Mca 1 Semester Operating System With Lab (MCC - 1.5) Full Marks - 100 (Mid Semester Lab: 20 Marks End Semester: 80 Marks)
Mca 1 Semester Operating System With Lab (MCC - 1.5) Full Marks - 100 (Mid Semester Lab: 20 Marks End Semester: 80 Marks)
Full marks – 100 (Mid Semester Lab : 20 Marks; End Semester: 80 Marks)
Unit I
Introduction: What is an Operating System, Simple Batch Systems, Multiprogramming and Time
Sharing systems. Personal Computer Systems, Parallel Systems, Distributed Systems and Real
time Systems, Operating system structures: OS Services, system calls, operating system
structure, Process Management: Process concept, Process Scheduling, Operation on Processes,
Cooperating Processes. Interprocess communication. Threads, CPU Scheduling: Basic concepts,
scheduling criteria, scheduling algorithms
Unit II
Process synchronization: Background, Critical section problem, Semaphore, Overview of
classicalsynchronization problem, Monitors, Deadlocks: System model, Deadlock
Characterization Methods for Handling Deadlocks, Deadlock Prevention, Deadlock avoidance,
Deadlock Detection, Recovery from Deadlock.
Unit III
Memory management: Background, address Binding, Logical versus Physical Address space,
Overlays, contiguous Allocation, Paging, Segmentation, Segmentation with paging, Virtual
Memory: Background, Demand paging, performance of Demand paging, Page, Replacement
Algorithms, Allocation of frames, Thrashing
Unit IV
File-system: File concept, Access Methods, RAID, Directory structure & implementation,
Allocation Method, Free space management, I/O systems: Overview, I/O Hardware, Application
of I/O interface, Kernel I/O-subsystem Transforming I/O requests to Hardware Operations,
Secondary storage Structure: Disk Structure, Disk Scheduling, Disk Management, Swap space
Management, Disk Reliability
Unit V:
Security Environment, Design Principles Of Security, User Authentication, Protection
Mechanism: Protection Domain, Access Control List, Development of Unix/Linux, Role &
Function of Kernel, System Calls, Elementary Linux command & Shell Programming, Directory
Structure, System Administration, Case study: Linux, Windows Operating System
Reference Books:
1. Abraham Silberschatz and Peter Bear Galvin, "Operating System Concepts",
Addison Wesley.
2. P. Blkeiahn Prasad. Moswen, SCITECH, "Operating Systems and System
Programming",Milenkovic, "Operating Systems Concepts and Design", Tata Mcgrawhill
3. Andrew, S Tannenbaum , "Operating System", PHI.
4. Y. Kanetkar “UNIX Shell Programming.”,BPB.
5. Deitel & Deitel, “ Operating System”, Pearsons
MSC 1st Semester
Mobile Communications (CSC-1.5)
Full marks – 100 (Mid Semester: 20; End Semester: 80)
UNIT I
Introduction to Wireless Networks: Evolution of Wireless Networks, Applications,
Challenges, Overview of various Wireless Networks.
Wireless transmission: Frequencies for radio transmission, signals, antennas, Signal
propagation.
Multiplexing (Space Division Multiplexing, Frequency Division Multiplexing, Time Division
Multiplexing, Code Division Multiplexing, Orthogonal Frequency Division Multiplexing),
Modulation(Amplitude shift keying, Frequency shift keying, Phase shift keying), spread
spectrum (Direct Sequence Spread Spectrum ,Frequency Hopping Spread Spectrum).
UNIT II
Motivation for a specialized MAC: Hidden and exposed terminal, Near and far terminals.
SDMA, FDMA, TDMA: Fixed TDM, Classical Aloha, Slotted Aloha, Carrier sense multiple
access, Demand assigned multiple access, PRMA packet reservation multiple access,
Reservation TDMA, Multiple access with collision avoidance, Polling, Inhibit sense multiple
access, CDMA: Spread Aloha multiple access.
UNIT III
GSM: Mobile services, System architecture, Radio interface, Protocols, Localization and
calling, Handover, Security, New data services,
Mobile IP : Goals, assumptions and requirements, Entities and terminology, IP packet
delivery, Agent discovery, Registration, Tunneling and encapsulation, Optimizations,
Reverse tunneling , IPv6, IP micro-mobility support
UNIT IV
Wireless LAN : Infra red vs radio transmission, Infrastructure and ad-hoc network,
IEEE 802.11: System architecture, Protocol architecture, Physical layer(FHSS,DSSS),
Medium access control layer (Basic DFWMAC-DCF using CSMA/CA, DFWMAC-DCF
with RTS/CTS extension, DFWMAC-PCF with polling), MAC frames, MAC
management(Registration,Handoff, Power Management).
UNIT V
Third Generation (3G) Cellular Systems: Introduction, 3G Spectrum Allocation, Third
Generation Service Classes and Applications, Third Generation Standards.
Fourth Generation (4G): Introduction, Design Goals for 4G and Beyond and Related
Research Issues, 4G Services and Applications, Challenges.
Text Book:
1. Mobile Communications, by Jochen Schiller, 2nd Edition, Addison Wesley, 2003
Reference:
1. Wireless Networks, by P. Nicopolitidis, M. S. Obaidat, G. I. Papadimitriou, A. S.
Pomportsis, John Wiley.
2. Principle of Wireless Networks, by Kaveh Pahlavan and Prashant Krishnamurthy.