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Process Synchronization and Deadlocks In a nutshell
Content Motivation Race Condition  Critical Section problem & Solutions Classical problems in Synchronization Deadlocks
Why study these chapters? This is about getting processes to coordinate with each other. How do processes work with resources that must be shared between them Very interesting concepts!
A race condition example A  race condition  is where multiple processes/threads concurrently read and write to a shared memory location and the result depends on the order of the execution. This was the cause of a patient death on a radiation therapy machine, the Therac-25 http://sunnyday.mit.edu/therac-25.html Yakima Software flow Also can happen in bank account database transactions with, say a husband and a wife accessing the same account simultaneously from different ATMs
A race condition example (2) We will implement count++ and count-- and run them concurrently Let us say they are executed by different threads accessing a global variable At the end we expect count's value not to change
A race condition example (3) count++  implementation: register1 = count register1 = register1 + 1 count = register 1 count--  implementation: register2 = count register2 = register2 - 1 count = register2 Let count = 5 initially. One possible concurrent execution of count++ and count-- is register1 = count  {register1 = 5} register1 = register1 + 1  {register1 = 6} register2 = count  {register2 = 5} register2 = register2 - 1  {register2 = 4} count = register1  {count = 6} count = register2  {count = 4} count = 4 after count++ and count--, even though we started with count = 5 Easy question: what other values can count be from doing this incorrectly?  Obviously, we would like to have count++ execute, followed by count-- (or vice versa)
A race condition example (4) Producer/consumer problem is more general form of the previous problem.
Critical Sections A  critical section  is a piece of code that accesses a shared resource (data structure or device) that must not be concurrently accessed by more than one thread of execution. The goal is to provide a mechanism by which only one instance of a critical section is executing for a particular shared resource. Unfortunately, it is often very difficult to detect critical section bugs
Critical Sections (2) A Critical Section Environment contains: Entry Section  Code requesting entry into the critical section. Critical Section  Code in which only one process can execute at any one time. Exit Section  The end of the critical section, releasing or allowing others in. Remainder Section  Rest of the code AFTER the critical section.
Critical Sections (3)
Solution to Critical-Section Problem The critical section must  ENFORCE ALL THREE  of the following rules: 1 .  Mutual Exclusion  - If process  P i  is executing in its critical section, then no other processes can be executing in their critical sections  In many calls, this is abbreviated mutex 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
Critical Section Solutions Hardware Many systems provide hardware support for critical section code Uniprocessors – could disable interrupts Currently running code would execute without preemption Generally too inefficient on multiprocessor systems Have to wait for disable to propagate to all processors Operating systems using this not broadly scalable Modern machines provide special atomic hardware instructions Atomic = non-interruptable
Critical Section Solutions Software Peterson’s Solution : for two processes only. Semaphore : A flag used to indicate that a routine cannot proceed if a shared resource is already in use by another routine. The allowable operations on a semaphore are V("signal") and P("wait"); both are atomic operations.  Two types: counting and binary (mutex locks).
Some Classical Problems in Synchronization  Dining Philosophers.
Deadlocks
Bridge Crossing Example Traffic only in one direction. Each section of a bridge can be viewed as a resource. If a deadlock occurs, it can be resolved if one car backs up (preempt resources and rollback). Several cars may have to be backed up if a deadlock occurs. Starvation is possible.
Deadlocks Deadlock: processes waiting indefinitely with no chance of making progress. Starvation: a process waits for a long time to make progress.
Deadlocks Deadlock applications not just OS Network Two processes may be blocking a send message to the other process if they are both waiting for a message from the other process Receive/waiting blocks writing Databases. Spooling/streaming data.
Deadlock Characterization Mutual exclusion:   only one process at a time can use a resource. Hold and wait:   a process holding at least one resource is waiting to acquire additional resources held by other processes. No preemption:   a resource can be released only voluntarily by the process holding it, after that process has completed its task. Circular wait:   there exists a set { P 0 ,  P 1 , …,  P 0 } of waiting processes such that  P 0  is waiting for a resource that is held by  P 1 ,  P 1  is waiting for a resource that is held by  P 2 , …,  P n –1  is waiting for a resource that is held by  P n , and  P 0  is waiting for a resource that is held by  P 0 . Deadlock can arise if four conditions hold simultaneously.
Resource-Allocation Graph V is partitioned into two types: P  = { P 1 ,  P 2 , …,  P n }, the set consisting of all the processes in the system. R  = { R 1 ,  R 2 , …,  R m }, the set consisting of all resource types in the system. request edge – directed edge  P 1     R j assignment edge – directed edge  R j      P i A set of vertices  V  and a set of edges  E .
