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Operating Systems Lecture-1 OS Concepts: Tahira Alam University of Asia Pacific

The document provides an overview of operating system concepts. It discusses that an operating system acts as an intermediary between the user and computer hardware, with goals of executing user programs, making problem solving easier for users, and efficiently using computer resources. It describes the components of a computer system as hardware, the operating system, application programs, and users. It defines key operating system concepts like the kernel, system programs, system calls, and shells. It explains the role of the operating system in managing programs, the CPU, memory, and external devices like disk drives.

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Md Saifullah
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
62 views

Operating Systems Lecture-1 OS Concepts: Tahira Alam University of Asia Pacific

The document provides an overview of operating system concepts. It discusses that an operating system acts as an intermediary between the user and computer hardware, with goals of executing user programs, making problem solving easier for users, and efficiently using computer resources. It describes the components of a computer system as hardware, the operating system, application programs, and users. It defines key operating system concepts like the kernel, system programs, system calls, and shells. It explains the role of the operating system in managing programs, the CPU, memory, and external devices like disk drives.

Uploaded by

Md Saifullah
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
Available Formats
Download as PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Operating Systems

Lecture-1
OS Concepts
Tahira Alam
University of Asia Pacific
What is Operating System
• A program that acts as an intermediary
between a user of a computer and the
computer hardware
• Operating system goals:
– Execute user programs and make solving user
problems easier
– Make the computer system convenient to use
– Use the computer hardware in an efficient
manner
Computer System Structure(1)
• What are the components?
Computer System Structure(2)

Application
User Software

Hardware
OS
Computer System Structure(3)
• Hardware
• Operating System
• Application Programs
• Users
Computer System Structure(4)
– Hardware – provides basic computing resources
• CPU, memory, I/O devices
– Operating system
• Controls and coordinates use of hardware among
various applications and users
Computer System Structure(5)
– Application programs – define the ways in which
the system resources are used to solve the
computing problems of the users
• Word processors, compilers, web browsers, database
systems, video games
– Users
• People, machines, other computers
Computer System Structure(6)
Some Useful Definitions(1)
Kernal
• kernel is the most important program in the
operating system.
• “The one program running at all times on the
computer”
• . Everything else is either a system program
or an application program.
Some Useful Definitions(2)
System Program:
• A program that controls some aspect of the
operation of a computer.
• used to program the operating system
software.
• Example: operating system, networking
system, web site server, data backup server
etc
Some Useful Definitions(3)
System Call:
• A system call is the programmatic way in
which a computer program requests a service
from the kernel of the operating system on
which it is executed.
Some Useful Definitions(4)
Shell:
• a shell is a user interface for access to
an operating system's services.
• In general, operating system shells use either
a command-line interface (CLI) or graphical
user interface (GUI)
Some Useful Definitions(4)
Program:
• A computer program is a collection of
instructions that can be executed by a
computer to perform a specific task.
What Happens When We Run a
Program(1)
• A compiler translates high level programs into an
executable file
• The exe contains instructions that the CPU can
understand, and data of the program (all
numbered with addresses)
• Instructions run on CPU: hardware implements
an instruction set architecture (ISA)
• CPU also consists of a few registers, e.g.,
– Pointer to current instruction (program counter or PC)
– Operands of instructions, memory addresses
What Happens When We Run a
Program(2) Exe in
• To run an exe, CPU Memory
CPU (RAM)
– fetches instruction pointed at
by PC from memory
– loads data required by the PC
instructions into registers Code
– decodes and executes the
Reg.
instruction
– stores results to memory Reg. Data
• Most recently used
instructions and data are in Reg.
CPU caches for faster access

Result
So, what does the OS do?
• OS manages program
memory
– Loads program executable Memory
(code, data) from disk to
memory
• OS manages CPU
– Initializes program
counter (PC) and other
registers to begin
execution Disk
• OS manages external devices
– Read/write files from disk.
OS manages CPU
• OS provides the process abstraction
– Process: a running program P P P
– OS creates and manages processes 1 2 3
• Each process has the illusion of
having the complete CPU, i.e., OS
virtualizes CPU
• Timeshares CPU between processes CPU
• Enables coordination between
processes
OS manages memory
Memory
• OS manages the memory
of the process: code, data, Of a Process
stack, heap etc 0
• Each process thinks it has a 1 Code
dedicated memory space 2
. Data
for itself, numbers code .
and data starting from 0 RAM .
(virtual addresses) Stack
• OS abstracts out the details
of the actual placement in . Heap
.
memory, translates from n
virtual addresses to actual
physical addresses
OS manages devices
• OS has code to manage disk, network card,
and other external devices: device drivers
• Device driver talks the language of the
hardware devices
– Issues instructions to devices (fetch data from a
file)
– Responds to interrupt events from devices (user
has pressed a key on keyboard)
• Persistent data organized as a filesystem on
disk
Interrupt
• An interrupt is a signal sent to the processor
that interrupts the current process.
• It may be generated by a hardware device or
a software program.
• A hardware interrupt is often created by
an input device such as a mouse or keyboard.
Common Functions of Interrupts
• Interrupt transfers control to the interrupt service
routine generally, through the interrupt vector, which
contains the addresses of all the service routines.
• Interrupt architecture must save the address of the
interrupted instruction.
• Incoming interrupts are disabled while another
interrupt is being processed to prevent a lost interrupt.
• A trap is a software-generated interrupt caused either
by an error or a user request.
• An operating system is interrupt driven.
Interrupt Handling
• The operating system preserves the state of the
CPU by storing registers and the program counter.
• Determines which type of interrupt has occurred:
– polling
– vectored interrupt system
• Separate segments of code determine what action
should be taken for each type of interrupt.
Design goals of an operating system
• Convenience, abstraction of hardware
resources for user programs
• Efficiency of usage of CPU, memory, etc.
• Isolation between multiple processes
Thank You

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