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Unit 02 - Process & Threads

This document discusses processes and process management in operating systems. It covers key topics such as the process concept, process states, process scheduling, and operations on processes like creation and termination. Processes are the active entities that execute programs, and they have multiple parts like code, data, and stack segments. Process management is important for CPU utilization and involves scheduling processes between ready, running, waiting and terminated states. The operating system uses process control blocks and context switching to manage multiple concurrent processes.

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Assel Majed
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0% found this document useful (0 votes)
25 views56 pages

Unit 02 - Process & Threads

This document discusses processes and process management in operating systems. It covers key topics such as the process concept, process states, process scheduling, and operations on processes like creation and termination. Processes are the active entities that execute programs, and they have multiple parts like code, data, and stack segments. Process management is important for CPU utilization and involves scheduling processes between ready, running, waiting and terminated states. The operating system uses process control blocks and context switching to manage multiple concurrent processes.

Uploaded by

Assel Majed
Copyright
© © All Rights Reserved
We take content rights seriously. If you suspect this is your content, claim it here.
Available Formats
Download as PPT, PDF, TXT or read online on Scribd
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Chapter 3: Processes

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne


Chapter 3: Processes
 Process Concept
 Process Scheduling
 Operations on Processes
 Inter-process Communication
 Example of IPC System
 Communication in Client-Server Systems

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Process Concept
 An operating system executes a variety of programs:
 Batch system – jobs
 Time-shared systems – user programs or tasks
 Textbook uses the terms job and process almost
interchangeably
 Process – a program in execution; process execution must
progress in sequential fashion
 Multiple parts
 The program code, also called text section
 Current activity including program counter, processor
registers
 Stack containing temporary data
 Function parameters, return addresses, local variables
 Data section containing global variables
 Heap containing memory dynamically allocated during run
time

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Process Concept (Cont.)
 Program is passive entity stored on disk (executable
file), process is active
 Program becomes process when executable file
loaded into memory
 Execution of program started via GUI mouse clicks,
command line entry of its name, etc
 One program can be several processes
 Consider multiple users executing the same
program

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Process State

 As a process executes, it changes state


 new: The process is being created
 running: Instructions are being executed
 waiting: The process is waiting for some event to
occur
 ready: The process is waiting to be assigned to a
processor
 terminated: The process has finished execution

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Diagram of Process State

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Process Control Block (PCB)
Information associated with each
process
(also called task control block)
 Process state – running, waiting, etc
 Program counter – location of
instruction to next execute
 CPU registers – contents of all
process-centric registers
 CPU scheduling information-
priorities, scheduling queue pointers
 Memory-management information –
memory allocated to the process
 Accounting information – CPU used,
clock time elapsed since start, time
limits
 I/O status information – I/O devices
allocated to process, list of open files

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
CPU Switch From Process to Process

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Process Scheduling

 Maximize CPU use, quickly switch processes onto


CPU for time sharing
 Process scheduler selects among available
processes for next execution on CPU
 Maintains scheduling queues of processes
 Job queue – set of all processes in the system
 Ready queue – set of all processes residing in
main memory, ready and waiting to execute
 Device queues – set of processes waiting for an
I/O device
 Processes migrate among the various queues

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Schedulers
 Short-term scheduler (or CPU scheduler) – selects which
process should be executed next and allocates CPU
 Sometimes the only scheduler in a system
 Short-term scheduler is invoked frequently (milliseconds)
 (must be fast)
 Long-term scheduler (or job scheduler) – selects which
processes should be brought into the ready queue
 Long-term scheduler is invoked infrequently (seconds,
minutes)  (may be slow)
 The long-term scheduler controls the degree of
multiprogramming
 Processes can be described as either:
 I/O-bound process – spends more time doing I/O than
computations, many short CPU bursts
 CPU-bound process – spends more time doing
computations; few very long CPU bursts
 Long-term scheduler strives for good process mix

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Context Switch
 When CPU switches to another process, the
system must save the state of the old process and
load the saved state for the new process via a
context switch
 Context of a process represented in the PCB
 Context-switch time is overhead; the system does
no useful work while switching
 The more complex the OS and the PCB  the
longer the context switch
 Time dependent on hardware support
 Some hardware provides multiple sets of
registers per CPU  multiple contexts loaded at
once

