代写 C operating system software 


CITS2002 Systems Programming
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Department of Computer Science and Software Engineering
CITS2002 Systems Programming
Project 1 2019. See also: Project 1 clarifications

The goal of this project is to implement a program to simulate a single-CPU, multi-device, pre-emptive process scheduler and to evaluate its effectiveness for varying job-mixes. Successful completion of the project will develop your understanding of some advanced features of the C99 programming language, and your understanding of how an operating system can manage processes.

Project Description
Modern operating systems maintain a lot of state information to support their operation. Some of this information can be periodically captured to provide a snapshot of a currently running system, or logged for later analysis. For example, a tracefile can contain a summary of the execution history of completed processes, and the information may be used to improve the execution of future processes.

In combination, the execution requirements of processes and the input/output (I/O) operations they perform, is termed the job-mix. This project will use the information in a tracefile to find the near-optimal scheduling of processes, in the belief that future job-mixes will be similar to that in a recent tracefile.

Our Operating System Model
Consider an operating system’s 5-State Model of Process Execution, as introduced in Lecture 8.
New processes are admitted to the system and are immediately marked as Ready to run.
Each process executes, in turn, until it:

completes its execution (at which time the process Exits),
executes for a finite time-quantum (after which the process is marked as Ready and is queued until it can again Run), or
requests some input or output (I/O) (at which time the process is marked as Blocked and queued until its I/O request is satisfied).

For this project we’ll consider a simplified operating system in which only a single process occupies the single CPU at any one time. The CPU has a clock speed of 1GHz, enabling it to execute one-billion instructions per second (or 1000 instructions per microsecond, 1000000 instructions per millisecond). For this simplified project, we do not need to consider any RAM accesses.
It takes 5 microseconds to perform a context-switch – to move one process from Ready → Running. No time is consumed deciding that the currently Running process can remaining Running (and start a new time-quantum). All other state transitions occur in zero time (unrealistic, but keeping the project simple).
The CPU is connected to a number of input/output (I/O) devices of differing speeds, using a single high-speed data-bus. Only a single process can use the data-bus at any one time, and it takes 5 microseconds for any process to first acquire the data-bus.
Only a single process can access each I/O device (and the data-bus) at any one time. If the data-bus is in use (data is still being transferred) and a second process also needs to access the data-bus, the second process must be queued until the current transfer is complete. When a data transfer completes, all waiting (queued) processes are consider to determine which process can next acquire the data-bus. If multiple processes are waiting to acquire the data-bus, the process that has been waiting the longest for the device with the highest priority will next acquire the data-bus. Thus, all processes waiting on higher priority devices are serviced before any processes that are waiting on lower priority devices.
The result is a need to support Multiple blocked queues, as introduced in Lecture 8.

Tracefiles
Consider the following lines from the beginning of text file termed a tracefile. We may assume that the format of each tracefile is correct, and its data consistent, so we do not need to check for errors in the tracefile.

device usb2 60000000 bytes/sec
device kb 10 bytes/sec
device ssd 240000000 bytes/sec
device hd 80000000 bytes/sec
reboot

Each line provides a device definition including its name and its data transfer rate (all transfer rates are measured in bytes/second). Devices with higher transfer rates have a higher priority and are serviced first. The final line indicates the end of all device definitions, and that the operating system commences execution setting the system-time to zero microseconds. All times in the tracefile are measured in microseconds.
The following lines of the same tracefile provide the execution summary of two processes:

process 1 200 {
i/o 100 hd 1600
i/o 110 usb2 1600
i/o 180 hd 1000
i/o 190 usb2 1000
exit 400
}
process 2 480 {
i/o 8000 usb2 40
exit 8005
}

Process number 1 commenced execution at 200 microseconds (after the operating system rebooted). Then, after the process has executed for a total of 100 microseconds (occupying the CPU for a total of 100 microseconds), the process transfers 1600 bytes from the device named ‘hd’. After a further 10 microseconds of execution time, the process transfers 1600 bytes of data to the device named ‘usb2’, and so on. We might assume that the process is copying a small file from ‘hd’ to ‘usb2’. The process finally exits after it has executed for a total on 400 microseconds.
Process 2 is computationally intensive – it commenced execution at 480 microseconds (after the operating system reboots), performs only a single I/O transfer (saving its answer), and then exits after 8005 microseconds of execution time.

As process 2 commenced execution before process 1 exits, they will need to share the CPU. When both processes exist, each process executes on the single CPU until it exits, until it performs some I/O, or until its finite time-quantum expires.

Run the sample solution: https://secure.csse.uwa.edu.au/run/besttq-sample

Download, understand, and then extend this C99 starting file: besttq.c

Evaluating Operating System Scheduling Effectiveness
There are a number of ways to measure the effectiveness of an operating system’s process scheduling. There can be no single perfect measure of its effectiveness as it is very dependent on the job-mix to be scheduled, and the data transfer rates of the system’s devices. For this project we will use the total process completion time to evaluate our process scheduling. With reference to our simple tracefile above, the total process completion time is the time from the commencement of the first process to the time that the final process exits.

