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Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Chapter 5: Process
Synchronization
5.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Chapter 5: Process Synchronization
 Background
 The Critical-Section Problem
 Peterson’s Solution
 Synchronization Hardware
 Mutex Locks
 Semaphores
 Classic Problems of Synchronization
 Monitors
 Synchronization Examples
 Alternative Approaches
5.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Objectives
 To present the concept of process synchronization.
 To introduce the critical-section problem, whose solutions
can be used to ensure the consistency of shared data
 To present both software and hardware solutions of the
critical-section problem
 To examine several classical process-synchronization
problems
 To explore several tools that are used to solve process
synchronization problems
5.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Background
 Processes can execute concurrently
 May be interrupted at any time, partially completing
execution
 Concurrent access to shared data may result in data
inconsistency
 Maintaining data consistency requires mechanisms to ensure
the orderly execution of cooperating processes
 Illustration of the problem:
Suppose that we wanted to provide a solution to the
consumer-producer problem that fills all the buffers. We can
do so by having an integer counter that keeps track of the
number of full buffers. Initially, counter is set to 0. It is
incremented by the producer after it produces a new buffer and
is decremented by the consumer after it consumes a buffer.
5.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Producer
while (true) {
/* produce an item in next produced */
while (counter == BUFFER_SIZE) ;
/* do nothing */
buffer[in] = next_produced;
in = (in + 1) % BUFFER_SIZE;
counter++;
}
5.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Consumer
while (true) {
while (counter == 0)
; /* do nothing */
next_consumed = buffer[out];
out = (out + 1) % BUFFER_SIZE;
counter--;
/* consume the item in next consumed */
}
5.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Race Condition
 counter++ could be implemented as
register1 = counter
register1 = register1 + 1
counter = register1
 counter-- could be implemented as
register2 = counter
register2 = register2 - 1
counter = register2
 Consider this execution interleaving with “count = 5” initially:
S0: producer execute register1 = counter {register1 = 5}
S1: producer execute register1 = register1 + 1 {register1 = 6}
S2: consumer execute register2 = counter {register2 = 5}
S3: consumer execute register2 = register2 – 1 {register2 = 4}
S4: producer execute counter = register1 {counter = 6 }
S5: consumer execute counter = register2 {counter = 4}
5.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Critical Section Problem
 Consider system of n processes {p0, p1, … pn-1}
 Each process has critical section segment of code
 Process may be changing common variables, updating
table, writing file, etc
 When one process in critical section, no other may be in its
critical section
 Critical section problem is to design protocol to solve this
 Each process must ask permission to enter critical section in
entry section, may follow critical section with exit section,
then remainder section
5.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Critical Section
 General structure of process Pi
5.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Algorithm for Process Pi
do {
while (turn == j);
critical section
turn = j;
remainder section
} while (true);
5.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Solution to Critical-Section Problem
1. Mutual Exclusion - If process Pi is executing in its critical
section, then no other processes can be executing in their
critical sections
2. Progress - If no process is executing in its critical section and
there exist some processes that wish to enter their critical
section, then the selection of the processes that will enter the
critical section next cannot be postponed indefinitely
3. Bounded Waiting - A bound must exist on the number of
times that other processes are allowed to enter their critical
sections after a process has made a request to enter its critical
section and before that request is granted
 Assume that each process executes at a nonzero speed
 No assumption concerning relative speed of the n
processes
5.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Critical-Section Handling in OS
Two approaches depending on if kernel is preemptive or non-
preemptive
 Preemptive – allows preemption of process when running
in kernel mode
 Non-preemptive – runs until exits kernel mode, blocks, or
voluntarily yields CPU
Essentially free of race conditions in kernel mode
5.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Peterson’s Solution
 Good algorithmic description of solving the problem
 Two process solution
 Assume that the load and store machine-language
instructions are atomic; that is, cannot be interrupted
 The two processes share two variables:
 int turn;
 Boolean flag[2]
 The variable turn indicates whose turn it is to enter the critical
section
 The flag array is used to indicate if a process is ready to enter
the critical section. flag[i] = true implies that process Pi is
ready!
5.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Algorithm for Process Pi
do {
flag[i] = true;
turn = j;
while (flag[j] && turn = = j);
critical section
flag[i] = false;
remainder section
} while (true);
5.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Peterson’s Solution (Cont.)
 Provable that the three CS requirement are met:
1. Mutual exclusion is preserved
Pi enters CS only if:
either flag[j] = false or turn = i
2. Progress requirement is satisfied
3. Bounded-waiting requirement is met
5.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Synchronization Hardware
 Many systems provide hardware support for implementing the
critical section code.
