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SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

(Established under section 3 of UGC Act, 1956)

Jeppiaar Nagar, Rajiv Gandhi Salai, Chennai - 119.

SYLLABUS MASTER OF ENGINEERING PROGRAMME IN COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING (4 SEMESTERS) REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY REGULATIONS 2010


Effective from the academic year 2010-2011 and applicable to the students admitted to the Master of Engineering / Technology / Architecture /Science (Four Semesters) 1. Structure of Programme 1.1 Every Programme will have a curriculum with syllabi consisting of theory and practical such as: (i) (ii) (iii) (iv) 1.2 General core courses like Mathematics Core course of Engineering / Technology/Architecture / Science Elective course for specialization in related fields Workshop practice, Computer Practice, laboratory Work, Industrial Training, Seminar Presentation, Project Work, Educational Tours, Camps etc.

Each semester curriculum shall normally have a blend of lecture course not exceeding 7 and practical course not exceeding 4.

2.

1.3 The medium of instruction, examinations and project report will be English. Duration of the Programme A student is normally expected to complete the M.E/M.Tech./M.Arch/M.Sc Programme in 4 semesters but in any case not more than 8 consecutive semesters from the time of commencement of the course. The Head of the Department shall ensure that every teacher imparts instruction as per the number of hours specified in the syllabus and that the teacher teaches the full content of the specified syllabus for the course being taught.

3.

Requirements for Completion of a Semester A candidate who has fulfilled the following conditions shall be deemed to have satisfied the requirement for completion of a semester. 3.1 3.2 He/She secures not less than 90% of overall attendance in that semester. Candidates who do not have the requisite attendance for the semester will not be permitted to write the University Exams.

4.

Examinations The examinations shall normally be conducted between October and December during the odd semesters and between March and May in the even semesters. The maximum marks for each theory and practical course (including the project work and Viva Voce examination in the Fourth Semester) shall be 100 with the following breakup. (i) Theory Courses
Internal Assessment : University Exams : 20 Marks 80 Marks

(ii)

Practical courses
Internal Assessment : University Exams : - 100 Marks

M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING)

REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

5.

Passing requirements (i) A candidate who secures not less than 50% of total marks prescribed for the course (For all courses including Theory, Practicals and Project work) with a minimum of 40 marks out of 80 in the University Theory Examinations, shall be declared to have passed in the Examination. If a candidate fails to secure a Pass in a particular course, it is mandatory that he/she shall reappear for the examination in that course during the next semester when examination is conducted in that course. However the Internal Assessment marks obtained by the candidate in the first attempt shall be retained and considered valid for all subsequent attempts.

(ii)

6.

Eligibility for the Award of Degree A student shall be declared to be eligible for the award of the M.E/M.Tech./M.Arch./M.Sc degree provided the student has successfully completed the course requirements and has passed all the prescribed examinations in all the 4 semesters within the maximum period specified in clause 2.

7.

Award of Credits and Grades All assessments of a course will be done on absolute marks basis. However, for the purpose of reporting the performance of a candidate, Letter Grades will be awarded as per the range of total marks (out of 100) obtained by the candidate as given below:

RANGE OF MARKS FOR GRADES


Range of Marks 90-100 80-89 70-79 60-69 50-59 00-49 ABSENT Grade A++ A+ B++ B+ C F W Grade Points (GP) 10 9 8 7 6 0 0

CUMULATIVE GRADE POINT AVERAGE CALCULATION


The CGPA calculation on a 10 scale basis is used to describe the overall performance of a student in all courses from first semester to the last semester. F and W grades will be excluded for calculating GPA and CGPA.
CGPA = i C i GP i i Ci

where Ci - Credits for the subject


GP i - Grade Point for the subject i - Sum of all subjects successfully cleared during all the semesters
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) ii REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

8.

Classification of the Degree Awarded 1 A candidate who qualifies for the award of the Degree having passed the examination in all the courses of all the semesters in his/her first appearance within a maximum period of 4 consecutive semesters after commencement of study securing a CGPA not less than 9.0 shall be declared to have passed the examination in First Class Exemplary. A candidate who qualifies for the award of the Degree having passed the examination in all the courses of all the semesters in his/her first appearance within a maximum period of 4 consecutive semesters after commencement of study, securing a CGPA not less than 7.5 shall be declared to have passed the examination in First Class with Distinction. A candidate who qualifies for the award of the Degree having passed the examination in all the courses of all the semesters within a maximum period of 4 consecutive semesters after commencement of study securing a CGPA not less than 6.0 shall be declared to have passed the examination in First Class. All other candidates who qualify for the award of the Degree having passed the examination in all the courses of all the 4 semesters within a maximum period of 8 consecutive semesters after his/her commencement of study securing a CGPA not less than 5.0 shall be declared to have passed the examination in Second Class. A candidate who is absent in semester examination in a course/project work after having registered for the same, shall be considered to have appeared in that examination for the purpose of classification of degree. For all the above mentioned classification of Degree, the break of study during the programme, will be counted for the purpose of classification of degree. A candidate can apply for revaluation of his/her semester examination answer paper in a theory course, within 1 week from the declaration of results, on payment of a prescribed fee along with prescribed application to the Controller of Examinations through the Head of Department. The Controller of Examination will arrange for the revaluation and the result will be intimated to the candidate concerned through the Head of the Department. Revaluation is not permitted for practical courses and for project work.

2.

3.

Final Degree is awarded based on the following :


CGPA 9.0 CGPA 7.50 < 9.0 CGPA 6.00 < 7.50 CGPA 5.00 < 6.00 First Class - Exemplary First Class with Distinction First Class Second Class

Minimum CGPA requirements for award of Degree is 5.0 CGPA. 9. Discipline Every student is required to observe disciplined and decorous behaviour both inside and outside the University and not to indulge in any activity which will tend to bring down the prestige of the University. If a student indulges in malpractice in any of the University theory / practical examination, he/she shall be liable for punitive action as prescribed by the University from time to time. 10. Revision of Regulations and Curriculum The University may revise, amend or change the regulations, scheme of examinations and syllabi from time to time, if found necessary.

M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING)

iii

REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

M.E - COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING REGULATIONS 2010 - CURRICULUM SEMESTER I


Sl .No. SUBJECT CODE THEORY 1 2 3 4 5 PRACTICAL 6 SCSX6501 Advanced Data Structures Laboratory 0 0 4 2 9 TOTAL CREDITS : 19 SMTX5009 SCSX5001 SCSX5002 SCSX5003 SCSX5004 Advanced Optimization Techniques Advanced Data Structures & Algorithms Compiler Design Computer Networks & Protocols Advanced Computer Architecture 3 3 3 3 3 1 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 4 3 3 3 1 2 3 4 5 SUBJECT TITLE L T P C Page No.

SEMESTER II
Sl.No. 1 2 3 4 5 PRACTICAL 6 SCSX6502 Operating System Laboratory 0 0 4 2 9 TOTAL CREDITS : 18 SUBJECT CODE THEORY SCSX5005 SCSX5006 SCSX5007 Advanced Databases Advanced Operating System Object Oriented Software Engineering Elective - I Elective - II 3 3 3 3 3 0 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 3 4 3 3 3 6 7 8 SUBJECT TITLE L T P C Page No.

SEMESTER III
Sl.No. SUBJECT CODE THEORY 1 2 3 4 5 PRACTICAL 6 SCSX6503 Web Technology Laboratory 0 0 4 2 13 TOTAL CREDITS : 18 SCSX5008 SCSX5009 SCSX5010 Data Mining & Warehousing Computational Intelligence Tools Web Technology Elective - III Elective - IV 3 3 3 3 3 1 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 4 3 3 3 3 10 11 12 SUBJECT TITLE L T P C Page No.