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Operations on Processes

 System must provide mechanisms for:


1. process creation
2. process termination

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
1. Process Creation
 Parent process create children processes, which,
in turn create other processes, forming a tree of
processes
 Generally, process identified and managed via a
process identifier (pid)
 Resource sharing options
 Parent and children share all resources
 Children share subset of parent’s resources
 Parent and child share no resources
 Execution options
 Parent and children execute concurrently
 Parent waits until children terminate

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
A Tree of Processes in Linux

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Process Creation (Cont.)
 Address space
 Child duplicate of parent
 Child has a program loaded into it
 UNIX examples
 fork() system call creates new process
 exec() system call used after a fork() to replace
the process’ memory space with a new program

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
2. Process Termination
 Process executes last statement and then asks the
operating system to delete it using the exit() system call.
 Returns status data from child to parent (via wait())
 Process’ resources are deallocated by operating system
 Parent may terminate the execution of children processes
using the abort() system call. Some reasons for doing so:
 Child has exceeded allocated resources
 Task assigned to child is no longer required
 The parent is exiting and the operating systems does
not allow a child to continue if its parent terminates
 Some operating systems do not allow child to exists if its
parent has terminated. If a process terminates, then all its
children must also be terminated.

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Multiprocess Architecture – Chrome Browser

 Many web browsers ran as single process (some still


do)
 If one web site causes trouble, entire browser can
hang or crash
 Google Chrome Browser is multiprocess with 3
different types of processes:
 Browser process manages user interface, disk and
network I/O
 Renderer process renders web pages, deals with
HTML, Javascript. A new renderer created for each
website opened
 Runs in sandbox restricting disk and network I/O,
minimizing effect of security exploits
 Plug-in process for each type of plug-in

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Interprocess Communication
 Processes within a system may be independent or
cooperating
 Cooperating process can affect or be affected by other
processes, including sharing data
 Reasons for cooperating processes:
 Information sharing
 Computation speedup
 Modularity
 Convenience
 Cooperating processes need interprocess communication
(IPC)
 Two models of IPC
 Shared memory
 Message passing

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Communications Models
(a) Message passing. (b) shared memory.

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Interprocess Communication – Message Passing

 Mechanism for processes to communicate and to


synchronize their actions

 Message system – processes communicate with


each other without resorting to shared variables

 IPC facility provides two operations:


 send(message)
 receive(message)

 The message size is either fixed or variable


 If processes P and Q wish to communicate, they
need to:
 Establish a communication link between them
 Exchange messages via send/receive

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Interprocess Communication – Shared Memory

 An area of memory shared among the processes


that wish to communicate
 The communication is under the control of the
users processes not the operating system.
 Major issues is to provide mechanism that will
allow the user processes to synchronize their
actions when they access shared memory.

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Cooperating Processes
 Independent process cannot affect or be affected by
the execution of another process
 Cooperating process can affect or be affected by the
execution of another process
 Advantages of process cooperation
 Information sharing
 Computation speed-up
 Modularity
 Convenience

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Example of IPC System – Windows

 Message-passing centric via advanced local procedure


call (LPC) facility
 Only works between processes on the same system
 Uses ports (like mailboxes) to establish and
maintain communication channels
 Communication works as follows:
 The client opens a handle to the subsystem’s
connection port object.
 The client sends a connection request.
 The server creates two private communication
ports and returns the handle to one of them to
the client.
 The client and server use the corresponding port
handle to send messages or callbacks and to
listen for replies.

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Communications in Client-Server Systems

1. Sockets
2. Remote Procedure Calls
3. Pipes

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
1. Sockets
 A socket is defined as an endpoint for
communication

 Concatenation of IP address and port – a number


included at start of message packet to differentiate
network services on a host

 The socket 161.25.19.8:1625 refers to port 1625 on


host 161.25.19.8

 Communication consists between a pair of sockets

 All ports below 1024 are well known, used for


standard services

 Special IP address 127.0.0.1 (loopback) to refer to


system on which process is running

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Socket Communication

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
2. Remote Procedure Calls
 Remote procedure call (RPC) abstracts procedure
calls between processes on networked systems
 Again uses ports for service differentiation
 Stubs – client-side proxy for the actual procedure
on the server
 The client-side stub locates the server and
marshalls the parameters
 The server-side stub receives this message,
unpacks the marshalled parameters, and
performs the procedure on the server
 On Windows, stub code compile from
specification written in Microsoft Interface
Definition Language (MIDL)