 All solutions below based on idea of locking
 Protecting critical regions via locks
 Uniprocessors – could disable interrupts
 Currently running code would execute without preemption
 Generally too inefficient on multiprocessor systems
 Operating systems using this not broadly scalable
 Modern machines provide special atomic hardware instructions
 Atomic = non-interruptible
 Either test memory word and set value
 Or swap contents of two memory words
5.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Solution to Critical-section Problem Using Locks
do {
acquire lock
critical section
release lock
remainder section
} while (TRUE);
5.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
test_and_set Instruction
Definition:
boolean test_and_set (boolean *target)
{
boolean rv = *target;
*target = TRUE;
return rv:
}
1. Executed atomically
2. Returns the original value of passed parameter
3. Set the new value of passed parameter to “TRUE”.
5.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Solution using test_and_set()
 Shared Boolean variable lock, initialized to FALSE
 Solution:
do {
while (test_and_set(&lock))
; /* do nothing */
/* critical section */
lock = false;
/* remainder section */
} while (true);
5.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
compare_and_swap Instruction
Definition:
int compare _and_swap(int *value, int expected, int new_value) {
int temp = *value;
if (*value == expected)
*value = new_value;
return temp;
}
1. Executed atomically
2. Returns the original value of passed parameter “value”
3. Set the variable “value” the value of the passed parameter “new_value”
but only if “value” ==“expected”. That is, the swap takes place only under
this condition.
5.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Solution using compare_and_swap
 Shared integer “lock” initialized to 0;
 Solution:
do {
while (compare_and_swap(&lock, 0, 1) != 0)
; /* do nothing */
/* critical section */
lock = 0;
/* remainder section */
} while (true);
5.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Bounded-waiting Mutual Exclusion with test_and_set
do {
waiting[i] = true;
key = true;
while (waiting[i] && key)
key = test_and_set(&lock);
waiting[i] = false;
/* critical section */
j = (i + 1) % n;
while ((j != i) && !waiting[j])
j = (j + 1) % n;
if (j == i)
lock = false;
else
waiting[j] = false;
/* remainder section */
} while (true);
5.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Mutex Locks
 Previous solutions are complicated and generally inaccessible
to application programmers
 OS designers build software tools to solve critical section
problem
 Simplest is mutex lock
 Protect a critical section by first acquire() a lock then
release() the lock
 Boolean variable indicating if lock is available or not
 Calls to acquire() and release() must be atomic
 Usually implemented via hardware atomic instructions
 But this solution requires busy waiting
 This lock therefore called a spinlock
5.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
acquire() and release()
 acquire() {
while (!available)
; /* busy wait */
available = false;;
}
 release() {
available = true;
}
 do {
acquire lock
critical section
release lock
remainder section
} while (true);
5.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Semaphore
 A semaphore S is an integer variable that, apart from initialization, is
accessed only through two standard atomic operations: wait() and signal().
 The wait() operation was originally termed P (from the Dutch proberen, “to
test”); signal() was originally called V (from verhogen, “to increment”).
 Definition of the wait() operation
wait(S) {
while (S <= 0)
; // busy wait
S--;
}
 Definition of the signal() operation
signal(S) {
S++;
}
5.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Semaphore Usage
 Operating systems often distinguish between counting and binary semaphores.
 The value of a counting semaphore can range over an unrestricted domain.
 The value of a binary semaphore can range only between 0 and 1.
 Can solve various synchronization problems
 Consider P1 and P2 that require S1 to happen before S2
Create a semaphore “synch” initialized to 0
P1:
S1;
signal(synch);
P2:
wait(synch);
S2;
 Can implement a counting semaphore S as a binary semaphore
5.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
 Counting semaphores can be used to control access to a given
resource consisting of a finite number of instances.
 The semaphore is initialized to the number of resources
available.
 Each process that wishes to use a resource performs a wait()
operation on the semaphore (thereby decrementing the count).
 When a process releases a resource, it performs a signal()
operation (incrementing the count).
 When the count for the semaphore goes to 0, all resources are
being used.
 After that, processes that wish to use a resource will block until
the count becomes greater than 0.
5.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Semaphore Implementation
 Must guarantee that no two processes can execute the wait()
and signal() on the same semaphore at the same time
 Thus, the implementation becomes the critical section problem
where the wait and signal code are placed in the critical
section
 Could now have busy waiting in critical section
implementation
 But implementation code is short
 Little busy waiting if critical section rarely occupied
 Note that applications may spend lots of time in critical sections
and therefore this is not a good solution
5.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Semaphore Implementation with no Busy waiting
 With each semaphore there is an associated waiting queue
 Each entry in a waiting queue has two data items:
 value (of type integer)
 pointer to next record in the list
 Two operations:
 block – place the process invoking the operation on the appropriate waiting queue
 wakeup – remove one of processes in the waiting queue and place it in the ready queue
typedef struct
{
int value;
struct process *list;
} semaphore;
5.30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Implementation with no Busy waiting (Cont.)
wait(semaphore *S) {
S->value--;
if (S->value < 0) {
add this process to S->list;
block();
}
}
signal(semaphore *S) {
S->value++;
if (S->value <= 0) {
remove a process P from S->list;
wakeup(P);
}
}
5.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Deadlock and Starvation
 Deadlock – two or more processes are waiting indefinitely for an event
that can be caused by only one of the waiting processes
 Let S and Q be two semaphores initialized to 1
P0 P1
wait(S); wait(Q);
wait(Q); wait(S);
... ...
signal(S); signal(Q);
signal(Q); signal(S);
 Starvation – indefinite blocking
 A process may never be removed from the semaphore queue in which it is
suspended
 Priority Inversion – Scheduling problem when lower-priority process
holds a lock needed by higher-priority process
 Solved via priority-inheritance protocol
5.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Classical Problems of Synchronization
 Classical problems used to test newly-proposed synchronization
schemes
 Bounded-Buffer Problem
 Readers and Writers Problem
 Dining-Philosophers Problem
5.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Bounded-Buffer Problem
 n buffers, each can hold one item
 Semaphore mutex initialized to the value 1
 Semaphore full initialized to the value 0
 Semaphore empty initialized to the value n
5.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Bounded Buffer Problem (Cont.)