M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING)

iv

REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SEMESTER IV
Sl.No. SUBJECT CODE 1 S31XPROJ SUBJECT TITLE Project Viva Voce L 0 T 0 P 30 C 15

TOTAL CREDITS : 15 TOTAL COURSE CREDITS : 70

LIST OF ELECTIVES
Sl.No. SUBJECT CODE 1 2 3 4 5 6 7 8 9 10 11 12 13 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 SCSX5011 SCSX5012 SCSX5013 SCSX5014 SCSX5015 SCSX5016 SCSX5017 SCSX5018 SCSX5019 SCSX5020 SCSX5021 SCSX5022 SCSX5023 SCSX5024 SCSX5025 SCSX5026 SCSX5027 SCSX5028 SMTX5008 SECX5079 SECX5080 Network Security Software Architecture Natural Language Processing Network Management System Agent Based Intelligent Systems Machine Learning Ethical Hacking & Digital Forensics Grid Computing Performance Evaluation of Systems and Networks Knowledge Engineering Digital Image Processing Virtualization Techniques Service Oriented Architecture Cloud Computing Multicore Architecture Mobile & Pervasive Computing Software Quality Assurance & Testing Software Project Management Mathematical Foundations For Computer Science Wireless Sensor Networks High Performance Networks SUBJECT TITLE L 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 T 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 P 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 0 C 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 3 Page No. 14 15 16 17 18 19 20 21 22 23 24 25 26 27 28 29 30 31 32 33 34

L Lecture hours; T Tutorial hours; P Practical hours; C Credits

M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING)

REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SMTX5009

ADVANCED OPTIMIZATION TECHNIQUES

L 3

T 1

P 0

Credits 4

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION TO OPTIMIZATION


Formulation of optimization problem- Classification - Bounded Variable problems- Bounded

10 hrs.

variable simplex algorithm-Integer Programming- Gomory All Integer cutting plane Method-Gomory Mixed Integer Method-Branch and Bound Method .

UNIT II NON LINEAR PROGRAMMING

10 hrs.

Introduction Unconstrained and Constrained Optimization- Kuhn Tucker conditions- Relative Maximum and Minimum values- Method of Lagrangian Multipliers- Hessian Matrix- Quadratic programming- Wolfes Modified Simplex Method Problems

UNIT III DYNAMIC PROGRAMMING

10 hrs.

Recursive relationship - Solution to recursive equation - Dynamic Programming Algorithm - Principle of Optimality - Maximum and minimum values - Solution of LPP by Dynamic Programming - Multi stage problem.

UNIT IV QUEUEING NETWORKS

10 hrs.

Introduction to concept of queueing Models - Single Server - Multiple server Models - Problems - Pollaczek theorem. Theoritical concepts of Open queueing networks (Theory) - Closed Queueing Networks (Theory) - Queues in series (Theory).

UNIT V DECISION ANALYSIS & SIMULATION

10 hrs.

Introduction to Decision Making process Elements Decision making under uncertainity Maximin and Maximac criteria - Hurwicz criterion Laplace criterion Minimax Regret criterion Decision tree analysis- Problems Discrete Even Simulation Monte Carlo Simulation Stochastic Simulation Applications to Queueing systems.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Hamdy Taha, Operation Research , PHI, 5th Edition., 1995 Hiller& Liberman, Introduction to Operation Research, McGraw Hill 5th Editionn., 2001 Ravindran,Phillips&Solberg, Operations Research : Principles and Practice, Wiley India Lts , 2nd Edition., 2007 Mital K.V. and Mohan. C, Optimization Methods in O.R and System Analysis, New Age International Publishers. Sharma .S.D, Operations Research, Kedarnath Ramnath& Co, 2002 Gupta. P.K and Man Mohan Problems in Operations Research, Sultan Chand and Sons,7th Edition, 1995

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 1 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5001

ADVANCED DATA STRUCTURES AND ALGORITHMS

L 3

T 1

P 0

Credits 4

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION TO ALGORITHMS

10 hrs.

Role of Algorithms in computing- Analyzing algorithm- Designing algorithm- Asymptotic Notations- Summations -Formulas and properties- Recurrences.

SORTING TECHNIQUES
Heapsort Quicksort-Radix sort- Bucket sort- Analysis of sorting techniques.

UNIT II TREE STRUCTURES


Binary Search Trees AVL Trees Red-Black trees-B-Trees Splay Trees

10 hrs.

HEAP STRUCTURES
Min/Max heaps -Leftist Heaps Binomial Heaps Fibonacci Heaps

UNIT III MULTIMEDIA STRUCTURES


Segment Trees k-d Trees Point Quad Trees MX-Quad Trees R-Trees TV-Trees.

10 hrs.

UNIT IV PROBLEM SOLVING TECHNIQUES

10 hrs.

Branch & Bound -NP hard and NP complete problems - Huffman Coding - Activity Networks - Flow Shop Scheduling -Randomized Algorithms - Greedy algorithms - Back tracking -Dynamic programming - Divide and Conquer

UNIT V GRAPH ALGORITHMS

10 hrs.

Graphic Representation BFS DFS Topological Sort Connnected Components Minimum Spanning trees Kruskals Algorithm Prims Algorithm Dijkstras Algorithm Floyds Algorithm Bellman Ford Algorithm

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Thomas H .Coreman, Charles E.Leiserson, Ronald L.Rivest, Introduction to Algorithms, PHI, 2002. Sara Baase, Allen Ran Gelda, Computer Algorithms and Introduction to Design and Analysis, Pearson,2000 Sahni ,Data Structures algorithm and Application in C++ , PHI, 2000 Mark Allen Weiss, Data Structures and Algorithms in C++, Addison wesley Aho. A.V,Hopcroft J.E, and Ullman.J.D, Design and analysis of Computer Algorithms, Addison wesley ,1974.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 2 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5002

COMPILER DESIGN

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I LEXICAL PHASE

10 hrs.

Principles of compiler- Compiler structure- Lexical analysis-buffering schemes-Regular expression-Design of lexical analyser-finite automata-types-Minimised DFA-Direct method-Implementation of lexical analyser generator-Study of LEX tool-Examples.

UNIT II SYNTAX &SEMANTIC PHASE

10 hrs.

Grammar-Syntax tree - Regular expression Vs CFG-Capabilities of CFG-Parsing-Types-Shift Reduce Parsing-Operator Precedence Parsing - Predicive Parsing-Recursive Decent parsing - LR parsing-SLR,CALR and LALR parsing - Run time environment - YACC tool - Examples

UNIT III INTERMEDIATE CODE GENERATION

10 hrs.

Syntax directed translation - Evaluation of inherited and synthesized attribute - Top-down and Bottom-up translators - Intermediate languages - Declaration - Assignment statements - Boolean expressions - Flow control statements -Back patching-Flow control statements-Procedure calls-Symbol table Organization.

UNIT IV CODE OPTIMIZATION

10 hrs.

Introduction to code optimization -Loop optimization- Procedure optimization in-line expansion Leaf routine optimization and shrink wrapping Register allocation and assignment Graph coloring Data flow analysis Constant propagation- Alias analysis Register allocation Global references Optimization for memory hierarchy -Code Scheduling Instruction scheduling Speculative scheduling Software pipelining Trace scheduling Run-time support Register usage Local stack frame Run-time stack Code sharing Positionindependent code.

UNIT V CODE GENERATION

10 hrs.

Issues in the design of a code generator Three address code generation algorithm - Run time environment-Design of a simple code generator.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Alfred V.Aho, Ravi Sethi, Jeffery D.Ullman, Compilers Principles, Techniques and Tools, Addison- Wesley Publishing Company, 1986. Jeans Paul Tramblay and Paul G.Sorenson, The Theory and Practice of compiler Writing, McGraw-Hill Book Company, 1985. Dhamdhere D.M, Introduction to System Software Tata McGraw-Hill Publishing Company, 1986. Alfred V.Aho and Jeffrey D.Ullman, Principles of Compiler Design Addison Wesley, 1977. Steven S. Muchnick, Advanced Compiler Design Implementation, Morgan Koffman Elsevier Science, India, First Edition 2004

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 3 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5003

COMPUTER NETWORKS AND PROTOCOLS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I NETWORK DESIGN AND TRANSMISSION MEDIA

10 hrs.