Resource-Allocation Graph (Cont.) Process Resource Type with 4 instances P i   requests instance of  R j P i  is holding an instance of  R j P i P i R j R j
Example of a Resource Allocation Graph
Resource Allocation Graph With A Deadlock
Graph With A Cycle But No Deadlock
Basic Facts If graph contains no cycles    no deadlock. If graph contains a cycle   if only one instance per resource type, then deadlock. if several instances per resource type, possibility of deadlock.
Methods for Handling Deadlocks Ensure that the system will  never  enter a deadlock state. Allow the system to enter a deadlock state and then recover. Ignore the problem and pretend that deadlocks never occur in the system; used by most operating systems, including UNIX.
Deadlock Prevention Mutual Exclusion  – not required for sharable resources; must hold for nonsharable resources. Hold and Wait  – must guarantee that whenever a process requests a resource, it does not hold any other resources. Require process to request and be allocated all its resources before it begins execution, or allow process to request resources only when the process has none. Low resource utilization; starvation possible. Restrain the ways request can be made.
Deadlock Prevention (Cont.) No Preemption  – If a process that is holding some resources requests another resource that cannot be immediately allocated to it, then all resources currently being held are released. Preempted resources are added to the list of resources for which the process is waiting. Process will be restarted only when it can regain its old resources, as well as the new ones that it is requesting. Circular Wait  – impose a total ordering of all resource types, and require that each process requests resources in an increasing order of enumeration.
Deadlock Avoidance Simplest and most useful model requires that each process declare the  maximum number  of resources of each type that it may need. The deadlock-avoidance algorithm dynamically examines the resource-allocation state to ensure that there can never be a circular-wait condition. Resource-allocation  state  is defined by the number of available and allocated resources, and the maximum demands of the processes. Requires that the system has some additional  a priori  information  available.
Useful Resources Amal Al-Hammad  http://os1h.pbwiki.com/deadlock Wajan Tamem http://os3a.pbwiki.com/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D9%85%D9%88%D8%AF%20Deadlock

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Process Synchronization And Deadlocks

  • 1. Process Synchronization and Deadlocks In a nutshell
  • 2. Content Motivation Race Condition Critical Section problem & Solutions Classical problems in Synchronization Deadlocks
  • 3. Why study these chapters? This is about getting processes to coordinate with each other. How do processes work with resources that must be shared between them Very interesting concepts!
  • 4. A race condition example A race condition is where multiple processes/threads concurrently read and write to a shared memory location and the result depends on the order of the execution. This was the cause of a patient death on a radiation therapy machine, the Therac-25 http://sunnyday.mit.edu/therac-25.html Yakima Software flow Also can happen in bank account database transactions with, say a husband and a wife accessing the same account simultaneously from different ATMs
  • 5. A race condition example (2) We will implement count++ and count-- and run them concurrently Let us say they are executed by different threads accessing a global variable At the end we expect count's value not to change
  • 6. A race condition example (3) count++ implementation: register1 = count register1 = register1 + 1 count = register 1 count-- implementation: register2 = count register2 = register2 - 1 count = register2 Let count = 5 initially. One possible concurrent execution of count++ and count-- is register1 = count {register1 = 5} register1 = register1 + 1 {register1 = 6} register2 = count {register2 = 5} register2 = register2 - 1 {register2 = 4} count = register1 {count = 6} count = register2 {count = 4} count = 4 after count++ and count--, even though we started with count = 5 Easy question: what other values can count be from doing this incorrectly? Obviously, we would like to have count++ execute, followed by count-- (or vice versa)
  • 7. A race condition example (4) Producer/consumer problem is more general form of the previous problem.
  • 8. Critical Sections A critical section is a piece of code that accesses a shared resource (data structure or device) that must not be concurrently accessed by more than one thread of execution. The goal is to provide a mechanism by which only one instance of a critical section is executing for a particular shared resource. Unfortunately, it is often very difficult to detect critical section bugs
  • 9. Critical Sections (2) A Critical Section Environment contains: Entry Section Code requesting entry into the critical section. Critical Section Code in which only one process can execute at any one time. Exit Section The end of the critical section, releasing or allowing others in. Remainder Section Rest of the code AFTER the critical section.