 The structure of the producer process
do {
...
/* produce an item in next_produced */
...
wait(empty);
wait(mutex);
...
/* add next produced to the buffer */
...
signal(mutex);
signal(full);
} while (true);
5.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Bounded Buffer Problem (Cont.)
 The structure of the consumer process
Do {
wait(full);
wait(mutex);
...
/* remove an item from buffer to next_consumed */
...
signal(mutex);
signal(empty);
...
/* consume the item in next consumed */
...
} while (true);
5.36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Readers-Writers Problem
 A data set is shared among a number of concurrent processes
 Readers – only read the data set; they do not perform any updates
 Writers – can both read and write
 Problem – allow multiple readers to read at the same time
 Only one single writer can access the shared data at the same time
 Several variations of how readers and writers are considered – all
involve some form of priorities
 Shared Data
 Data set
 Semaphore rw_mutex initialized to 1
 Semaphore mutex initialized to 1
 Integer read_count initialized to 0
5.37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Readers-Writers Problem (Cont.)
 The structure of a writer process
do {
wait(rw_mutex);
...
/* writing is performed */
...
signal(rw_mutex);
} while (true);
5.38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Readers-Writers Problem (Cont.)
 The structure of a reader process
do {
wait(mutex);
read_count++;
if (read_count == 1)
wait(rw_mutex);
signal(mutex);
...
/* reading is performed */
...
wait(mutex);
read count--;
if (read_count == 0)
signal(rw_mutex);
signal(mutex);
} while (true);
5.39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Readers-Writers Problem Variations
 First variation – no reader kept waiting unless writer has
permission to use shared object
 Second variation – once writer is ready, it performs the
write ASAP
 Both may have starvation leading to even more variations
 Problem is solved on some systems by kernel providing
reader-writer locks
5.40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Dining-Philosophers Problem
 Philosophers spend their lives alternating thinking and eating
 Don’t interact with their neighbors, occasionally try to pick up 2
chopsticks (one at a time) to eat from bowl
 Need both to eat, then release both when done
 In the case of 5 philosophers
 Shared data
 Bowl of rice (data set)
 Semaphore chopstick [5] initialized to 1
5.41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Dining-Philosophers Problem Algorithm
 The structure of Philosopher i:
do {
wait (chopstick[i] );
wait (chopStick[ (i + 1) % 5] );
// eat
signal (chopstick[i] );
signal (chopstick[ (i + 1) % 5] );
// think
} while (TRUE);
 What is the problem with this algorithm?
5.42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Dining-Philosophers Problem Algorithm (Cont.)
 Deadlock handling
 Allow at most 4 philosophers to be sitting
simultaneously at the table.
 Allow a philosopher to pick up the forks only if both
are available (picking must be done in a critical
section.
 Use an asymmetric solution -- an odd-numbered
philosopher picks up first the left chopstick and then
the right chopstick. Even-numbered philosopher picks
up first the right chopstick and then the left chopstick.
5.43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Problems with Semaphores
 Incorrect use of semaphore operations:
 signal (mutex) …. wait (mutex)
 wait (mutex) … wait (mutex)
 Omitting of wait (mutex) or signal (mutex) (or both)
 Deadlock and starvation are possible.
5.44 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Monitors
 A high-level abstraction that provides a convenient and effective
mechanism for process synchronization
 Abstract data type, internal variables only accessible by code within the
procedure
 Only one process may be active within the monitor at a time
 But not powerful enough to model some synchronization schemes
monitor monitor-name
{
// shared variable declarations
procedure P1 (…) { …. }
procedure Pn (…) {……}
Initialization code (…) { … }
}
}
5.45 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Schematic view of a Monitor
5.46 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Condition Variables
 condition x, y;
 Two operations are allowed on a condition variable:
 x.wait() – a process that invokes the operation is
suspended until x.signal()
 x.signal() – resumes one of processes (if any) that
invoked x.wait()
 If no x.wait() on the variable, then it has no effect on
the variable
5.47 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Monitor with Condition Variables
5.48 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Condition Variables Choices
 If process P invokes x.signal(), and process Q is suspended in
x.wait(), what should happen next?