Components-Topologies-ISO / OSI reference model-layered architecture-TCP/IP architecture and protocol-IP Utilities -Transmission media- SONET-Signaling-cellular network

UNIT II DIGITAL TRANSMISSION AND P2P PROTOCOL

10 hrs.

Characterization of communication channels-Line coding-Error detection and correction-FEC-peer to peer protocols-ARQ protocols-Adaptation functions-Data link control-Channelization

UNIT III IEEE 802.X LAN STANDARDS AND ROUTING TECHNIQUES

10 hrs.

IEEE 802 LAN Standards-LAN bridges-Packet network topology-Routing in packet networks- Shortest path algorithm-Congestion control techniques

UNIT IV TCP/IP

10 hrs.

Ipv4 and Ipv6-User Datagram Protocol-Transmission Control Protocol-DHCP and Mobile IP-Internet routing protocols Multicasting routing.

UNIT V ADVANCED ARCHITECTURE AND MULTIMEDIA NETWORKING

10 hrs.

IP forwarding architectures- Overlay models-MPLS-RSVP-Real time transport protocol[RTCP]-Session control protocol

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Leon Garcia.Widjaja, Communication Networks, Tata Mcgraw-Hill, Sixth Edition, 2002. 2. Behrouz A. Forouzan, Data communication and Networking, Tata McGraw-Hill 2nd edition , 2006. 3. Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Computer Networks, PHI, Fourth Edition, 2003. 4. Prakash C Gupta, Data communication and Networks, PHI, 2009.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 4

Exam Duration : 3 hrs. 30 marks 50 marks


REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5004

ADVANCED COMPUTER ARCHITECTURE

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION AND MEMORY ORGANISATION

10 hrs.

Evolution of Computers - CPU Organisation - Optimizations of Cache Performance - Memory Technology and Optimizations - Protection: Virtual Memory and Virtual Machines - Design of Memory Hierarchies - Case Studies

UNIT II ADVANCED TECHNIQUES FOR EXPLOITING ILP

10 hrs.

Introduction Parallel Processing - Instruction Level Parallelism and Its Exploitation - Concepts and Challenges -Compiler Techniques for Exposing ILP - Limitations on ILP for Realizable Processors - Hardware versus Software Speculation - Multithreading: Using ILP Support to Exploit Thread-level Parallelism

UNIT III MULTI-CORE ARCHITECTURES

10 hrs.

SMT and CMP architectures Design issues Intel Multi-core architecture SUN CMP architecture IBM cell architecture - HP architecture RISC architecture.

UNIT IV MULTIPROCESSORS

10 hrs.

Symmetric and distributed shared memory architectures Cache coherence issues - Performance Issues Synchronization issues Models of Memory Consistency - Interconnection networks Buses, crossbar and multi-stage switches

UNIT V PIPELINING AND VECTOR PROCESSING

10 hrs.

Pipelining Arithmetic Pipeline Instruction Pipeline RISC Pipeline Vector Processing Vector Operations

REFERENCES BOOKS :
1. John L. Hennessey and David A. Patterson, Computer Architecture A quantitative approach, Morgan Kaufmann / Elsevier, 4th. edition, 2007. 2. John P. Hayes, Computer Architecture and Organisation ,MCGraw Hill. 3rd Edition, 1998, 3. Hwang K. and Briggs. F.A, Computer Architecture and Parallel Processing, MCGraw Hill, 1985.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 5 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5005

ADVANCED DATABASES

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I PARALLEL AND DISTRIBUTED DATABASES

10 hrs.

Database System Architectures: Centralized and Client-Server Architectures Server System Architectures Parallel Systems- Distributed Systems Parallel Databases: I/O Parallelism Inter and Intra Query Parallelism Inter and Intra operation Parallelism Distributed Database Concepts - Distributed Data Storage Distributed Transactions Commit Protocols Concurrency Control Distributed Query Processing Three Tier Client Server ArchitectureCase Studies.

UNIT II OBJECT AND OBJECT RELATIONAL DATABASES

10 hrs.

Concepts for Object Databases: Object Identity Object structure Type Constructors Encapsulation of Operations Methods Persistence Type and Class Hierarchies Inheritance Complex Objects Object Database Standards, Languages and Design:ODMG Model ODL OQL Object Relational and Extended Relational Systems : Object Relational featuresinSQL/Oracle Case Studies.

UNIT III XML DATABASES

10 hrs.

XML Databases: XML Data Model DTD - XML Schema - XML Querying Web Databases JDBC Information Retrieval Data Warehousing Data Mining.

UNIT IV MOBILE DATABASES

10 hrs.

Mobile Databases: Location and Handoff Management - Effect of Mobility on Data Management - Location Dependent Data Distribution - Mobile Transaction Models - Concurrency Control - Transaction Commit Protocols- Mobile Database Recovery Schemes

UNIT V MULTIMEDIA DATABASES

10 hrs.

Multidimensional Data Structures Image Databases Text/Document Databases- Video Databases Audio Databases Multimedia Database Design.

REFERENCES BOOKS :
1. Elmasri.R, Navathe. S.B, Fundamentals of Database Systems, Fifth Edition, Pearson Education/Addison Wesley, 2007. 2. Thomas Cannolly and Carolyn Begg, Database Systems, A Practical Approach to Design, Implementation and Management, Third Edition, Pearson Education, 2007. 3. Henry F Korth, Abraham Silberschatz, S. Sudharshan, Database System Concepts, Fifth Edition, McGraw Hill, 2006. 4. Date. C.J,Kannan.A and Swamynathan. S,An Introduction to Database Systems, Eighth Edition, Pearson Education, 2006.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 6 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5006

ADVANCED OPERATING SYSTEM

L 3

T 1

P 0

Credits 4

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Overview of processes Processor Inter Process communication Critical sections Semaphores Process scheduling Performance evaluation Deadlocks: prevention,avoidance detection and recovery.

UNIT II STORAGE ORGANIZATION

10 hrs.

Management strategies Contiguous and non-contiguous storage allocation Fixed partition multi-programming Variable partitions Swapping. Virtual storage, Multilevel organizations, block mapping, paging, segmentation, paging / segmentation systems Page replacement locality-Working sets Demand paging Anticipatory paging page release Page size Program behavior under paging.

UNIT III FILE SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Structures, types File operations Memory mapped files Hierarchical directory systems File system implementation Shared files Protection and security- Case study on design of Unix and MSDOS

UNIT IV DISTRIBUTED OPERATING SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Introduction Hardware and software concepts Multiprocessor time sharing system Design issues Layered protocols Client server model - Remote procedure calls.

UNIT V THREADS & FILE SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Distributed operating systems - Clock synchronization algorithms Threads Design issues of threaded packages Design and implementation issues of processor allocation algorithms Distributed file system.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Silberschatz, Peterson and Galving, Operating System Concepts, Addison Wesley Publishing Company, 3rd Edition 1991. Milenkovich M., Operating Systems: Concepts and Design, McGraw Hill Inc., 2nd Edition, 1992. Tannenbaum. A.S, Modern Operating System Prentice Hall 1992. Bach, M.J Design of Unix Operating SystemPrentice Hall India Ltd., 1988. She Tov Levi, Ashok K.Agarwal, Real Time System Design, Mc Graw Hill Publishing Company 1990.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 7 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5007

OBJECT ORIENTED SOFTWARE ENGINEERING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I PROCESS MODELS

10 hrs.

Software Process - Process models - unified process - Iterative and Incremental - Agile software development - Formal methods - Process improvement models. Object models Classes and objects - Notations- OOSD life cycle UML diagrams.

UNIT II ANALYSIS OF MODELS

10 hrs.

Requirements elicitation Usecases - Analysis of object models - Analysis of dynamic models - Functional and non-functional requirements - Analysis patterns - C&Y CRC technique - Cohesion and Coupling

UNIT III OBJECT MODEL

10 hrs.

Static object modeling - Identification of classes dynamic object modeling - Interaction diagrams - Interface specification Object constraint language.

UNIT IV OO TESTING STRATEGIES

10 hrs.

