Operating Systems 2017F Lecture 15
Video
The video from the lecture given on Nov. 7, 2017 is now available. Unfortunately, the video cut out halfway through; audio is also available however.
Notes
In Class
Lecture 15 ---------- What's a filesystem? - persistent data structure organized around fixed allocation units (blocks) - maps hierarchical names (keys) to values - provide a file-like API (open, read, write, close, etc) What does it mean to "make" a filesystem? - initialize the data structure - "formatting" a disk Physical versus logical size of a file - logical: the "size" your program sees when accessing the file - physical: how much space the file takes up on disk Physical is in terms of blocks - fixed units of storage allocation - ext4 has 4k blocks - default for many command line utilities is 1k blocks Kernel programming - you may destroy the system you are working on AT ANY TIME - HAVE GOOD BACKUPS - rsync is your friend Kernel modules - way of splitting up kernel functionality so everything doesn't have to load at boot - code loaded as part of the initial boot image is hard to get rid of at runtime - why do we need modules? why not processes? - no new mechanisms - increased security (restricted access) - "microkernel" approach - instead of code talking in supervisor mode, processes do IPC - filesystems - drivers - networking - minix, QNX, GNU hurd - Linux is a "monolithic" kernel. Why? - performance: context switches are expensive - techniques to make microkernels fast can be adopted by monolithic kernels to make them even faster - security benefit is illusory - if you control the filesystem process, you already own everything
Additional
--> Core kernel functionality is implemented via modules --> use ls mod to see modules that are loaded
What is a monolithic kernel? --> a type of OS architecture where the entire OS is working in kernel space --> can dynamically load/unload modules at runtime
make localmodconfig: --> takes output of ls mod and configures your kernel
ones.c program:
/dev/ones: --> permissions are read only
file_operations ones_fops(): --> defines what happens when you open a file, read from it, release tells you what happens when you're done with it (not the same thing as close)
ones_read(): --> len is the number of bytes to read --> offset tells you where you are in the file --> put_user() takes care of whatever needs to be done to write into that process properly
ones_release:
Why are we using printk instead of printf? --> printf is not yet defined (ie. C library is not available in the kernel) --> kernel doesn't depend on any libraries, all code belongs to the kernel itself --> printk is the kernel's own implementation of printf (outputs to the kernel log --> /var/log/kern.log)
vfs = virtual filesystem layer
How do we limit access to user space processes? --> Do a permission check
--> kernels need to be updated regularly to correct bugs that make the kernel vulnerable to programs trying to gain access to important user space processes --> unlikely() = tells you that this branch is not likely to be taken, optimize the current path
vfs_read:
file->f_op->read: --> this is how our read function will be called