 Both Q and P cannot execute in paralel. If Q is resumed, then P must
wait
 Options include
 Signal and wait – P waits until Q either leaves the monitor or it waits
for another condition
 Signal and continue – Q waits until P either leaves the monitor or it
waits for another condition
 Both have pros and cons – language implementer can decide
 Monitors implemented in Concurrent Pascal compromise
 P executing signal immediately leaves the monitor, Q is resumed
 Implemented in other languages including Mesa, C#, Java
5.49 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Monitor Solution to Dining Philosophers
monitor DiningPhilosophers
{
enum { THINKING; HUNGRY, EATING) state [5] ;
condition self [5];
void pickup (int i) {
state[i] = HUNGRY;
test(i);
if (state[i] != EATING) self[i].wait;
}
void putdown (int i) {
state[i] = THINKING;
// test left and right neighbors
test((i + 4) % 5);
test((i + 1) % 5);
}
5.50 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Solution to Dining Philosophers (Cont.)
void test (int i) {
if ((state[(i + 4) % 5] != EATING) &&
(state[i] == HUNGRY) &&
(state[(i + 1) % 5] != EATING) ) {
state[i] = EATING ;
self[i].signal () ;
}
}
initialization_code() {
for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++)
state[i] = THINKING;
}
}
5.51 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
 Each philosopher i invokes the operations pickup() and
putdown() in the following sequence:
DiningPhilosophers.pickup(i);
EAT
DiningPhilosophers.putdown(i);
 No deadlock, but starvation is possible
Solution to Dining Philosophers (Cont.)
5.52 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Monitor Implementation Using Semaphores
 Variables
semaphore mutex; // (initially = 1)
semaphore next; // (initially = 0)
int next_count = 0;
 Each procedure F will be replaced by
wait(mutex);
…
body of F;
…
if (next_count > 0)
signal(next)
else
signal(mutex);
 Mutual exclusion within a monitor is ensured
5.53 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Monitor Implementation – Condition Variables
 For each condition variable x, we have:
semaphore x_sem; // (initially = 0)
int x_count = 0;
 The operation x.wait can be implemented as:
x_count++;
if (next_count > 0)
signal(next);
else
signal(mutex);
wait(x_sem);
x_count--;
5.54 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Monitor Implementation (Cont.)
 The operation x.signal can be implemented as:
if (x_count > 0) {
next_count++;
signal(x_sem);
wait(next);
next_count--;
}
5.55 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Resuming Processes within a Monitor
 If several processes queued on condition x, and x.signal()
executed, which should be resumed?
 FCFS frequently not adequate
 conditional-wait construct of the form x.wait(c)
 Where c is priority number
 Process with lowest number (highest priority) is
scheduled next
5.56 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
 Allocate a single resource among competing processes using
priority numbers that specify the maximum time a process
plans to use the resource
R.acquire(t);
...
access the resurce;
...
R.release;
 Where R is an instance of type ResourceAllocator
Single Resource allocation
5.57 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
A Monitor to Allocate Single Resource
monitor ResourceAllocator
{
boolean busy;
condition x;
void acquire(int time) {
if (busy)
x.wait(time);
busy = TRUE;
}
void release() {
busy = FALSE;
x.signal();
}
initialization code() {
busy = FALSE;
}
}
5.58 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Synchronization Examples
 Solaris
 Windows
 Linux
 Pthreads
5.59 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Solaris Synchronization
 Implements a variety of locks to support multitasking, multithreading
(including real-time threads), and multiprocessing
 Uses adaptive mutexes for efficiency when protecting data from short
code segments
 Starts as a standard semaphore spin-lock
 If lock held, and by a thread running on another CPU, spins
 If lock held by non-run-state thread, block and sleep waiting for signal of
lock being released
 Uses condition variables
 Uses readers-writers locks when longer sections of code need access
to data
 Uses turnstiles to order the list of threads waiting to acquire either an
adaptive mutex or reader-writer lock
 Turnstiles are per-lock-holding-thread, not per-object
 Priority-inheritance per-turnstile gives the running thread the highest of
the priorities of the threads in its turnstile
5.60 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Windows Synchronization
 Uses interrupt masks to protect access to global resources on
uniprocessor systems
 Uses spinlocks on multiprocessor systems
 Spinlocking-thread will never be preempted
 Also provides dispatcher objects user-land which may act
mutexes, semaphores, events, and timers
 Events
 An event acts much like a condition variable
 Timers notify one or more thread when time expired
 Dispatcher objects either signaled-state (object available)
or non-signaled state (thread will block)
5.61 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Linux Synchronization
 Linux:
 Prior to kernel Version 2.6, disables interrupts to
implement short critical sections
 Version 2.6 and later, fully preemptive
 Linux provides:
 Semaphores
 atomic integers
 spinlocks
 reader-writer versions of both
 On single-cpu system, spinlocks replaced by enabling and
disabling kernel preemption
5.62 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Pthreads Synchronization
 Pthreads API is OS-independent
 It provides:
 mutex locks
 condition variable
 Non-portable extensions include:
 read-write locks
 spinlocks
5.63 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
Alternative Approaches
 Transactional Memory
 OpenMP
 Functional Programming Languages
5.64 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
 A memory transaction is a sequence of read-write operations
to memory that are performed atomically.
void update()
{
/* read/write memory */
}
Transactional Memory
5.65 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
 OpenMP is a set of compiler directives and API that support
parallel progamming.
void update(int value)
{
#pragma omp critical
{
count += value
}
}
The code contained within the #pragma omp critical directive
is treated as a critical section and performed atomically.
OpenMP
5.66 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
 Functional programming languages offer a different paradigm
than procedural languages in that they do not maintain state.
 Variables are treated as immutable and cannot change state
once they have been assigned a value.
 There is increasing interest in functional languages such as
Erlang and Scala for their approach in handling data races.
