1.What are short, long and medium-term scheduling?
Long term scheduler : determines which programs are admitted to the system for
processing. It controls the degree of multiprogramming. Once admitted, a job
becomes a process.
Medium term scheduling : is part of the swapping function. This relates to
processes that are in a blocked or suspended state. They are swapped out of
real-memory until they are ready to execute. The swapping-in decision is based
on memory-management criteria.
Short term scheduler: also know as a dispatcher executes most frequently, and makes
the finest-grained decision of which process should execute next. This scheduler
is invoked whenever an event occurs. It may lead to interruption of one process
by preemption.
2. What are turnaround time and response time?
Turnaround
time is the interval between the submission of a job and its completion.
Response time is the interval between submission of a request, and the first
response to that request.
3. What are the typical elements of a process image?
User data:
Modifiable part of user space. May include program data, user stack area, and
programs that may be modified.
User program:
The instructions to be executed.
System Stack:
Each process has one or more LIFO stacks associated with it. Used to store
parameters and calling addresses for procedure and system calls.
Process control Block (PCB): Info needed by the OS to control processes.
4. What is the Translation Lookaside Buffer (TLB)?
In
a cached system, the base addresses of the last few referenced pages is
maintained in registers called the TLB that aids in faster lookup. TLB contains
those page-table entries that have been most recently used. Normally, each
virtual memory reference causes 2 physical memory accesses- one to fetch
appropriate page-table entry, and one to fetch the desired data. Using TLB
in-between, this is reduced to just one physical memory access in cases of
TLB-hit.
5. What is the resident set and working set of a process?
Resident
set is that portion of the process image that is actually in real-memory at a
particular instant. Working set is that subset of resident set that is actually
needed for execution. (Relate this to the variable-window size method for
swapping techniques.)
6. When is a system in safe state?
The
set of dispatchable processes is in a safe state if there exists at least one
temporal order in which all processes can be run to completion without
resulting in a deadlock.
7. What is cycle stealing?
We
encounter cycle stealing in the context of Direct Memory Access (DMA). Either
the DMA controller can use the data bus when the CPU does not need it, or it
may force the CPU to temporarily suspend operation. The latter technique is
called cycle stealing. Note that cycle stealing can be done only at specific
break points in an instruction cycle.
8. What is meant by arm-stickiness?
If
one or a few processes have a high access rate to data on one track of a
storage disk, then they may monopolize the device by repeated requests to that
track. This generally happens with most common device scheduling algorithms
(LIFO, SSTF, C-SCAN, etc). High-density multisurface disks are more likely to
be affected by this than low density ones.
9. What are the stipulations of C2 level security?
C2
level security provides for:
1. Discretionary Access Control
2. Identification and Authentication
3. Auditing
4. Resource reuse
10. What is busy waiting?
The
repeated execution of a loop of code while waiting for an event to occur is
called busy-waiting. The CPU is not engaged in any real productive activity
during this period, and the process does not progress toward completion.
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