CSCI 4320 (Principles of Operating Systems), Fall 2005:
Homework 5
- Assigned:
- November 28, 2005.
- Due:
- December 5, 2005, at 5pm.
- Credit:
- 30 points.
Be sure you have read chapter 5.
Answer the following questions. You may write out your answers by
hand or using a word processor or other program, but please submit
hard copy, either in class or in my mailbox in the department office.
- (5 points)
Consider a computer system with the following characteristics:
Reading or writing a memory word takes up to
10 nsec (i.e.,
seconds).
It has 32 CPU registers, and when an interrupt occurs,
all of them, plus the program counter and the PSW
are pushed onto the stack (in memory).
What is the maximum number of interrupts per second this
machine can process?
(Hint: Observe that after an interrupt is processed,
the contents of CPU registers, program counter, and PSW
must be restored to their pre-interrupt values by popping
them back off the stack.)
- (5 points)
Consider a printer that prints at a maximum rate of
400 characters per second,
connected to a computer system in which writing to
the printer's output register takes essentially no time.
If each character printed requires an interrupt that
takes a total of 50 microseconds (i.e.,
seconds) to process,
would it make sense to use interrupt-driven I/O to write
to this printer, or would it be better to use programmed I/O?
Why?
(Hint: How much time is required for interrupt
processing if the printer is printing at its maximum rate?)
- (5 points)
Now consider a system with a memory-mapped terminal,
and suppose that interrupts take a minimum of 100 nsec
to process and copying a byte
into the terminal's video RAM takes 10 nsec.
Would it make sense to use interrupt-driver I/O to write
to the terminal, or would it be better to use programmed I/O?
Why?
- (5 points)
The textbook divides the many routines that make up
an operating system's I/O software into four layers,
as shown in Figure 5-10. In which of these layers
should each of the following be done? Why?
- Converting floating-point numbers to ASCII for
printing.
- Computing the track, sector, and head for
a disk read operation.
- Writing commands to a printer controller's device
registers.
- Detecting that an application program is attempting
to write data from an invalid buffer address.
(Assume that detecting an invalid buffer address
can only be done in supervisor mode.)
- (5 points)
Suppose at a given point in time a disk driver has in its
queue requests to read cylinders 10, 22, 20, 2, 40, 6, and
38, received in that order. If a seek takes 5 milliseconds
(i.e.,
seconds)
per cylinder moved, and the arm is initially at cylinder 20,
how much seek time is needed to process
these requests using each of the three scheduling
algorithms discussed (FCFS, SSF, and elevator)?
Assume no other requests arrive while these are being
processed.
- (5 points)
Student H. Hacker installs a new disk driver that
its author claims improves performance by
using the elevator algorithm and also processing requests
for multiple sectors within a cylinder in sector order.
Hacker, very impressed with this claim, writes a program
to test the new driver's performance by reading 10,000
blocks spread randomly across the disk. The observed
performance, however, is no better than what would be
expected if the driver used a first-come first-served
algorithm. Why? What would be a better test of whether
the new driver is faster?
(Hint: The test program reads the blocks one at
a time. Think about how many requests will be on the
disk driver's queue at any one time.)
Berna Massingill
2005-11-28