Functional Programming Languages
Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013
Operating System Concepts – 9th
Edition
End of Chapter 5

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Chapter 5 Process Synchronization os.ppt

  • 1. Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Chapter 5: Process Synchronization
  • 2. 5.2 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Chapter 5: Process Synchronization  Background  The Critical-Section Problem  Peterson’s Solution  Synchronization Hardware  Mutex Locks  Semaphores  Classic Problems of Synchronization  Monitors  Synchronization Examples  Alternative Approaches
  • 3. 5.3 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Objectives  To present the concept of process synchronization.  To introduce the critical-section problem, whose solutions can be used to ensure the consistency of shared data  To present both software and hardware solutions of the critical-section problem  To examine several classical process-synchronization problems  To explore several tools that are used to solve process synchronization problems
  • 4. 5.4 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Background  Processes can execute concurrently  May be interrupted at any time, partially completing execution  Concurrent access to shared data may result in data inconsistency  Maintaining data consistency requires mechanisms to ensure the orderly execution of cooperating processes  Illustration of the problem: Suppose that we wanted to provide a solution to the consumer-producer problem that fills all the buffers. We can do so by having an integer counter that keeps track of the number of full buffers. Initially, counter is set to 0. It is incremented by the producer after it produces a new buffer and is decremented by the consumer after it consumes a buffer.
  • 5. 5.5 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Producer while (true) { /* produce an item in next produced */ while (counter == BUFFER_SIZE) ; /* do nothing */ buffer[in] = next_produced; in = (in + 1) % BUFFER_SIZE; counter++; }
  • 6. 5.6 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Consumer while (true) { while (counter == 0) ; /* do nothing */ next_consumed = buffer[out]; out = (out + 1) % BUFFER_SIZE; counter--; /* consume the item in next consumed */ }
  • 7. 5.7 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Race Condition  counter++ could be implemented as register1 = counter register1 = register1 + 1 counter = register1  counter-- could be implemented as register2 = counter register2 = register2 - 1 counter = register2  Consider this execution interleaving with “count = 5” initially: S0: producer execute register1 = counter {register1 = 5} S1: producer execute register1 = register1 + 1 {register1 = 6} S2: consumer execute register2 = counter {register2 = 5} S3: consumer execute register2 = register2 – 1 {register2 = 4} S4: producer execute counter = register1 {counter = 6 } S5: consumer execute counter = register2 {counter = 4}
  • 8. 5.8 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Critical Section Problem  Consider system of n processes {p0, p1, … pn-1}  Each process has critical section segment of code  Process may be changing common variables, updating table, writing file, etc  When one process in critical section, no other may be in its critical section  Critical section problem is to design protocol to solve this  Each process must ask permission to enter critical section in entry section, may follow critical section with exit section, then remainder section
  • 9. 5.9 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Critical Section  General structure of process Pi
  • 10. 5.10 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Algorithm for Process Pi do { while (turn == j); critical section turn = j; remainder section } while (true);
  • 11. 5.11 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Solution to Critical-Section Problem 1. Mutual Exclusion - If process Pi is executing in its critical section, then no other processes can be executing in their critical sections 2. Progress - If no process is executing in its critical section and there exist some processes that wish to enter their critical section, then the selection of the processes that will enter the critical section next cannot be postponed indefinitely 3. Bounded Waiting - A bound must exist on the number of times that other processes are allowed to enter their critical sections after a process has made a request to enter its critical section and before that request is granted  Assume that each process executes at a nonzero speed  No assumption concerning relative speed of the n processes
  • 12. 5.12 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Critical-Section Handling in OS Two approaches depending on if kernel is preemptive or non- preemptive  Preemptive – allows preemption of process when running in kernel mode  Non-preemptive – runs until exits kernel mode, blocks, or voluntarily yields CPU Essentially free of race conditions in kernel mode
  • 13. 5.13 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Peterson’s Solution  Good algorithmic description of solving the problem  Two process solution  Assume that the load and store machine-language instructions are atomic; that is, cannot be interrupted  The two processes share two variables:  int turn;  Boolean flag[2]  The variable turn indicates whose turn it is to enter the critical section  The flag array is used to indicate if a process is ready to enter the critical section. flag[i] = true implies that process Pi is ready!
  • 14. 5.14 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Algorithm for Process Pi do { flag[i] = true; turn = j; while (flag[j] && turn = = j); critical section flag[i] = false; remainder section } while (true);
  • 15. 5.15 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Peterson’s Solution (Cont.)  Provable that the three CS requirement are met: 1. Mutual exclusion is preserved Pi enters CS only if: either flag[j] = false or turn = i 2. Progress requirement is satisfied 3. Bounded-waiting requirement is met
  • 16. 5.16 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Synchronization Hardware  Many systems provide hardware support for implementing the critical section code.  All solutions below based on idea of locking  Protecting critical regions via locks  Uniprocessors – could disable interrupts  Currently running code would execute without preemption  Generally too inefficient on multiprocessor systems  Operating systems using this not broadly scalable  Modern machines provide special atomic hardware instructions  Atomic = non-interruptible  Either test memory word and set value  Or swap contents of two memory words
  • 17. 5.17 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Solution to Critical-section Problem Using Locks do { acquire lock critical section release lock remainder section } while (TRUE);
  • 18. 5.18 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition test_and_set Instruction Definition: boolean test_and_set (boolean *target) { boolean rv = *target; *target = TRUE; return rv: } 1. Executed atomically 2. Returns the original value of passed parameter 3. Set the new value of passed parameter to “TRUE”.
