gt m, then suspend one of the
processes.
6Working-set model
7Keeping Track of the Working Set
- Approximate with interval timer a reference bit
- Example ? 10,000
- Timer interrupts after every 5000 time units.
- Keep in memory 2 bits for each page.
- Whenever a timer interrupts copy and sets the
values of all reference bits to 0. - If one of the bits in memory 1 ? page in
working set. - Why is this not completely accurate?
- Improvement 10 bits and interrupt every 1000
time units.
8Page-Fault Frequency Scheme
- Establish acceptable page-fault rate.
- If actual rate too low, process loses frame.
- If actual rate too high, process gains frame.
9Memory-mapped Files
- Memory mapping a file can be accomplished by
mapping a disk block to one or more pages in
memory. - A page-sized portion of the file is read from the
file system into a physical page. Subsequent
read() and write() operations are handled as
memory (not disk) accesses. - Writing to the file in memory is not necessarily
synchronous to the file on disk. The file can be
committed back to disk when its closed.
10Memory-mapped Files
3
1
1
6
2
2
3
3
4
4
1
5
5
5
6
6
4
process A virtual memory
2
process B virtual memory
1 2 3 4 5 6
disk file
11Prepaging
- Prepaging In order to avoid the initial number
of page faults, the system can bring into memory
all the pages that will be needed all at once. - This can also be applied when a swapped-out
process is restarted. The smart thing to do is to
remember the working set of the process. - One question that arises is whether all the pages
brought in will actually be used - Is the cost of prepaging less than the cost of
servicing each individual page fault?
12File System Topics
- File Concept
- Access Methods
- Directory Structure
- File System Mounting
- File Sharing
- Protection
13File Concept
- Contiguous logical address space.
- File types
- Data
- numeric.
- character.
- binary.
- Program (executable).
14File Structure
- None just a sequence of words or bytes.
- Simple record structure
- Lines,
- Fixed length,
- Variable length.
- Complex Structures
- Formatted document,
- Relocatable load file.
- Can simulate last two with first method by
inserting appropriate control characters. - Who decides
- Operating system,
- Program.
15File Attributes
- Name only information kept in human-readable
form. - Type needed for systems that support different
types. - Location pointer to file location on device.
- Size current file size.
- Protection controls who can do reading,
writing, executing. - Time, date, and user identification data for
protection, security, and usage monitoring. - Information about files is kept in the
directory structure, which is maintained on the
disk.
16File Operations
- Create.
- Write.
- Read.
- Seek.
- Delete.
- Truncate (reset size to 0, keep current
attributes). - Open(Fi) search the directory structure on disk
for entry Fi, and move the content of entry to
memory. - Close (Fi) move the content of entry Fi in
memory to directory structure on disk.
17File Types Name and Extension
18Access Methods
- Sequential Access read next
- write next
- reset
- no read after last write
- (rewrite)
- Direct Access read n
- write n
- position to n
- read next
- write next
- rewrite n
-
- n relative block number
19Sequential-access File
20Simulation of Sequential Access on a
Direct-access File
21Example of Index and Relative Files
22Directory Structure
- Directory a symbol table that translates file
names into directory entries.
ping
emacs
ifconfig
mount
fdisk
find
Both the directory structure and the files reside
on disk. Backups of these two structures are kept
on tapes.
23Partitions and Directories(File system
organization)
24Operations on Directories
- Search for a file.
- Create a file.
- Delete a file.
- List a directory.
- Rename a file.
- Traverse the file system.
25Goals of Directory Logical Organization
- Efficiency locating a file quickly.
- Naming convenient to users.
- Two users can have same name for different files.
- The same file can have several different names.
- Grouping logical grouping of files by
properties, (e.g., all Java programs, all games,
)
26Single-Level Directory
- A single directory for all users.
Drawbacks Naming problem Grouping problem
27Two-Level Directory
- A separate directory for each user.
- Path name.
- Can have the same file name for different user.
- Efficient searching.
- No grouping capability.
28Tree-Structured Directories
29Tree-Structured Directories (Cont.)
- Efficient searching.
- Grouping Capability.
- Current directory (working directory)
- cd /spell/mail/prog,
- type list.
30Tree-Structured Directories (Cont.)
- Absolute or relative path name.
- Creating a new file is done in current directory
by default. - Delete a file
- rm ltfile-namegt
- Creating a new subdirectory is done in current
directory. - mkdir ltdir-namegt
- Example if in current directory /mail
- mkdir count
mail
prog
copy
prt
exp
count
Deleting mail ? deleting the entire subtree
rooted by mail.
31Acyclic-Graph Directories
- Have shared subdirectories and files.
32Acyclic-Graph Directories (Cont.)
- Two different names (aliasing).
- If dict deletes list ? dangling pointer.
- Solutions
- Backpointers, so we can delete all
pointers.Variable size records a problem. - Backpointers using a daisy chain organization.
- Entry-hold-count solution.
33General Graph Directory
34General Graph Directory (Cont.)
- How do we guarantee no cycles?
- Allow only links to file not subdirectories.
- Garbage collection.
- Every time a new link is added use a cycle
detectionalgorithm to determine whether it is OK.
35File System Mounting
- A file system (partition) must be mounted before
it can be accessed. - A unmounted file system needs to be attached to a
mount point before it can be accessed.
unmounted
existing
36File Sharing
- Sharing of files on multi-user systems is
desirable. - Sharing may be done through a protection scheme.
- On distributed systems, files may be shared
across a network. - Network File System (NFS) is a common distributed
file-sharing method.
37Protection
- File owner/creator should be able to control
- what can be done,
- by whom.
- Types of access
- Read,
- Write,
- Execute,
- Append,
- Delete,
- List.
38Access Lists and Groups
- Mode of access read, write, execute
- Three classes of users
-
RWX - a) owner access 7 ? 1 1 1
RWX - b) group access 6 ? 1 1 0
- RWX
- c) public access 1 ? 0 0 1
- Ask manager to create a group (unique name), say
G, and add some users to the group. - For a particular file (say game) or subdirectory,
define an appropriate access.
owner
group
public
chmod
761
game
Associate a group with a file chgrp G game