DistOS 2014W Lecture 1: Difference between revisions
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'''Anil's definition''': "taking the distributed pieces of a system you have and | '''Anil's definition''': "taking the distributed pieces of a system you have and | ||
turning it into the system you WANT. | turning it into the system you WANT." | ||
It is good to think about about DOS's within the context of who/what is in | It is good to think about about DOS's within the context of who/what is in |
Revision as of 18:18, 8 January 2014
What is an OS? Here are some ideas of what it could mean:
- a hardware abstraction
- Consistent execution environment. (ie. code written to interface -- think portable code)
- manages I/O
- Resource management/Multiplexing
An OS can be defined as the role it plays in the programming of systems. It takes care of resource management and creates abstraction. An OS turns hardware into the computer/api/interface you WANT to program.
This is similar to how the browser is becoming the OS of the web. The browser is the key abstraction needed to run web apps. It is the interface web developers target. It doesn't matter what you consume a given website on (eg. a phone, tablet, etc.), the browser abstracts the device's hardware and OS away.
So, what's a distributed OS?
Anil prefers to think of this 'logically' than functionally/physically. This is because the old distributed operating system (DOS) model applies to today's systems (ie. managing multiple cores, etc). The tradition definition is systems that manage their resources over TCP/IP.
A lot of these definitions are hard to peg down because simplicity always gets in the way of truth. These concepts to do not fit into well defined classes.
Anil's definition: "taking the distributed pieces of a system you have and turning it into the system you WANT."
It is good to think about about DOS's within the context of who/what is in control. The traditional kernel-process model is a dictatorship. Authoritarian model of control. The kernel controls what lives or dies. The internet, by contrast, is decentralised (eg. DNS). Distributed systems may have distributed policies where there is not one source of power.
Yuan Liu's Notes
(Normal) Operating Systems
OS allows you to run on (slightly) different hardware. Functionalities and responsibilities of OSes include:
- abstracts hardware such that hardware resources can be accessed by software
- provides consistent execution environment (which hardware doesn't provide)
- manages I/O (such as user I/O, machine I/O i.e. network I/O, sensors, videos, etc.)
- manages resources via mulitplexing
- multiplexing (sharing): one resource wanted by multiple users
- O/S turns a computer you want to a computer you want to program
- manages synchronization and concurrency issues
- resource management and abstraction
- uses policies to manage resources
Distributed O/S
- turns a distributed system (with their hardware) into a distributed system you want to program
- resource management: who is in charge?
- in local O/S, the kernel is the boss
- in distributed O/S, the control is decentralized
- different humans control their machine
- has distributed policies for managing resources
- who decides control? different than local O/S
Other thoughts
- a more centralized system will become fragile later
- concentration of policy tend to fall apart in the future, according to Anil