  • 19. 5.19 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Solution using test_and_set()  Shared Boolean variable lock, initialized to FALSE  Solution: do { while (test_and_set(&lock)) ; /* do nothing */ /* critical section */ lock = false; /* remainder section */ } while (true);
  • 20. 5.20 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition compare_and_swap Instruction Definition: int compare _and_swap(int *value, int expected, int new_value) { int temp = *value; if (*value == expected) *value = new_value; return temp; } 1. Executed atomically 2. Returns the original value of passed parameter “value” 3. Set the variable “value” the value of the passed parameter “new_value” but only if “value” ==“expected”. That is, the swap takes place only under this condition.
  • 21. 5.21 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Solution using compare_and_swap  Shared integer “lock” initialized to 0;  Solution: do { while (compare_and_swap(&lock, 0, 1) != 0) ; /* do nothing */ /* critical section */ lock = 0; /* remainder section */ } while (true);
  • 22. 5.22 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Bounded-waiting Mutual Exclusion with test_and_set do { waiting[i] = true; key = true; while (waiting[i] && key) key = test_and_set(&lock); waiting[i] = false; /* critical section */ j = (i + 1) % n; while ((j != i) && !waiting[j]) j = (j + 1) % n; if (j == i) lock = false; else waiting[j] = false; /* remainder section */ } while (true);
  • 23. 5.23 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Mutex Locks  Previous solutions are complicated and generally inaccessible to application programmers  OS designers build software tools to solve critical section problem  Simplest is mutex lock  Protect a critical section by first acquire() a lock then release() the lock  Boolean variable indicating if lock is available or not  Calls to acquire() and release() must be atomic  Usually implemented via hardware atomic instructions  But this solution requires busy waiting  This lock therefore called a spinlock
  • 24. 5.24 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition acquire() and release()  acquire() { while (!available) ; /* busy wait */ available = false;; }  release() { available = true; }  do { acquire lock critical section release lock remainder section } while (true);
  • 25. 5.25 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Semaphore  A semaphore S is an integer variable that, apart from initialization, is accessed only through two standard atomic operations: wait() and signal().  The wait() operation was originally termed P (from the Dutch proberen, “to test”); signal() was originally called V (from verhogen, “to increment”).  Definition of the wait() operation wait(S) { while (S <= 0) ; // busy wait S--; }  Definition of the signal() operation signal(S) { S++; }
  • 26. 5.26 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Semaphore Usage  Operating systems often distinguish between counting and binary semaphores.  The value of a counting semaphore can range over an unrestricted domain.  The value of a binary semaphore can range only between 0 and 1.  Can solve various synchronization problems  Consider P1 and P2 that require S1 to happen before S2 Create a semaphore “synch” initialized to 0 P1: S1; signal(synch); P2: wait(synch); S2;  Can implement a counting semaphore S as a binary semaphore
  • 27. 5.27 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition  Counting semaphores can be used to control access to a given resource consisting of a finite number of instances.  The semaphore is initialized to the number of resources available.  Each process that wishes to use a resource performs a wait() operation on the semaphore (thereby decrementing the count).  When a process releases a resource, it performs a signal() operation (incrementing the count).  When the count for the semaphore goes to 0, all resources are being used.  After that, processes that wish to use a resource will block until the count becomes greater than 0.
  • 28. 5.28 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Semaphore Implementation  Must guarantee that no two processes can execute the wait() and signal() on the same semaphore at the same time  Thus, the implementation becomes the critical section problem where the wait and signal code are placed in the critical section  Could now have busy waiting in critical section implementation  But implementation code is short  Little busy waiting if critical section rarely occupied  Note that applications may spend lots of time in critical sections and therefore this is not a good solution
  • 29. 5.29 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Semaphore Implementation with no Busy waiting  With each semaphore there is an associated waiting queue  Each entry in a waiting queue has two data items:  value (of type integer)  pointer to next record in the list  Two operations:  block – place the process invoking the operation on the appropriate waiting queue  wakeup – remove one of processes in the waiting queue and place it in the ready queue typedef struct { int value; struct process *list; } semaphore;
  • 30. 5.30 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Implementation with no Busy waiting (Cont.) wait(semaphore *S) { S->value--; if (S->value < 0) { add this process to S->list; block(); } } signal(semaphore *S) { S->value++; if (S->value <= 0) { remove a process P from S->list; wakeup(P); } }
  • 31. 5.31 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Deadlock and Starvation  Deadlock – two or more processes are waiting indefinitely for an event that can be caused by only one of the waiting processes  Let S and Q be two semaphores initialized to 1 P0 P1 wait(S); wait(Q); wait(Q); wait(S); ... ... signal(S); signal(Q); signal(Q); signal(S);  Starvation – indefinite blocking  A process may never be removed from the semaphore queue in which it is suspended  Priority Inversion – Scheduling problem when lower-priority process holds a lock needed by higher-priority process  Solved via priority-inheritance protocol
  • 32. 5.32 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Classical Problems of Synchronization  Classical problems used to test newly-proposed synchronization schemes  Bounded-Buffer Problem  Readers and Writers Problem  Dining-Philosophers Problem
  • 33. 5.33 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Bounded-Buffer Problem  n buffers, each can hold one item  Semaphore mutex initialized to the value 1  Semaphore full initialized to the value 0  Semaphore empty initialized to the value n