Testing OOA and OOD Models OO Testing Strategies Test Case Design for OO Software Testing Methods applicable at the class level Interclass test design Metrics for the OO design model OO metrics Metrics for OO testing- Software configuration management - Reverse Engineering and Reengineering - Quality Standards.

UNIT V MAINTENANCE & RISK ANALYSIS

10 hrs.

Maintenance-its importance-Problem tracking report (PTR), Risk management,CMM,COCOMO Model, Risk Analysis, Software Project Scheduling and tracking- Software Architecture Case Studies:-Intro to CASE TOOLS, Object Oriented database-Client /Server computing middleware

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. Stephen R Schach,Classical Object Oriented Software Engineering With UML and Java, McGraw-Hill International edition Brett McLaughlin, Gary Pollice, David West, Head First Object Oriented Analysis and Design, Oreilly series- 2006 John D McGregor, David A Sykes, A Practical Guide to Testing Object Oriented Software, 2001 Pressman R.S,Software Engineering McGraw-Hill 6th edition . Ali Bahrami, Object Oriented System Development using UML, McGraw-Hill International edition, 2005 Graddy Booch, James Rumbaugh,Ivar Jacobson The Unified Modeling Language, Addison-Wesley Professional Robert Binder, Testing Object oriented Systems: Models, Patterns and Tools, Addison-Wesley,1999

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 8 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX6501

ADVANCED DATA STRUCTURES LAB LIST OF EXPERIMENTS

L 0

T 0

P 4

Credits 2

Total Marks 100

1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10. 11.

Polynomial Differentiation. Printing the node details level wise Searching the given element from N*N matrix using Binary search Knapsack Problem using Greedy Method Traveling salesman Problem Binary Tree Traversal Implementing RED BLACK Trees Minimum Spanning Tree using KRUSKAL Algorithm Minimum Spanning Tree using FLOYD WARSHALL Algorithm Implementing Oct trees Implementing quad trees

SCSX6502

OPERATING SYSTEM LABORATORY LIST OF EXPERIMENTS

L 0

T 0

P 4

Credits 2

Total Marks 100

1.

Implement the following CPU scheduling algorithm. a. FCFS b. Round Robin c. Shortest Job First

2. 3. 4. 5. 6. 7. 8. 9. 10.

Implement the Mutual Exclusion problem using Dekkers Algorithm. Implement the Inter Process Communication Problem (Producer Consumer / Reader-Writer problem) using semaphores. Implement Best-Fit, First-Fit Algorithm for Memory management. Implement Memory Allocation with Pages. Implement FIFO Page Replacement Algorithm. Implement LRU Page Replacement Algorithm. Implement the creation of Shared memory Segment. Implement File Locking. Implement Bankers Algorithm.

M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING)

REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5008

DATA MINING AND WAREHOUSING

L 3

T 1

P 0

Credits 4

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Data mining- Introduction - Data Mining Functionalities-Steps in Data Mining Process-Architecture of a Typical Data Mining Systems- Classification of Data Mining Systems Major Issues in Data Mining

DATA PREPROCESSING
Data Preprocessing-Data Cleaning Integration Transformation Reduction - Discretization Concept Hierarchies

UNIT II CONCEPT DESCRIPTION AND ASSOCIATION RULES

10 hrs.

Concept Description - Data Generalization and Summarization based Characterization - Mining Association Rules In Large Databases.

UNIT III PREDICTIVE MODELING

10 hrs.

Classification and Prediction - Issues Regarding Classification and Prediction-Classification By Decision Tree Induction-Bayesian Classification-Other Classification Methods-Prediction-Clusters Analysis: Types Of Data In Cluster Analysis- Categorization Of Major Clustering Methods: Partitioning Methods Hierarchical Methods

UNIT IV DATA WAREHOUSING

10 hrs.

Introduction -Multi Dimensional Data Model- Data Warehouse Architecture-Data Warehouse Implementation- From Data warehousing to Data Mining-OLAP-Need- Categorization Of OLAP Operations.

UNIT V APPLICATIONS

10 hrs.

Applications of Data Mining-Social Impacts Of Data Mining-Tools-An Introduction to DB Miner-Case Studies-Mining WWW-Mining Text Database-Mining Spatial Databases.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Jiawei Han, Micheline Kamber, "Data Mining: Concepts and Techniques", Morgan Kaufmann Publishers, 2002. 2. Alex Berson,Stephen J. Smith, Data Warehousing, Data Mining,& OLAP, Tata Mcgraw- Hill, 2004. 3. Usama M.Fayyad, Gregory Piatetsky - Shapiro, Padhrai Smyth and Ramasamy Uthurusamy, "Advances In Knowledge Discovery And Data Mining", The M.I.T Press, 1996. 4. Ralph Kimball, "The Data Warehouse Life Cycle Toolkit", John Wiley & Sons Inc., 1998. 5. Sean Kelly, "Data Warehousing In Action", John Wiley & Sons Inc., 1997.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 10 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5009

COMPUTATIONAL INTELLIGENCE TOOLS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I ARTIFICIAL NEURAL NETWORKS

10 hrs.

The Artificial Neuron - Supervised Learning -Unsupervised Learning - Reinforcement Learning - Performance Issues

UNIT II EVOLUTIONARY COMPUTATION

10 hrs.

Introduction - Genetic Algorithms - Genetic Programming - Evolutionary Programming - Evolution Strategies Differential Evolution - Cultural Algorithms - Coevolution

UNIT III SWARM INTELLIGENCE

10 hrs.

Particle Swarm Optimization - Ant Colony Optimization Artificial Bee Colony Sheepflock Optimization

UNIT IV ARTIFICIAL IMMUNE SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Natural Immune System - Learning the Antigen Structure - The Network Theory - The Danger Theory Artificial Immune Models

UNIT V FUZZY SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Fuzzy Sets - Fuzzy Logic and Reasoning - Fuzzy Inferencing - Fuzzy Controllers - Mamdani Fuzzy Controller Takagi-Sugeno Controller - Rough Sets

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Andries . P. Engelbrecht , Computational Intelligence, Wiley Publications, Second Edition

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 11

Exam Duration : 3 hrs. 30 marks 50 marks


REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5010

WEB TECHNOLOGY

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I WEB ESSENTIALS

10 hrs.

Internet Web clients-servers communication XHTML 1.0 Cascading Style sheets[CSS]: features- Style rule-Style properties-Box model techniques

UNIT II CLIENT SIDE PROGRAMMING

10 hrs.

Java script objects Build in objects-DOM: History and levels- Document tree- DOM event handling- Non compliant browsers .

UNIT III JAVA SERVLET AND JSP

10 hrs.

Server side programming Java servlets: basics Simple program Session management JSP : JSP basics -JSP objects simple JSP pages.

UNIT IV ASP PROGRAMMING


Active server page: ASP object - AJAX- Simple ASP pages-ASP Components-Database connectivity.

10 hrs.

UNIT V RELATED TECHNOLOGIES

10 hrs.

Building Web applications - Cookies Sessions Open source environment PHP basis and simple program MYSQL -SOAP basis Case studies.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Jeffrey C Jackson, Web Technology A computer Science perspective, Person Education, 2007. 2. Chris Bates, Web Programming Building Internet Applications, Wiley India, 2006. 3. Deitel & Deitel Internet and World Wide Web How to Program, Third Edition. 4. Gopalan. N.P , Web Technology A Developer Perspectives, PHI, 2009.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 12

Exam Duration : 3 hrs. 30 marks 50 marks


REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX6503

WEB TECHNOLOGY LAB

L 0

T 0

P 4

Credits 2

Total Marks 100

LIST OF EXPERIMENTS

HTML
1. Create a personalized web page using HTML. The web page must include links about yourself, your curriculum vitae (forms), album (img tags), tutorials and contacts. All types of hyper-links should be used. 2. Create a web page using frames, ordered and unordered list.

XML
Develop a simple application using XML

JAVA SCRIPT
1. Perform client side validation for an e-mail registration form using Java Script. 2. Create a simple quiz application with timer using Java Script. 3. Develop an application to fetch information from a database with AJAX

JAVA APPLETS
1. Create an applet application and load an image in the applet. 2. Create a Java application to show how mouse events are handled.