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
3. Pipes
 Acts as a conduit allowing two processes to
communicate
 Issues:
 Is communication unidirectional or bidirectional?
 In the case of two-way communication, is it half or
full-duplex?
 Must there exist a relationship (i.e., parent-child)
between the communicating processes?
 Can the pipes be used over a network?
 Ordinary pipes – cannot be accessed from outside the
process that created it. Typically, a parent process
creates a pipe and uses it to communicate with a child
process that it created.
 Named pipes – can be accessed without a parent-child
relationship.

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Ordinary Pipes
 Unidirectional communication in standard producer-consumer style
 Producer writes to one end (the write-end of the pipe)
 Consumer reads from the other end (the read-end of the pipe)
 Require parent-child relationship between communicating
processes
 Windows calls these anonymous pipes

Named Pipes
 Named Pipes are more powerful than ordinary pipes
 Communication is bidirectional
 No parent-child relationship is necessary for communicating
processes
 Provided on both UNIX and Windows systems

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Chapter 4: Threads

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne


Chapter 4: Threads
 Introduction
 Multicore Programming
 Multithreading Models
 Thread Libraries
 Implicit Threading
 Threading Issues
 Examples

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Introduction

 Most modern applications are multithreaded


 Threads run within application
 Multiple tasks with the application can be
implemented by separate threads
 Update display
 Fetch data
 Spell checking
 Answer a network request
 Process creation is heavy-weight while thread
creation is light-weight
 Can simplify code, increase efficiency
 Kernels are generally multithreaded

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Multithreaded Server Architecture

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Benefits

 Responsiveness – may allow continued execution if


part of process is blocked, especially important for
user interfaces
 Resource Sharing – threads share resources of
process, easier than shared memory or message
passing
 Economy – cheaper than process creation, thread
switching lower overhead than context switching
 Scalability – process can take advantage of
multiprocessor architectures

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Multicore Programming

 Multicore or multiprocessor systems putting pressure on


programmers, challenges include:
 Dividing activities
 Balance
 Data splitting
 Data dependency
 Testing and debugging
 Parallelism implies a system can perform more than one
task simultaneously
 Concurrency supports more than one task making
progress
 Single processor / core, scheduler providing
concurrency

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Multicore Programming (Cont.)

 Types of parallelism
 Data parallelism – distributes subsets of the
same data across multiple cores, same operation
on each
 Task parallelism – distributing threads across
cores, each thread performing unique operation
 As # of threads grows, so does architectural support
for threading
 CPUs have cores as well as hardware threads
 Consider Oracle SPARC T4 with 8 cores, and 8
hardware threads per core

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Concurrency vs. Parallelism
 Concurrent execution on single-core system:

 Parallelism on a multi-core system:

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Single and Multithreaded Processes

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
User Threads and Kernel Threads
 User threads - management done by user-level threads library
 Three primary thread libraries:
 POSIX Pthreads
 Windows threads
 Java threads
 Kernel threads - Supported by the Kernel
 Examples – virtually all general-purpose operating systems,
including:
 Windows
 Solaris
 Linux
 Tru64 UNIX
 Mac OS X

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Multithreading Models

 Many-to-One

 One-to-One

 Many-to-Many

 Two-Level

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Many-to-One

 Many user-level threads mapped


to single kernel thread
 One thread blocking causes all
to block
 Multiple threads may not run in
parallel on muticore system
because only one may be in
kernel at a time
 Few systems currently use this
model
 Examples:
 Solaris Green Threads
 GNU Portable Threads

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
One-to-One
 Each user-level thread maps to kernel
thread
 Creating a user-level thread creates a
kernel thread
 More concurrency than many-to-one
 Number of threads per process
sometimes restricted due to overhead
 Examples
 Windows
 Linux
 Solaris 9 and later

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Many-to-Many Model
 Allows many user level threads
to be mapped to many kernel
threads
 Allows the operating system
to create a sufficient number
of kernel threads
 Solaris prior to version 9
 Windows with the ThreadFiber
package