  • 34. 5.34 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Bounded Buffer Problem (Cont.)  The structure of the producer process do { ... /* produce an item in next_produced */ ... wait(empty); wait(mutex); ... /* add next produced to the buffer */ ... signal(mutex); signal(full); } while (true);
  • 35. 5.35 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Bounded Buffer Problem (Cont.)  The structure of the consumer process Do { wait(full); wait(mutex); ... /* remove an item from buffer to next_consumed */ ... signal(mutex); signal(empty); ... /* consume the item in next consumed */ ... } while (true);
  • 36. 5.36 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Readers-Writers Problem  A data set is shared among a number of concurrent processes  Readers – only read the data set; they do not perform any updates  Writers – can both read and write  Problem – allow multiple readers to read at the same time  Only one single writer can access the shared data at the same time  Several variations of how readers and writers are considered – all involve some form of priorities  Shared Data  Data set  Semaphore rw_mutex initialized to 1  Semaphore mutex initialized to 1  Integer read_count initialized to 0
  • 37. 5.37 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Readers-Writers Problem (Cont.)  The structure of a writer process do { wait(rw_mutex); ... /* writing is performed */ ... signal(rw_mutex); } while (true);
  • 38. 5.38 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Readers-Writers Problem (Cont.)  The structure of a reader process do { wait(mutex); read_count++; if (read_count == 1) wait(rw_mutex); signal(mutex); ... /* reading is performed */ ... wait(mutex); read count--; if (read_count == 0) signal(rw_mutex); signal(mutex); } while (true);
  • 39. 5.39 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Readers-Writers Problem Variations  First variation – no reader kept waiting unless writer has permission to use shared object  Second variation – once writer is ready, it performs the write ASAP  Both may have starvation leading to even more variations  Problem is solved on some systems by kernel providing reader-writer locks
  • 40. 5.40 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Dining-Philosophers Problem  Philosophers spend their lives alternating thinking and eating  Don’t interact with their neighbors, occasionally try to pick up 2 chopsticks (one at a time) to eat from bowl  Need both to eat, then release both when done  In the case of 5 philosophers  Shared data  Bowl of rice (data set)  Semaphore chopstick [5] initialized to 1
  • 41. 5.41 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Dining-Philosophers Problem Algorithm  The structure of Philosopher i: do { wait (chopstick[i] ); wait (chopStick[ (i + 1) % 5] ); // eat signal (chopstick[i] ); signal (chopstick[ (i + 1) % 5] ); // think } while (TRUE);  What is the problem with this algorithm?
  • 42. 5.42 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Dining-Philosophers Problem Algorithm (Cont.)  Deadlock handling  Allow at most 4 philosophers to be sitting simultaneously at the table.  Allow a philosopher to pick up the forks only if both are available (picking must be done in a critical section.  Use an asymmetric solution -- an odd-numbered philosopher picks up first the left chopstick and then the right chopstick. Even-numbered philosopher picks up first the right chopstick and then the left chopstick.
  • 43. 5.43 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Problems with Semaphores  Incorrect use of semaphore operations:  signal (mutex) …. wait (mutex)  wait (mutex) … wait (mutex)  Omitting of wait (mutex) or signal (mutex) (or both)  Deadlock and starvation are possible.
  • 44. 5.44 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Monitors  A high-level abstraction that provides a convenient and effective mechanism for process synchronization  Abstract data type, internal variables only accessible by code within the procedure  Only one process may be active within the monitor at a time  But not powerful enough to model some synchronization schemes monitor monitor-name { // shared variable declarations procedure P1 (…) { …. } procedure Pn (…) {……} Initialization code (…) { … } } }
  • 45. 5.45 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Schematic view of a Monitor
  • 46. 5.46 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Condition Variables  condition x, y;  Two operations are allowed on a condition variable:  x.wait() – a process that invokes the operation is suspended until x.signal()  x.signal() – resumes one of processes (if any) that invoked x.wait()  If no x.wait() on the variable, then it has no effect on the variable
  • 47. 5.47 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Monitor with Condition Variables
  • 48. 5.48 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Condition Variables Choices  If process P invokes x.signal(), and process Q is suspended in x.wait(), what should happen next?  Both Q and P cannot execute in paralel. If Q is resumed, then P must wait  Options include  Signal and wait – P waits until Q either leaves the monitor or it waits for another condition  Signal and continue – Q waits until P either leaves the monitor or it waits for another condition  Both have pros and cons – language implementer can decide  Monitors implemented in Concurrent Pascal compromise  P executing signal immediately leaves the monitor, Q is resumed  Implemented in other languages including Mesa, C#, Java
  • 49. 5.49 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Monitor Solution to Dining Philosophers monitor DiningPhilosophers { enum { THINKING; HUNGRY, EATING) state [5] ; condition self [5]; void pickup (int i) { state[i] = HUNGRY; test(i); if (state[i] != EATING) self[i].wait; } void putdown (int i) { state[i] = THINKING; // test left and right neighbors test((i + 4) % 5); test((i + 1) % 5); }
  • 50. 5.50 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Solution to Dining Philosophers (Cont.) void test (int i) { if ((state[(i + 4) % 5] != EATING) && (state[i] == HUNGRY) && (state[(i + 1) % 5] != EATING) ) { state[i] = EATING ; self[i].signal () ; } } initialization_code() { for (int i = 0; i < 5; i++) state[i] = THINKING; } }
  • 51. 5.51 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition  Each philosopher i invokes the operations pickup() and putdown() in the following sequence: DiningPhilosophers.pickup(i); EAT DiningPhilosophers.putdown(i);  No deadlock, but starvation is possible Solution to Dining Philosophers (Cont.)