ASP
Develop a simple application using ASP

PHP
Develop a simple application using PHP

WEB APPLICATIONS
Creating a simple web service using SOAP.
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 13 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5011

NETWORK SECURITY

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION & MATHEMATICAL FOUNDATION

10 hrs.

Beginning with a simple communication game Wresting between safeguard and attack Probability and Information Theory - Algebraic foundations Number theory.

UNIT II ENCRYPTION SYMMETRIC TECHNIQUES

10 hrs.

Substitution Ciphers - Transposition Ciphers - Classical Ciphers DES AES Confidentiality Modes of Operation Key Channel Establishment for symmetric cryptosystems.

UNIT III ENCRYPTION ASYMMETRIC TECHNIQUES & DATA INTEGRITY TECHNIQUES

10 hrs.

Diffie-Hellman Key Exchange protocol Discrete logarithm problem RSA cryptosystems & cryptanalysis ElGamal cryptosystem Need for stronger Security Notions for Public key Cryptosystems Combination of Asymmetric and Symmetric Cryptography Key Channel Establishment for Public key Cryptosystems - Data Integrity techniques Symmetric techniques - Asymmetric techniques

UNIT IV AUTHENTICATION

10 hrs.

Authentication Protocols Principles Authentication protocols for Internet Security SSH Remote logic protocol Kerberos Protocol SSL & TLS Authentication frame for public key Cryptography Directory Based Authentication framework Non - Directory Based Public-Key Authentication framework .

UNIT V SECURITY PRACTICES

10 hrs.

Protecting Programs and Data Information and the Law Rights of Employees and Employers Software Failures Computer Crime Privacy Ethical Issues in Computer Security.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. Wenbo Mao, Modern Cryptography Theory and Practice, Pearson Education, First Edition, 2006. Douglas R. Stinson ,Cryptography Theory and Practice , Third Edition, Chapman & Hall/CRC,2006. Charles B. Pfleeger, Shari Lawrence Pfleeger, Security in Computing, Fourth Edition, Pearson Education, 2007. Wade Trappe and Lawrence C. Washington, Introduction to Cryptography with Coding Theory, Second Edition, Pearson Education, 2007

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 14 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX501

SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I SOFTWARE PROCESS AND THE ROLE OF MODELING AND ANALYSIS

10 hrs.

Analysis modeling and best practices Process - Process modeling - process notations Traditional best practice diagrams such as DFDs and ERDs.

UNIT II ARCHITECTURAL MODELING

10 hrs.

UML diagrams - Structural static modeling - Behavioural modeling Interactions Use cases Use case, interaction & Activity diagrams - Component and deployment diagrams analysis case studies - analysis patterns.

UNIT III SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE DESIGN

10 hrs.

Design best practices - Design patterns Creational patterns Structural patterns Behavioural patterns Component technology - Object oriented frameworks - Distributed objects - Interoperability standards- Case studies.

UNIT IV SOFTWARE ARCHITECTURE

10 hrs.

Architectural styles - Architectural patterns - Patterns and software architecture - Analysis of architectures Formal descriptions of software architectures.

UNIT V ARCHITECTURAL DESCRIPTION LANGUAGES ADL AND TOOLS

10 hrs.

Requirements of Architecture Description languages - Tools for Architectural design - Scalability and Interoperability issues, Web application architectures - case studies.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Grady Booch, James Rumbaugh, Ivar Jacobson, The Unified Modeling Language User Guide, Addison Wesley, 1999. 2. Erich Gamma, Richard Helm, Ralph Johnson and John Vlissides, Design Patterns, Elements of reusable Object Oriented Software, Addison Wesley 1995. 3. Frank Buschmann et al, Pattern Oriented Software Architecture, Volume 1: A system of patterns, John Wiley and Sons, 1996. 4. Len Bass, Paul Clements, Rick Kazman, Software Architecture in Practice, Second Edition, Addison Wesley, 1998. 5. Mary Shaw and David Garlan, Software Architecture Perspectives on an emerging Discipline:, Prentice Hall, 1996.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 15 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5013

NATURAL LANGUAGE PROCESSING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I LINGUISTIC BACKGROUND


An outline of English syntax Grammars and Parsing features and Augmented Grammars.

10 hrs.

UNIT II SYNTACTIC PROCESSING

10 hrs.

Grammars for Natural language Toward efficient parsing - Bottom-up parsing - Top-down parsing Transition Network Grammars.

UNIT III FEATURES AND AUGMENTED GRAMMARS

10 hrs.

Feature systems and Augmented Grammars Some basic feature systems for English Morphological analysis and the lexicon Grammar using features Parsing with features Augmented transition networks Generalized feature systems and unification grammars.

UNIT IV GRAMMARS FOR NATURAL LANGUAGE

10 hrs.

Auxiliary verbs and verb phrases Movement phenomena in language Handling questions in context Free grammars relative clauses Hold mechanism in ATNs.

UNIT V TOWARD EFFICIENT PARSING

10 hrs.

Human preferences - Parsing semantic interpretation Semantics and logical form word senses and Ambiguity The basic logical form language Encoding ambiguity Verbs and states in logical form Semantic interpretation and compositionality A simple grammar and lexicon with semantic interpretation Prepositional phrases and noun phrases.

REFERENCE BOOK:
1. James. Allan, Natural Language understanding, Benjamin/Gumming Publishing Company Inc, 2nd edition, 1995

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 16 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5014

NETWORK MANAGEMENT SYSTEM

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I DATA COMMUNICATION AND NETWORKS MANAGEMENT OVERVIEW

10 hrs.

Analogy of Telephone Network Management Distributed Computing Environments Communications Protocols & Standards Case histories of Networking and Management Challenges of Information Technology Managers Network Management Goals , Organization, and Functions Network & System management Network Management System Platform Current status and Future of Network management.

UNIT II SNMP, BROADBAND, AND TMN MANAGNEMENT

10 hrs.

Standard, Models and Language SNMPv1 Network Management: Organization, Information, Communication and Functional model SNMPv2: System Architecture- Structure of Management Information SNMPv2 Protocol SNMpv3: Documentation Architecture Applications.

UNIT III SNMP MANAGEMENT

10 hrs.

RMON Remote Monitoring RMON SMI & MIB RMON1 RMON2 ATM remote monitoring A Case study of Internet Traffic Using RMON.

UNIT IV BROADBAND NETWORK MANAGEMENT

10 hrs.

Broadband Access Networks and Technologies HFC Technology HFC Management DSL Technology Asymmetric Digital Subscriber Line Technology Telecommunication Management Network: Why TMN TMN Conceptual Model TMN Standards TMN Architecture TMN Management Service Architecture Implementation Issues.

UNIT V NETWORK MANAGEMENT TOOLS AND SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Network Management Tools- Network Statistics Measurement Systems History of Enterprise Management Network Management Systems Commercial Network Management Systems System Management Network Management Applications: Fault management Performance Management security Management.

REFERENCE BOOK:
1. Mani Subramanian ,Network Management Principles and Practice, Pearson Education, Fourth Indian Reprint , 2003

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 17 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5015

AGENT BASED INTELLIGENT SYSTEMS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Definitions - Foundations - History - Intelligent Agents-Problem Solving-Searching - Heuristics -Constraint Satisfaction Problems - Game playing.

UNIT II KNOWLEDGE REPRESENTATION AND REASONING

10 hrs.

Logical Agents-First order logic-First Order Inference-Unification-Chaining- Resolution Strategies-Knowledge Representation-Objects-Actions-Events

UNIT III PLANNING AGENTS

10 hrs.

Planning Problem-State Space Search-Partial Order Planning-Graphs-Nondeterministic Domains-Conditional Planning-Continuous Planning-MultiAgent Planning.

UNIT IV AGENTS AND UNCERTAINITY

10 hrs.

Acting under uncertainty Probability Notation-Bayes Rule and use - Bayesian Networks-Other Approaches-Time and Uncertainty-Temporal Models- Utility Theory - Decision Network Complex Decisions.

