Operating System Organization: Difference between revisions
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==Operating System Organization== | |||
===Device Management=== | |||
How do kernels communicate with devices such as a network card? How do drivers for such devices fit into the kernel? We need a mechanism to allow applications to communicate with the devices. Most kernels use a form of message passing, often using a registration system. For example, a network card device driver would register itself with the kernel and identify that it is in fact a network card (as opposed to say, a mouse). MS DOS used interrupt handlers instead. | |||
Glenn's talk focused mostly on the how the Linux Kernel works. | |||
====File Abstraction==== | |||
In Linux there exists a "/proc" directory which contains special information. This directory does not actually exist on disk. When the kernel receives a request to read a file in one of these directories, it retrieves system information and serves it up as a file. For example, executing more /proc/cupinfo gives: | |||
<pre> | |||
$ more /proc/cpuinfo | |||
processor : 0 | |||
vendor_id : GenuineIntel | |||
cpu family : 6 | |||
model : 13 | |||
model name : Intel(R) Pentium(R) M processor 1.73GHz | |||
stepping : 8 | |||
cpu MHz : 798.000 | |||
cache size : 2048 KB | |||
... | |||
</pre> | |||
Each process that is currently running on the system gets its own directory in /proc, with the process ID (pid) as the directory name. For example for process with pid 2, there exists "/proc/2/" which contains more information about that process. | |||
The "/dev" directory actually exists on the file system and contains entries for devices (called nodes). For example, the first hard drive on the system might reside in "/dev/hda/". Each device entry has a major node number and a minor node number. For example, the hard drive specified by "/dev/hda" might have major node number "3" and minor node number "0". At first the node numbers were pre-defined and there could be no more than 255 of them. These major/minor node numbers are used to link the specific device types into the kernel. These nodes existed in "/dev" even if the devices were not connected to the system. | |||
This was eventually replaced with a new system called "devfs" (device file system), which was a pseudo-file system similar to /proc. Devfs is implemented in the kernel and knows about the currently available hardware. Some problems still existed with this system: it was implemented in the kernel, and thus a change to hardware required an update to the kernel; and the major and minor node numbers were still fixed in the kernel. It would be nice to dynamically reassign major nodes to unknown devices that are actually present on the system. | |||
Devfs has since been replaced by a new system named "udev" |
Revision as of 02:55, 24 September 2007
Operating System Organization
Device Management
How do kernels communicate with devices such as a network card? How do drivers for such devices fit into the kernel? We need a mechanism to allow applications to communicate with the devices. Most kernels use a form of message passing, often using a registration system. For example, a network card device driver would register itself with the kernel and identify that it is in fact a network card (as opposed to say, a mouse). MS DOS used interrupt handlers instead.
Glenn's talk focused mostly on the how the Linux Kernel works.
File Abstraction
In Linux there exists a "/proc" directory which contains special information. This directory does not actually exist on disk. When the kernel receives a request to read a file in one of these directories, it retrieves system information and serves it up as a file. For example, executing more /proc/cupinfo gives:
$ more /proc/cpuinfo processor : 0 vendor_id : GenuineIntel cpu family : 6 model : 13 model name : Intel(R) Pentium(R) M processor 1.73GHz stepping : 8 cpu MHz : 798.000 cache size : 2048 KB ...
Each process that is currently running on the system gets its own directory in /proc, with the process ID (pid) as the directory name. For example for process with pid 2, there exists "/proc/2/" which contains more information about that process.
The "/dev" directory actually exists on the file system and contains entries for devices (called nodes). For example, the first hard drive on the system might reside in "/dev/hda/". Each device entry has a major node number and a minor node number. For example, the hard drive specified by "/dev/hda" might have major node number "3" and minor node number "0". At first the node numbers were pre-defined and there could be no more than 255 of them. These major/minor node numbers are used to link the specific device types into the kernel. These nodes existed in "/dev" even if the devices were not connected to the system.
This was eventually replaced with a new system called "devfs" (device file system), which was a pseudo-file system similar to /proc. Devfs is implemented in the kernel and knows about the currently available hardware. Some problems still existed with this system: it was implemented in the kernel, and thus a change to hardware required an update to the kernel; and the major and minor node numbers were still fixed in the kernel. It would be nice to dynamically reassign major nodes to unknown devices that are actually present on the system.
Devfs has since been replaced by a new system named "udev"