  • 52. 5.52 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Monitor Implementation Using Semaphores  Variables semaphore mutex; // (initially = 1) semaphore next; // (initially = 0) int next_count = 0;  Each procedure F will be replaced by wait(mutex); … body of F; … if (next_count > 0) signal(next) else signal(mutex);  Mutual exclusion within a monitor is ensured
  • 53. 5.53 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Monitor Implementation – Condition Variables  For each condition variable x, we have: semaphore x_sem; // (initially = 0) int x_count = 0;  The operation x.wait can be implemented as: x_count++; if (next_count > 0) signal(next); else signal(mutex); wait(x_sem); x_count--;
  • 54. 5.54 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Monitor Implementation (Cont.)  The operation x.signal can be implemented as: if (x_count > 0) { next_count++; signal(x_sem); wait(next); next_count--; }
  • 55. 5.55 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Resuming Processes within a Monitor  If several processes queued on condition x, and x.signal() executed, which should be resumed?  FCFS frequently not adequate  conditional-wait construct of the form x.wait(c)  Where c is priority number  Process with lowest number (highest priority) is scheduled next
  • 56. 5.56 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition  Allocate a single resource among competing processes using priority numbers that specify the maximum time a process plans to use the resource R.acquire(t); ... access the resurce; ... R.release;  Where R is an instance of type ResourceAllocator Single Resource allocation
  • 57. 5.57 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition A Monitor to Allocate Single Resource monitor ResourceAllocator { boolean busy; condition x; void acquire(int time) { if (busy) x.wait(time); busy = TRUE; } void release() { busy = FALSE; x.signal(); } initialization code() { busy = FALSE; } }
  • 58. 5.58 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Synchronization Examples  Solaris  Windows  Linux  Pthreads
  • 59. 5.59 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Solaris Synchronization  Implements a variety of locks to support multitasking, multithreading (including real-time threads), and multiprocessing  Uses adaptive mutexes for efficiency when protecting data from short code segments  Starts as a standard semaphore spin-lock  If lock held, and by a thread running on another CPU, spins  If lock held by non-run-state thread, block and sleep waiting for signal of lock being released  Uses condition variables  Uses readers-writers locks when longer sections of code need access to data  Uses turnstiles to order the list of threads waiting to acquire either an adaptive mutex or reader-writer lock  Turnstiles are per-lock-holding-thread, not per-object  Priority-inheritance per-turnstile gives the running thread the highest of the priorities of the threads in its turnstile
  • 60. 5.60 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Windows Synchronization  Uses interrupt masks to protect access to global resources on uniprocessor systems  Uses spinlocks on multiprocessor systems  Spinlocking-thread will never be preempted  Also provides dispatcher objects user-land which may act mutexes, semaphores, events, and timers  Events  An event acts much like a condition variable  Timers notify one or more thread when time expired  Dispatcher objects either signaled-state (object available) or non-signaled state (thread will block)
  • 61. 5.61 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Linux Synchronization  Linux:  Prior to kernel Version 2.6, disables interrupts to implement short critical sections  Version 2.6 and later, fully preemptive  Linux provides:  Semaphores  atomic integers  spinlocks  reader-writer versions of both  On single-cpu system, spinlocks replaced by enabling and disabling kernel preemption
  • 62. 5.62 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Pthreads Synchronization  Pthreads API is OS-independent  It provides:  mutex locks  condition variable  Non-portable extensions include:  read-write locks  spinlocks
  • 63. 5.63 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition Alternative Approaches  Transactional Memory  OpenMP  Functional Programming Languages
  • 64. 5.64 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition  A memory transaction is a sequence of read-write operations to memory that are performed atomically. void update() { /* read/write memory */ } Transactional Memory
  • 65. 5.65 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition  OpenMP is a set of compiler directives and API that support parallel progamming. void update(int value) { #pragma omp critical { count += value } } The code contained within the #pragma omp critical directive is treated as a critical section and performed atomically. OpenMP
  • 66. 5.66 Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition  Functional programming languages offer a different paradigm than procedural languages in that they do not maintain state.  Variables are treated as immutable and cannot change state once they have been assigned a value.  There is increasing interest in functional languages such as Erlang and Scala for their approach in handling data races. Functional Programming Languages
  • 67. Silberschatz, Galvin and Gagne ©2013 Operating System Concepts – 9th Edition End of Chapter 5