UNIT V HIGHER LEVEL AGENTS


Knowledge in Learning-Relevance Information-Statistical Learning Communication - Formal Grammar-Augmented Grammars- Future of AI. Methods-Reinforcement

10 hrs.
Learning -

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. Stuart Russell and Peter Norvig, Artificial Intelligence - A Modern Approach, 2nd Edition, Prentice Hall, 2002 Michael Wooldridge, An Introduction to Multi Agent System, John Wiley, 2002. Patrick Henry Winston,Artificial Intelligence, III Edition, AW, 1999. Nils.J.Nilsson, Principles of Artificial Intelligence, Narosa Publishing House, 1992.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 18

Exam Duration : 3 hrs. 30 marks 50 marks


REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5016

MACHINE LEARNING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Learning Problems Perspectives and Issues Concept Learning Version Spaces and Candidate Eliminations Inductive bias Decision Tree learning Representation Algorithm Heuristic Space Search.

UNIT II NEURAL NETWORKS AND GENETIC ALGORITHMS

10 hrs.

Neural Network Representation Problems Perceptrons Multilayer Networks and Back Propagation Algorithms Advanced Topics Genetic Algorithms Hypothesis Space Search Genetic Programming Models of Evalution and Learning.

UNIT III BAYESIAN AND COMPUTATIONAL LEARNING

10 hrs.

Bayes Theorem Concept Learning Maximum Likelihood Minimum Description Length Principle Bayes Optimal Classifier Gibbs Algorithm Nave Bayes Classifier Bayesian Belief Network EM Algorithm Probability Learning Sample Complexity Finite and Infinite Hypothesis Spaces Mistake Bound Model.

UNIT IV INSTANT BASED LEARNING

10 hrs.

K- Nearest Neighbour Learning Locally weighted Regression Radial Bases Functions Case Based Learning.

UNIT V ADVANCED LEARNING

10 hrs.

Learning Sets of Rules Sequential Covering Algorithm Learning Rule Set First Order Rules Sets of First Order Rules Induction on Inverted Deduction Inverting Resolution Analytical Learning Perfect Domain Theories Explanation Base Learning FOCL Algorithm Reinforcement Learning Task Q-Learning Temporal Difference Learning

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Tom M. Mitchell, Machine Learning, McGraw-Hill, 1st edition, 1997 2. Ethem Alpaydin, Introduction to Machine Learning (Adaptive Computation and Machine Learning), The MIT Press 2004 3. Hastie. T, Tibshirani. R, Friedman. J. H, The Elements of Statistical Learning, Springer,1st edition, 2001

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 mark
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 19 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5017

ETHICAL HACKING AND DIGITAL FORENSICS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I HACKING WINDOWS

10 hrs.

Hacking windows Network hacking Web hacking Password hacking - A study on various attacks Input validation attacks SQL injection attacks Buffer overflow attacks - Privacy attacks.

UNIT II TCP / IP AND FIREWALLS

10 hrs.

TCP / IP Checksums IP Spoofing port scanning, DNS Spoofing. Dos attacks SYN attacks, Smurf attacks, UDP flooding, DDOS Models. Firewalls Packet filter firewalls - Packet Inspection firewalls Application Proxy Firewalls - Batch File Programming.

UNIT III COMPUTER FRAUD

10 hrs.

Fundamentals of Computer Fraud Threat concepts Framework for predicting inside attacks Managing the threat Strategic Planning Process.

UNIT IV ARCHITECTURE STRATEGIES

10 hrs.

Architecture strategies for computer fraud prevention Protection of Web sites Intrusion detection system NIDS, HIDS Penetrating testing process Web Services Reducing transaction risks.

UNIT V FRAUD SELECTION & DETECTION

10 hrs.

Key Fraud Indicator selection process customized taxonomies Key fraud signature selection process Accounting Forensics Computer Forensics Journaling and it requirements Standardized logging criteria Journal risk and control matrix Neural networks Misuse detection and Novelty detection.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Kenneth C.Brancik, Insider Computer Fraud, Auerbach Publications Taylor & Francis, Group 2008. 2. Ankit Fadia, Ethical Hacking, Second Edition Macmillan India Ltd, 2006

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 20 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5018

GRID COMPUTING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

High Performance Computing- Cluster Computing-Grid Computing- Grid Computing Models- Types of Grids An overview of Grid Business Areas- Grid Applications Grid Protocols

UNIT II GRID COMPUTING SYSTEMS AND ARCHITECTURES

10 hrs.

Grid architecture Grid architecture and relationship to other Distributed Technologies Concept of virtual organizations- Grid Computing road map

UNIT III THE NEW GENERATION OF GRID COMPUTING APPLICATIONS


Merging the Grid services Architecture with the Web Services Architecture

10 hrs.

UNIT IV OPEN GRID SERVICES

10 hrs.

ARCHITECTURE: OGSA Sample use cases OGSA platform components - OGSA Basic Services. INFRASTRUCTURE: Technical details of OSGI- OGSI/OGSA service elements and layered model

UNIT V GRID COMPUTING TOOL KITS

10 hrs.

Globus Toolkit Architecture - Programming model - High level services OGSI - .Net middleware Solutions

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Joshy Joseph & Craig Fellenstein, Grid Computing, PHI, PTR-2003. 2. Ahmar Abbas, Grid Computing: A Practical Guide to technology and Applications, Charles River media 2003. 3. Ian Foster, Carl Kesselman, The Grid2: Blueprint for a New Computing Infrastructure. Morgan Kaufman, New Delhi, 2004 4. Fran Bermn, Geoffrey Fox, Anthony Hey J.G., Grid Computing: Making the Global Infrastructure a Reality, Wiley, USA, 2003 5. Maozhen Li, Mark Baker, The Grid: Core Technologies, John Wiley & Sons, 2005. 6. URLs: www.globus.org and glite.web.cern.ch (Unit 5)

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 21

Exam Duration : 3 hrs. 30 marks 50 marks


REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5019

PERFORMANCE EVALUATION OF SYSTEMS AND NETWORKS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I REQUIREMENT ANALYSIS

10 hrs.

Performance Characteristics Requirement Analysis: Concepts User, Device, Network Requirements Process Developing RMA, Delay, Capacity Requirements Flow Analysis Identifying and Developing Flows Flow Models Flow Prioritization Specification.

UNIT II QUEUING MODELS AND DISCIPLINE

10 hrs.

Random variables - Stochastic process Link Delay components Queuing Models Littles Theorem Birth & Death process Queuing Disciplines.

UNIT III QUEUING SYSTEMS

10 hrs.

Markovian FIFO Queuing Systems M/M/1 M/M/a M/M/8 - M/G/1 M/M/m/m and other Markov-Non-Markovian and self-similar models Network of Queues Burkes Theorem Jacksons Theorem.

UNIT IV THROUGHPUT ANALYSIS

10 hrs.

Multi-User Uplinks/Downlinks - Capacity Regions - Opportunistic Scheduling for Stability and Max Throughput Multi-Hop Routing - Mobile Networks - Throughput Optimality and Backpressure

UNIT V PERFORMANCE MEASURES

10 hrs.

Performance of Optimal Lyapunov Networking - Energy Optimality- Energy-Delay Tradeoffs - Virtual Cost Queues - Average Power Constraints - Flow Control with Infinite Demand - Auxiliary Variables - Flow Control with Finite Demand - General Utility Optimization.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. James D.McCabe , Network Analysis , Architecture and Design , 2nd Edition,Elsevier,2003 Bertsekas & Gallager , Data Networks , Second Edition ,Pearson Education,2003 Sheldon Ross ,Introduction to Probability Models , Academic Press, New York , 8th edition,2003 Bertsekas.D, Nedic A. and Ozdaglar. A., Convex Analysis and Optimization, Athena Scientific, Cambridge , Massachusetts , 2003 Nader F.Mir, Computer and Communication Networks,Pearson Education.2007 Paul J.Fortier, Howard E.Michel, Computer Systems Performance Evaluation and Prediction, Elsevier,2003

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 22 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5020

KNOWLEDGE ENGINEERING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Key concepts Why knowledge Representation and Reasoning Language of first order Logic Syntax, Semantics Pragmatics Expressing Knowledge Levels of Representation Knowledge Acquisition and Sharing Sharing Ontologies Language Ontologies Language Patterns Tools for Knowledge Acquisition

UNIT II RESOLUTION AND REASONING

10 hrs.