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Two-level Model
 Similar to M:M, except that it allows a user
thread to be bound to kernel thread
 Examples
 IRIX
 HP-UX
 Tru64 UNIX
 Solaris 8 and earlier

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.44 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Thread Libraries
 Thread library provides programmer with API for creating and
managing threads
 Two primary ways of implementing
 Library entirely in user space
 Kernel-level library supported by the OS

Pthreads
 May be provided either as user-level or kernel-level
 A POSIX standard (IEEE 1003.1c) API for thread creation and
synchronization
 Specification, not implementation
 API specifies behavior of the thread library, implementation is up
to development of the library
 Common in UNIX operating systems (Solaris, Linux, Mac OS X)

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.45 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Java Threads

 Java threads are managed by the JVM


 Typically implemented using the threads model
provided by underlying OS
 Java threads may be created by:

 Extending Thread class


 Implementing the Runnable interface

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.46 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Implicit Threading

 Growing in popularity as numbers of threads


increase, program correctness more difficult with
explicit threads
 Creation and management of threads done by
compilers and run-time libraries rather than
programmers
 Two methods are explored
 Thread Pools
 Grand Central Dispatch

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.47 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Thread Pools
 Create a number of threads in a pool where they
await work
 Advantages:
 Usually slightly faster to service a request with
an existing thread than create a new thread
 Allows the number of threads in the
application(s) to be bound to the size of the
pool
 Separating task to be performed from
mechanics of creating task allows different
strategies for running task
 i.e.Tasks could be scheduled to run
periodically
 Windows API supports thread pools

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.48 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Grand Central Dispatch

 Apple technology for Mac OS X and iOS operating


systems
 Extensions to C, C++ languages, API, and run-time
library
 Allows identification of parallel sections
 Manages most of the details of threading
 Blocks placed in dispatch queue
 Assigned to available thread in thread pool when
removed from queue

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.49 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Threading Issues
 Semantics of fork() and exec() system calls
 Signal handling
 Synchronous and asynchronous
 Thread cancellation of target thread
 Asynchronous or deferred
 Thread-local storage
 Scheduler Activations

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.50 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Signal Handling
 Signals are used in UNIX systems to notify a
process that a particular event has occurred.
 A signal handler is used to process signals
1. Signal is generated by particular event
2. Signal is delivered to a process
3. Signal is handled by one of two signal
handlers:
1. default
2. user-defined
 Every signal has default handler that kernel runs
when handling signal
 User-defined signal handler can override
default
 For single-threaded, signal delivered to
process

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.51 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Signal Handling (Cont.)
 Where should a signal be delivered for multi-
threaded?
 Deliver the signal to the thread to which the
signal applies
 Deliver the signal to every thread in the
process
 Deliver the signal to certain threads in the
process
 Assign a specific thread to receive all signals
for the process

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.52 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Thread Cancellation
 Terminating a thread before it has finished
 Thread to be canceled is target thread
 Two general approaches:
 Asynchronous cancellation terminates the target
thread immediately
 Deferred cancellation allows the target thread to
periodically check if it should be cancelled

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.53 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Scheduler Activations
 Both M:M and Two-level models require
communication to maintain the appropriate
number of kernel threads allocated to the
application
 Typically use an intermediate data
structure between user and kernel threads
– lightweight process (LWP)
 Appears to be a virtual processor on
which process can schedule user thread
to run
 Each LWP attached to kernel thread
 How many LWPs to create?
 Scheduler activations provide upcalls - a
communication mechanism from the kernel
to the upcall handler in the thread library
 This communication allows an application
to maintain the correct number kernel
threads

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.54 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Example 1: Windows Threads

 Windows implements the Windows API – primary


API for Win 98, Win NT, Win 2000, Win XP, and Win
7
 Implements the one-to-one mapping, kernel-level
 Each thread contains
 A thread id
 Register set representing state of processor
 Separate user and kernel stacks for when
thread runs in user mode or kernel mode
 Private data storage area used by run-time
libraries and dynamic link libraries (DLLs)
 The register set, stacks, and private storage area
are known as the context of the thread

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.55 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne
Example 2: Linux Threads
 Linux refers to them as tasks rather than threads
 Thread creation is done through clone() system call
 clone() allows a child task to share the address
space of the parent task (process)
 Flags control behavior

Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition 3.56 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne

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