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(Winter 2014) ASSIGNMENT
PROGRAM
|
BCA (REVISED
FALL 2012)
|
SEMESTER
|
2
|
SUBJECT CODE
& NAME
|
BCA2010 –
OPERATING SYSTEM
|
CREDIT
|
2
|
BK ID
|
B1405
|
MAX.MARKS
|
60
|
Note: Answer all questions. Kindly note that answers for 10 marks
questions should be approximately of 400 words. Each question is followed by
evaluation scheme.
1. Define operating system. Explain any four major functions of
Operating system.
Answer : A computer's operating
system is one of the most important “parts” of the computer. Almost every type
of computer—including mobile telephones, video game systems, E-book readers,
and DVRs—needs an operating system in order to operate properly. When one turns
on a computer, the operating system tells the computer what to do by
controlling the system resources such as the processor, memory, disk space,
etc. The operating system allows the user to work on the computer without
having to know all the details about how the hardware works.
When choosing an operating system
for a business, the primary considerations should be the hardware platform
used, the number of users and attendant system security requirements, the ease
of administration, the adaptability toward
2 Explain the different process states.
Answer : A process is a program
in execution. The execution of a process must progress in a sequential fashion.
Definition of process is following.
A process which is Executed by
the Process have various States, the State of the Process is also called as the
Status of the process, The Status includes whether the Process has Executed or
Whether the process is Waiting for Some input and output from the user and
whether the Process is Waiting for the CPU to Run the Program after the Completion
of the Process.
The various States of the Process are as Followings:-
1) New State : When a user request for a Service from the System ,
then the System will first initialize the process or the System will call it an
initial Process . So Every new Operation which is Requested to the System is
known as the New Born Process.
3 Define Deadlock. Explain necessary conditions for deadlock.
Answer : A deadlock is a situation in which two computer programs sharing the
same resource are effectively preventing each other from accessing the
resource, resulting in both programs ceasing to function. The earliest computer
operating systems ran only one program at a time. Eventually some operating
systems offered dynamic allocation of resources. Programs could request further
allocations of resources after they had begun running. This led to the problem
of the deadlock.
Coffman (1971) identified four (4) conditions
that must hold simultaneously for there to be a deadlock.
1. Mutual Exclusion Condition
The resources involved are
non-shareable.
Explanation: At least one
resource (thread) must be held in a non-shareable mode, that is, only one
process at a time claims exclusive control of the
4. Differentiate between Sequential access and direct access methods.
Answer : The hypertext and hyperlink
exemplify the direct-access paradigm and are a significant improvement over the
more traditional, book-based model of sequential access.
(Direct access can also be called
random access, because it allows equally easy and fast access to any randomly selected
destination. Somewhat like traveling by a Star Trek transporter instead of
driving along the freeway and passing the exits one at a time, which is what
you get with sequential access.)
In a normal, physical book, the
reader is supposed to read pages one by one, in the order in which they are
provided by the author. For most books (fiction, at least), it makes little
sense for the reader to turn directly page 256 and start reading there. Unless,
of course, that is where the reader left off in their last reading session.
Getting to page 256 in
5. Differentiate between Daisy chain bus arbitration and Priority
encoded bus arbitration.
Answer : In most mini- and
mainframe computer systems, a great deal of input and output occurs between the
disk system and the processor. It would be very inefficient to perform these
operations directly through the processor; it is much more efficient if such
devices, which can transfer data at a very high rate, place the data directly
into the memory, or take the data directly from the processor without direct
intervention from the processor. I/O performed in this way is usually called
direct memory access, or DMA. The controller for a device employing DMA
must have the capability of generating address signals for the memory, as well
as all of the memory control signals. The processor informs the DMA controller
that data is available (or is to be placed into) a block of memory locations
starting at a certain address in
6. Explain LRU page replacement algorithm with example
Answer: A good approximation to
the optimal algorithm is based on the observation that pages that have been
heavily used in the last few instructions will probably be heavily used again
in the next few. Conversely, pages that have not been used for ages will
probably remain unused for a long time. This idea suggests a realizable
algorithm: when a page fault occurs, throw out the page that has been unused
for the longest time. This strategy is called LRU (Least Recently Used) paging.
Although LRU is theoretically
realizable, it is not cheap. To fully implement LRU, it is necessary to
maintain a linked list of all pages in memory, with the most recently used page
at the front and the least recently used page at the rear. The difficulty is
that the list must be updated on every memory reference. Finding a page in the
list, deleting it, and then moving it to the front is a very time consuming
operation, even in hardware (
Dear
students get fully solved assignments
Send
your semester & Specialization name to our mail id :
“ help.mbaassignments@gmail.com ”
or
Call
us at : 08263069601
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