Session 2, 1999
To provide students with a deep understanding of modern operating system technology, implementation techniques and research issues.
Provide in-depth coverage of modern operating system issues, such as:
A rough outline of the lectures is (subject to change):
Lab work forms a major component of the subject. This will be carried out in the Advanced Systems Teaching (ASysT) Lab, commencing from about Week 4. The lab features locally developed 64-bit computers based on a MIPS R6400 processor. These nodes are set up to run a locally developed implementation of the L4 microkernel. They are connected to UNIX hosts (PCs running Solaris) running an L4 development environment. OS code is developed and compiled there and then downloaded to the 64-bit systems, which present a minimum environment ideally suited for low-level systems programming exercises. Documentation as well as sample code will be provided.
After some ``warm-up'' experiments students will work in groups of two on a project, which constructs various OS component, with the ultimate aim of producing a small (and very efficient) operating system. A series of milestones will be defined to aid the implementation.
Milestones and the final project will be demonstrated to School staff and the code submitted for assessment. Complete system documentation will form the final deliverable.
Details will be published in due course. Milestones must be demonstrated (and the code submitted) during the week in which they are due. Milestones deadlines missed by less than one week will cause a loss of 25% of the mark for that particular milestone, if missed by more that one week the penalty is 50%, up to a maximum of two weeks. No submissions/demos will be accepted later than two weeks after the deadline. Cheating will be severely dealt with.
As this is supposed to be a challenging subject, I am quite concerned about boring students who already have a strong background in L4 and therefore might find the project too easy. For this reason, I am offering the possibility of alternative projects for such students. An alternative project must be discussed with me in detail and approved in advance. The main criteria for approval will be that, given the students' backgrounds, the project should present a similar challenge than the ``standard'' project would present to students with no OS knowledge beyond what is defined by the prerequisites.
There will be a final exam, the format of which will be determined by class size. In the past the exam was open book, but I'm reserving the right to move to a different format (such as orals). Details will be advertised in due time, not later than the mid-session break.
Supplementary exams will only be awarded in well justified cases, in accordance with School policy, not as a second chance for poorly performing students. In particular, it is unlikely that a supplementary will be awarded to students who have actually sat the proper exam. Make up your mind whether or not you are sick before attempting the exam!
Supplementary exams will be oral. The supplementary final exam will be held either on the day before, or the day after, the written supplementary exams held for other subjects.
Assignments count for 65%, the exam for 35% of the final mark. A minimum mark of 14 (i.e., 40% of the maximum) is required in the exam to receive a passing grade.
There is no textbook for this subject, as no published book covers the material in sufficient depth. Plenty of handouts will be provided.
The following will be provided in hardcopy as reference for the project component:
Lecture notes and other information can be found under the subject's WWW home page at URL http://www.cse.unsw.edu.au/~cs9242/.
Some lectures may be delivered by visitors. [an error occurred while processing this directive] Last modified: 1999-08-09.