  • 11. Solution to Critical-Section Problem The critical section must ENFORCE ALL THREE of the following rules: 1 . Mutual Exclusion - If process P i is executing in its critical section, then no other processes can be executing in their critical sections In many calls, this is abbreviated mutex 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. Critical Section Solutions Hardware Many systems provide hardware support for critical section code Uniprocessors – could disable interrupts Currently running code would execute without preemption Generally too inefficient on multiprocessor systems Have to wait for disable to propagate to all processors Operating systems using this not broadly scalable Modern machines provide special atomic hardware instructions Atomic = non-interruptable
  • 13. Critical Section Solutions Software Peterson’s Solution : for two processes only. Semaphore : A flag used to indicate that a routine cannot proceed if a shared resource is already in use by another routine. The allowable operations on a semaphore are V("signal") and P("wait"); both are atomic operations. Two types: counting and binary (mutex locks).
  • 14. Some Classical Problems in Synchronization Dining Philosophers.
  • 16. Bridge Crossing Example Traffic only in one direction. Each section of a bridge can be viewed as a resource. If a deadlock occurs, it can be resolved if one car backs up (preempt resources and rollback). Several cars may have to be backed up if a deadlock occurs. Starvation is possible.
  • 17. Deadlocks Deadlock: processes waiting indefinitely with no chance of making progress. Starvation: a process waits for a long time to make progress.
  • 18. Deadlocks Deadlock applications not just OS Network Two processes may be blocking a send message to the other process if they are both waiting for a message from the other process Receive/waiting blocks writing Databases. Spooling/streaming data.
  • 19. Deadlock Characterization Mutual exclusion: only one process at a time can use a resource. Hold and wait: a process holding at least one resource is waiting to acquire additional resources held by other processes. No preemption: a resource can be released only voluntarily by the process holding it, after that process has completed its task. Circular wait: there exists a set { P 0 , P 1 , …, P 0 } of waiting processes such that P 0 is waiting for a resource that is held by P 1 , P 1 is waiting for a resource that is held by P 2 , …, P n –1 is waiting for a resource that is held by P n , and P 0 is waiting for a resource that is held by P 0 . Deadlock can arise if four conditions hold simultaneously.
  • 20. Resource-Allocation Graph V is partitioned into two types: P = { P 1 , P 2 , …, P n }, the set consisting of all the processes in the system. R = { R 1 , R 2 , …, R m }, the set consisting of all resource types in the system. request edge – directed edge P 1  R j assignment edge – directed edge R j  P i A set of vertices V and a set of edges E .
  • 21. Resource-Allocation Graph (Cont.) Process Resource Type with 4 instances P i requests instance of R j P i is holding an instance of R j P i P i R j R j
  • 22. Example of a Resource Allocation Graph
  • 23. Resource Allocation Graph With A Deadlock
  • 24. Graph With A Cycle But No Deadlock
  • 25. Basic Facts If graph contains no cycles  no deadlock. If graph contains a cycle  if only one instance per resource type, then deadlock. if several instances per resource type, possibility of deadlock.
  • 26. Methods for Handling Deadlocks Ensure that the system will never enter a deadlock state. Allow the system to enter a deadlock state and then recover. Ignore the problem and pretend that deadlocks never occur in the system; used by most operating systems, including UNIX.
  • 27. Deadlock Prevention Mutual Exclusion – not required for sharable resources; must hold for nonsharable resources. Hold and Wait – must guarantee that whenever a process requests a resource, it does not hold any other resources. Require process to request and be allocated all its resources before it begins execution, or allow process to request resources only when the process has none. Low resource utilization; starvation possible. Restrain the ways request can be made.
  • 28. Deadlock Prevention (Cont.) No Preemption – If a process that is holding some resources requests another resource that cannot be immediately allocated to it, then all resources currently being held are released. Preempted resources are added to the list of resources for which the process is waiting. Process will be restarted only when it can regain its old resources, as well as the new ones that it is requesting. Circular Wait – impose a total ordering of all resource types, and require that each process requests resources in an increasing order of enumeration.
  • 29. Deadlock Avoidance Simplest and most useful model requires that each process declare the maximum number of resources of each type that it may need. The deadlock-avoidance algorithm dynamically examines the resource-allocation state to ensure that there can never be a circular-wait condition. Resource-allocation state is defined by the number of available and allocated resources, and the maximum demands of the processes. Requires that the system has some additional a priori information available.
  • 30. Useful Resources Amal Al-Hammad http://os1h.pbwiki.com/deadlock Wajan Tamem http://os3a.pbwiki.com/%D8%A7%D9%84%D8%AC%D9%85%D9%88%D8%AF%20Deadlock