Proportional Case Handling Variables and Qualifies Dealing with Intractability Reasoning with Horn Clauses - Procedural Control of Reasoning Rules in Production Description Logic - Vivid Knowledge Beyond Vivid.

UNIT III REPRESENTATION

10 hrs.

Object Oriented Representations Frame Formalism Structured Descriptions Meaning and Entailment Taxonomies and Classification Inheritance Networks Strategies for Defeasible Inheritance Formal Account of Inheritance Networks.

UNIT IV DEFAULTS, UNCERTAINTY AND EXPRESSIVENESS

10 hrs.

Defaults Introduction Closed World Reasoning Circumscription Default Logic Limitations of Logic Fuzzy Logic Nonmontonic Logic Theories and World Semiotics Auto epistemic Logic - Vagueness Uncertainty and Degrees of Belief Noncategorical Reasoning Objective and Subjective Probability.

UNIT V ACTIONS AND PLANNING

10 hrs.

Explanation and Diagnosis Purpose Syntax, Semantics of Context First Order Reasoning Modal Reasoning in Context Encapsulating Objects in Context Agents Actions Situational Calculus Frame Problem Complex Actions Planning Strips Planning as Reasoning Hierarchical and Conditional Planning.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Ronald Brachman, Hector Levesque Knowledge Representation and Reasoning , The Morgan Kaufmann Series in Artificial Intelligence 2004 2. John F. Sowa, Knowledge Representation: Logical, Philosophical, and Computational Foundations, 2000 3. Arthur B. Markman, Knowledge Representation, Lawrence Erlbaum Associates,1998

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 23

Exam Duration : 3 hrs. 30 marks 50 marks


REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5021

DIGITAL IMAGE PROCESSING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I FUNDAMENTALS

10 hrs.

Digital Image Representation- Fundamental steps in Image Processing- Elements of Digital Image Processing System. Digital Image Fundamentals Elements of Visual perception- A simple Image Model- Sampling & QuantizationNeighbours of a Pixel Connectivity Relations - Equivalence & Transitive Closure.

UNIT II BASIC TRANSFORMATION

10 hrs.

Basic Transformation Perspective Transformation Photographic film structure, Exposure & Film Characteristics. Image Transforms-Introduction to Fourier Transform-Discrete Fourier Transform-Fast Fourier Transform-Discrete Cosine Transform.

UNIT III IMAGE ENHANCEMENT AND RESTORATION

10 hrs.

Image Enhancement: Background Enhancement by Point Processing Spactial filtering Enhancement in Frequency Domain Colour Image Processing : Color Models RGB color model CMY color model YIQ color model- HIS color model PseudoColor Image Processing Fundamentals- Filtering model of pseudo-color image processing. Image Restoration:Algebraic approach to restoration Inverse filtering, LMS filter Geometric transformation Spatial & Gray-level Interpolation

UNIT IV IMAGE COMPRESSION

10 hrs.

Image Compression : Fundamentals Image Compression Models Elements of Information Theory Error Free Compression Variable Length Coding Constant area Coding Lossless Predictive Coding Transform Coding Image Compression Standards.

UNIT V IMAGE SEGMENTATION AND APPLICATIONS

10 hrs.

Image Segmentation, Representation & Description Edge linking & Boundary Detection Thresholding Region Segmentation Representation Oriented & description schemes of Images Boundary Extraction Morphology Applications Elements of Image Analysis.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Rafel C. Gonzalez & Richard E. Woods, Digital Image Processing , Addison Wesley 2. SID Ahamed M.A, Image Processing Theory, Algorithm & Architecture , McGraw Hill 1991.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 24 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5022

VIRTUALIZATION TECHNIQUES

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I OVERVIEW OF VIRTUALIZATION

10 hrs.

Basics of Virtualization - Virtualization Types Desktop Virtualization Network Virtualization Server and Machine Virtualization Storage Virtualization System-level or Operating Virtualization Application Virtualization-Virtualization Advantages - Virtual Machine Basics Taxonomy of Virtual machines - Process Virtual Machines - System Virtual Machines Hypervisor - Key Concepts

UNIT II SERVER CONSOLIDATION

10 hrs.

Hardware Virtualization Virtual Hardware Overview - Sever Virtualization Physical and Logical Partitioning Types of Server Virtualization Business cases for Server Virtualization Uses of Virtual server Consolidation Planning for Development Selecting server Virtualization Platform

UNIT III NETWORK VIRTUALIZATION

10 hrs.

Design of Scalable Enterprise Networks - Virtualizing the Campus WAN Design - WAN Architecture - WAN Virtualization - Virtual Enterprise Transport VirtualizationVLANs and Scalability - Theory Network Device Virtualization Layer 2 - VLANs Layer 3 VRF Instances Layer 2 - VFIs Virtual Firewall Contexts Network Device Virtualization Data-Path Virtualization Layer 2: 802.1q - Trunking Generic Routing Encapsulation - IPsec L2TPv3 Label Switched Paths - Control-Plane VirtualizationRouting Protocols- VRF - Aware Routing Multi-Topology Routing.

UNIT IV VIRTUALIZING STORAGE

10 hrs.

SCSI- Speaking SCSI- Using SCSI buses Fiber Channel Fiber Channel Cables Fiber Channel Hardware Devices iSCSI Architecture Securing iSCSI SAN backup and recovery techniques RAID SNIA Shared Storage Model Classical Storage Model SNIA Shared Storage Model Host based Architecture Storage based architecture Network based Architecture Fault tolerance to SAN Performing Backups Virtual tape libraries.

UNIT V VIRTUAL MACHINES PRODUCTS

10 hrs.

Xen Virtual machine monitors- Xen API VMware VMware products - Vmware Features Microsoft Virtual Server Features of Microsoft Virtual Server.

REFERENCES BOOKS :
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. William von Hagen, ,,Professional Xen Virtualization, Wrox Publications, January, 2008. Chris Wolf , Erick M. Halter, Virtualization: From the Desktop to the Enterprise, APress 2005. Kumar Reddy, Victor Moreno, Network virtualization, Cisco Press, July, 2006. James E. Smith, Ravi Nair, Virtual Machines: Versatile Platforms for Systems and Processes, Elsevier/Morgan Kaufmann, 2005. David Marshall, Wade A. Reynolds, Advanced Server Virtualization: VMware and Microsoft Platform in the Virtual Data Center, Auerbach Publications, 2006.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 25 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5023

SERVICE ORIENTED ARCHITECTURE

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I SOA - INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Software Architecture Types of IT Architecture SOA Evolution Key components perspective of SOA Enterprise-wide SOA Architecture Enterprise Applications Solution Architecture for enterprise application Software platforms for enterprise Applications Patterns for SOA SOA programming models

UNIT II ANALYSIS AND DESIGN

10 hrs.

Service-oriented Analysis and Design Design of Activity, Data, Client and business process services Technologies of SOA SOAP WSDL JAX WS XML WS for .NET Service integration with ESB Scenario Business case for SOA stakeholder objectives benefits of SPA Cost Savings

UNIT III SOA TECHNOLOGIES

10 hrs.

SOA implementation and Governance Strategy SOA development SOA governance Trends in SOA Event-driven architecture Software as a service SOA technologies Proof-of-concept Process orchestration SOA best practices

UNIT IV WEB SERVICE FRAMEWORK

10 hrs.

Meta data management XML security XML signature XML Encryption SAML XACML XKMS WS-Security Security in web service framework - Advanced messaging

UNIT V TRANSACTION PROCESSING

10 hrs.

