Operating Systems 2019W Lecture 3
Video
Video from the lecture given on January 14, 2019 is now available.
Notes
In Class
Lecture 3
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* tutorials have started
* look in cuLearn to see your TA
- in grades, "TA" (feedback)
* system calls!
- we have processes
- they are isolated (only have a virtual CPU and virtual memory)
- to access any other resources, it must make a system call
- system calls are requests to the kernel
- kernel decides whether a system call is allowed or not based on
the user and group of the process
- file system calls
open, read, write, lseek, (mmap), close
Question
- why do we only need to do GET, POST on the web, but we need to
do a open before a read or write?
HTTP is (originally) stateless
- server doesn't have to remember client state between requests
UNIX file API is stateful
- maintains state between requests
file descriptors are an index into an array of file state maintained by the kernel for each process
---break---
SCS sysadmin in charge of openstack: Andrew Pullin
Processes can use file descriptors that were opened by "someone else"
- parent process
- "the one who execve'd me"
FORK:
process 4500
- opens file on fd 7
- runs fork, gets 4501
process 4501
- identical to 4500
- so has fd 7
EXECVE
process 5000
running /bin/bash
- opens file on fd 1
execve("/bin/ls")
- fd 1 still open for ls (running as process 5000)
Code
crash.c
#include <stdio.h>
int main(int argc, char *argv[])
{
int *x;
x = (int *) 0;
*x = 5;
printf("Done!\n");
return 0;
}