Under our simple operating system model, the time-quantum may be varied to permit each process to occupy the CPU for different lengths of time. Varying the time-quantum will result in the same job-mix exhibiting different total process completion times. With a short time-quantum, a system running many processes will give each of those processes a frequent chance to ‘make progress’, and will appear very responsive. With a long time-quantum, computationally-intensive processes can perform a lot of their execution, but delay the execution of other processes waiting for the CPU, and may make the system appear sluggish.
Each job-mix (recorded in a tracefile) will have a near optimal time-quantum that minimises the total process completion time. If future job-mixes are similar to the one in a given tracefile, and we can determine a good time-quantum, then we can tune our process scheduling to match our anticipated job-mix.

Project requirements
You are required to develop and test a program that determines the time-quantum providing the best (shortest) total process completion time for a given tracefile.

Your program, named besttq, should accept command-line arguments providing the name of the tracefile and three integers representing times measured in microseconds. The program is only required to produce a single line of output (though you may wish to produce several more lines, as a form of debugging) reporting the best time-quantum found.
For example, the following command might produce the single line of output:
prompt> ./besttq  tracefile1  100  2000  100
best  1600  440800

The command reads and evaluates (simulates, ‘executes’) the contents of the tracefile several times, employing different time-quanta, to find which time-quantum results in the lowest total process completion time.
The command, above, considers the different time-quantum values of 100 microseconds, 200 microseconds, … 2000 microseconds (just like a for loop in C99). The program has determined that the best time-quantum for the given job-mix is 1600 microseconds and which results in a total process completion time of 440800  microseconds.
Your program can print out any additional information (debugging?) that you want – just ensure that the last line is of the form “best  1600  440800”.
Assessment
The project is due 11:59PM Fri 13th September, and is worth 20% of your final mark for CITS2002.
It will be marked out of 40. The project may be completed individually or in teams of two (but not teams of three).

You are strongly encouraged to work with someone else – this will enable you to discuss your initial design, and to assist each other to develop and debug your joint solution. Work together – do not attempt to split the project into two equal parts, and then plan to meet near the deadline to join your parts together.
20 of the possible 40 marks will come from the correctness of your solution. The remaining 20 marks will come from your programming style, including your use of meaningful comments, well chosen identifier names, appropriate choice of basic data-structures and data-types, and appropriate choice of control-flow constructs.
During the marking, attention will obviously be given to the correctness of your solution. However, a correct and efficient solution should not be considered as the perfect, nor necessarily desirable, form of solution. Preference will be given to well presented, well documented solutions that use the appropriate features of the language to complete tasks in an easy to understand and easy to follow manner. That is, do not expect to receive full marks for your project simply because it works correctly. Remember, a computer program should not only convey a message to the computer, but also to other human programmers.
Your project will be marked on the computers in CSSE Lab 2.03, using the macOS environment. No allowance will be made for a program that “works at home” but not on CSSE Lab 2.03 computers, so be sure that your code compiles and executes correctly on these machines before you submit it.

Submission requirements
1. The deadline for the project is 11:59PM Friday 13th September (end of week 7). 

2. Your submission will be compiled, run, and examined using the macOS platform on computers in CSSE Lab 2.03. Your submission must work as expected on this platform. While you may develop your project on other computers, excuses such as “it worked at home, just not in the lab!”  will not be accepted. 

3. Your submission’s C99 source file should each begin with the C99 block comment:
4. /* CITS2002 Project 1 2019
5. Name(s): student-name1 (, student-name2)
6. Student number(s): student-number-1 (, student-number-2)
7. */
8. 

If working as a team, only one team member should make the team’s submission. 

9. You must submit your project electronically using cssubmit. You should submit a single C99 source-code file, named besttq.c. You do not need to submit any additional testing scripts or files that you used while developing your project. The cssubmit facility will give you a receipt of your submission. You should print and retain this receipt in case of any dispute. Note also that the cssubmit facility does not archive submissions and will simply overwrite any previous submission with your latest submission. 

10. This project is subject to UWA’s Policy on Assessment – particularly §10.2 Principles of submission and penalty for late submission. In accordance with this policy, you may discuss with other students the general principles required to understand this project, but the work you submit must be the result of your own efforts. All projects will be compared using software that detects significant similarities between source code files. Students suspected of plagiarism will be interviewed and will be required to demonstrate their full understanding of their project submission.
Good luck!

Chris McDonald.

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This Page
Last updated:
Wed Sep 11 2019 09:26:47 GMT+0800 (中国标准时间)
Written by: Chris.McDonald@uwa.edu.au