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Advanced Operating Systems • Welcome to this course, in Fall Semester 1389-90 • Main TextBooks 1- Tanenbaum’s book 2- Chow’s Book 3- Singhal’s Book • Other extra references: 1- Attieh’s book 2- Lynch’s book OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Advanced Operating Systems • Assistants: to be announced. • Evaluation: – – – – Mid-Term Exam Project Review Paper Final Exam • The course Home page and Mailing-list … • Office Hours: Sunday and Tuesday 8 - 9 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili 1 Introduction to Distributed Systems and Distributed Operating Systems (DOSs) (From Tanenbaum’s Book) OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Definition of a Distributed System (1) A distributed system is: A collection of independent computers that appears to its users as a single coherent system. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Definition of a Distributed System (2) 1.1 A distributed system organized as middleware. Note that the middleware layer extends over multiple machines. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Goals in DSs • Connecting Users and Resources • Transparency • Openness • Scalability Will be discussed in the next slides. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Transparency in Distributed Systems Transparency Description Access Hide differences in data representation and how a resource is accessed Location Hide where a resource is located Migration Hide that a resource may move to another location Relocation Hide that a resource may be moved to another location while in use Replication Hide that a resource may be shared by several competitive users Concurrency Hide that a resource may be shared by several competitive users Failure Hide the failure and recovery of a resource Persistence Hide whether a (software) resource is in memory or on disk Different forms of transparency in a distributed system. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Degree of Transparency • Is transparency good anytime and everywhere? • Tradeoff between transparency and performance. - Updating a replicated database! OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Openness • Offering services based on standards. • Services are specified through interfaces, described in IDL (Interface Definition Language) • Interoperability: two implementations of a system to co-exist and work together; or multiple systems developed by different vendors to be able to work with each other. • Portability: An application developed to work on A can be executed on another system B. • Separating policy from mechanism OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Scalability • Definition of an scalable system? • 3 different dimensions – Size: Adding more users and resources to the system. – Geography: Users and resources can lie far apart. – Administration: Many administration organization! OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Scalability Obstacles Concept Example Centralized services A single server for all users Centralized data A single on-line telephone book Centralized algorithms Doing routing based on complete information Examples of scalability limitations. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Scalability Solutions 1. Hiding communication latencies: try to avoid waiting for responses to remote service requests Use Asynchronous Communication • • Many applications cannot run on an asynch communication system Next slide example. 2. Distribution: DNS as example 3. Replication: Caching and consistency! OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Scaling Techniques (1) 1.4 The difference between letting: a) a server or b) a client check forms as they are being filled OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Scaling Techniques (2) 1.5 An example of dividing the DNS name space into zones. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Hardware Concepts 1.6 Different basic organizations and memories in distributed computer systems OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Multiprocessors A bus-based multiprocessor. 1.7 • Memory is Coherent. • The bus is overloaded. • Caching: hit-rate? • Scalability? OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Software Concepts System Description Main Goal DOS Tightly-coupled operating system for multiprocessors and homogeneous multicomputers Hide and manage hardware resources NOS Loosely-coupled operating system for heterogeneous multicomputers (LAN and WAN) Offer local services to remote clients Middleware Additional layer atop of NOS implementing general-purpose services Provide distribution transparency An overview of • DOS (Distributed Operating Systems) • NOS (Network Operating Systems) • Middleware OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Uniprocessor Operating Systems Separating applications from operating system code through a microkernel. 1.11 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Multiprocessor Operating Systems (1) A monitor to protect an integer against concurrent access. monitor Counter { private: int count = 0; public: int value() { return count;} void incr () { count = count + 1;} void decr() { count = count – 1;} } OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Multiprocessor Operating Systems (2) A monitor to protect an integer against concurrent access, but blocking a process. monitor Counter { void decr() { private: if (count ==0) { int count = 0; int blocked_procs = 0; blocked_procs = blocked_procs + 1; condition unblocked; wait (unblocked); blocked_procs = blocked_procs – 1; public: } int value () { return count;} else void incr () { count = count – 1; if (blocked_procs == 0) count = count + 1; } } else signal (unblocked); } OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Multicomputer Operating Systems (1) General structure of a multicomputer operating system Message Passing 1.14 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-90-91; R. Jalili Distributed Shared Memory Systems (1) a) Pages of address space distributed among four machines b) Situation after CPU 1 references page 10 c) Situation if page 10 is read only and replication is used OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili DSM – An Interesting Scenario! False sharing of a page between two independent processes. 1.18 False Sharing! OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Network Operating System (1) General structure of a network operating system. 1-19 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Network Operating System (2) Two clients and a server in a network operating system. 1-20 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Network Operating System (3) Different clients may mount the servers in different places. 1.21 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Positioning Middleware General structure of a distributed system as middleware. 1-22 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Middleware and Openness 1.23 In an open middleware-based distributed system, the protocols used by each middleware layer should be the same, as well as the interfaces they offer to applications. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Comparison between Systems Distributed OS Item Network OS Middlewarebased OS Multiproc. Multicomp. Very High High Low High Yes Yes No No Number of copies of OS 1 N N N Basis for communication Shared memory Messages Files Model specific Resource management Global, central Global, distributed Per node Per node Scalability No Moderately Yes Varies Openness Closed Closed Open Open Degree of transparency Same OS on all nodes OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Clients and Servers General interaction between a client and a server. 1.25 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili An Example Client and Server (1) The header.h file used by the client and server. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili An Example Client and Server (2) A sample server. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili An Example Client and Server (3) 1-27 b A client using the server to copy a file. OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Application Layering:Processing Level The general organization of an Internet search engine into three different layers 1-28 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Multitiered Architectures (1) Alternative client-server organizations (a) – (e). 1-29 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Multitiered Architectures (2) An example of a server acting as a client. 1-30 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili Modern Architectures An example of horizontal distribution of a Web service. 1-31 OS2-Sharif University of Technology - Sem1-89-90; R. Jalili