Transaction processing Paradigm Protocols and co-ordination Transaction specifications SOA in mobile Research issues.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Shankar Kambhampaly, Service Oriented Architecture for Enterprise Applications, Wiley India Pvt Ltd, 2008 2. Eric Newcomer, Greg Lomow, Understanding SOA with Web Services, Pearson Education. 3. Mark O Neill, et al. , Web Services Security, Tata McGraw Hill

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 26 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5024

CLOUD COMPUTING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I UNDERSTANDING CLOUD COMPUTING

10 hrs.

Cloud Computing History of Cloud Computing Cloud Architecture Cloud Storage Why Cloud Computing Matters Advantages of Cloud Computing Disadvantages of Cloud Computing Companies in the Cloud Today Cloud Services

UNIT II DEVELOPING CLOUD SERVICES

10 hrs.

Web-Based Application Pros and Cons of Cloud Service Development Types of Cloud Service Development Software as a Service Platform as a Service Web Services On-Demand Computing Discovering Cloud Services Development Services and Tools Amazon Ec2 Google App Engine IBM Clouds

UNIT III CLOUD COMPUTING FOR EVERYONE

10 hrs.

Centralizing Email Communications Collaborating on Schedules Collaborating on To-Do Lists Collaborating Contact Lists Cloud Computing for the Community Collaborating on Group Projects and Events Cloud Computing for the Corporation

UNIT IV USING CLOUD SERVICES

10 hrs.

Collaborating on Calendars, Schedules and Task Management Exploring Online Scheduling Applications Exploring Online Planning and Task Management Collaborating on Event Management Collaborating on Contact Management Collaborating on Project Management Collaborating on Word Processing - Collaborating on Databases Storing and Sharing Files

UNIT V OTHER WAYS TO COLLABORATE ONLINE

10 hrs.

Collaborating via Web-Based Communication Tools Evaluating Web Mail Services Evaluating Web Conference Tools Collaborating via Social Networks and Groupware Collaborating via Blogs and Wikis

REFERENCE BOOKS :
1. Michael Miller, Cloud Computing: Web-Based Applications That Change the Way You Work and Collaborate Online, Que publishing, August 2008. 2. Haley Beard, Cloud Computing Best Practices for Managing and Measuring Processes for On-demand Computing, applications and Data Centers in the Cloud with SLAs, Emereo Pty Limited, July 2008

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 27 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5025

MULTICORE ARCHITECTURE

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Fundamentals of SuperScalar Processor Design - Introduction to Multicore Architecture Chip Multiprocessing - Homogeneous Vs Heterogeneous design - SMP Multicore Vs Multithreading.

UNIT II MEMORY ORGANIZATION

10 hrs.

Shared memory architectures Synchronization Memory organization Cache Memory Cache Coherency Protocols - Design of Levels of Caches.

UNIT III PROGRAMMING MODEL

10 hrs.

Multicore programming Model Shared memory model - Message passing model -Transaction model OpenMP and MPI Programming.

UNIT IV POWER PC DESIGN

10 hrs.

PowerPC architecture RISC design - Power PC ISA - Power PC Memory Management - Power 5 Multicore architecture design - Power 6 Architecture.

UNIT V PROCESSING ELEMENT AND DEVELOPMENT

10 hrs.

Cell Broad band engine architecture, PPE (Power Processor Element), SPE (Synergistic processing element), Cell Software Development Kit, Programming for Multicore architecture.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. 6. Hennessey & Pateterson, Computer Architecture A Quantitative Approach, Harcourt Asia, Morgan Kaufmann, 1999 Joseph JaJa, Introduction to Parallel Algorithms, Addison-Wesley, 1992. IBM Journals for Power 5, Power 6 and Cell Broadband Engine Architecture. Kai Hwang, Advanced Computer Architecture: Parallelism, Scalability and Programmability McGraw-Hill, 1993 Richard Y. Kain, Advanced Computer Architecture: A System Design Approach, PHI, 1999 Rohit Chandra, Ramesh Menon, Leo Dagum, and David Kohr, Parallel Programming in OpenMP, Morgan Kaufmann, 2000.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 28 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5026

MOBILE AND PERVASIVE COMPUTING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I EMERGING TECHNOLOGIES

10 hrs.

Wireless networks- Emerging technologies - Blue tooth, WiFi, WiMAX, 3G ,WATM.-Mobile IP protocols -WAP push architecture-Wml scripts and applications.

UNIT II MOBILE COMPUTING ENVIRONMENT AND SECURITY

10 hrs.

Mobile computing environment Functions -Architecture-Design considerations - content architecture -CC/PP exchange protocol -context manager - Data management in WAE-Coda file system- Caching schemes- Mobility QOS - Security in mobile computing.

UNIT III HANDOFF AND TRACKING MANAGEMENT SCHEMES

10 hrs.

Handoff in wireless mobile networks-Reference model-Handoff schemes- Location management in cellular networks - Mobility models- Location and tracking management schemes- Time, movement, profile and distance based update strategies - ALI technologies

UNIT IV PERVASIVE COMPUTING

10 hrs.

Pervasive Computing- Principles, Characteristics- Interaction transparency - Context aware - Automated experience capture. Architecture for pervasive computing- Pervasive devices - Embedded controls.- Smart sensors and actuators -Context communication and access services

UNIT V OPEN PROTOCOLS AND CONTEXT AWARE SENSOR NETWORKS

10 hrs.

Open protocols- Service discovery technologies- SDP, Jini, SLP, UpnP protocolsdata synchronization- SyncML framework - Context aware mobile services -Context aware sensor networks - Addressing and communications - Context aware security.

REFERENCE BOOKS :
1. 2. 3. 4. Ivan Stojmenovic , Handbook of Wireless Networks and Mobile Computing, John Wiley & sons Inc, Canada, 2002. Asoke K Taukder,Roopa R Yavagal,Mobile Computing, Tata McGraw Hill Pub Co. , New Delhi, 2005. Seng Loke, Context-Aware Computing Pervasive Systems Auerbach Pub., New York, 2007. Uwe Hansmann etl , Pervasive Computing, Springer, New York.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 29 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5027

SOFTWARE QUALITY ASSURANCE AND TESTING

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I INTRODUCTION

10 hrs.

Software testing fundamentals Objectives-principles Testability- Levels of testing-TMM- Characteristics of a tester-A testing group-Comparison of KPA in ISO, CMM and TMM- Software quality attributes.

UNIT II SOFTWARE TESTING METHODS & STRATEGIES

10 hrs.

Test case design-White box testing-Basic path testing Flow Graph Notation-Cyclomatic Complexity-Deriving Test Cases- Graphic matrices-Control Structure Testing Deriving Test cases-Data flow Testing-Loop Testing-Black box Testing Graph Based Testing Methods- Equivalence partitioning-Boundary value analysis-Comparison testing. Strategic Approach to Software Testing Verification and Validation-Strategic issues-Unit testing Consideration Procedures. Integration Testing-Regression Testing-Integration Test Documentation-Validation testing-Configuration Review-Alpha and Beta Testing System Testing Art of Debugging Case studies : Writing test cases for white box and black box testing.

UNIT III OBJECT ORIENTED TESTING, METRICS & MEASUREMENTS

10 hrs.

Testing OOD Models OO Testing Strategies Test Case Design for OO Software Testing Methods applicable at the class level Interclass test design The intent of OO metrics Distinguishing characteristics of OO metrics Common software measurements: Code coverage-Cohesion-Comment density,Coupling-Function point analysis-Number of classes and interfaces-Number of lines of customer requirements-Robert Cecil Martins software package metrics-Bugs per line of code -Source lines of code

UNIT IV QUALITY CONSIDERATIONS

10 hrs.

Planning for quality Quality plan Cost/benefit tradeoff Feature/bug tradeoff Modeling quality improvement - Notation of defects Defects Defect removal activities Conditions for each activity Defect removal goals Quality improvement teams quality recognition Manage Priorities Effectively Statistical Quality Assurance-Software Reliability

UNIT V OVERVIEW OF STANDARDS

10 hrs.

Levels of standards Quality assurance standards Project management standards Dependability standards Product standards Process standards - ISO 9000 Reviews, Audits and Certification.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Ilene Barnstein,Practical Software Testing A Process Oriented Approach, Springer International Edition. Humphrey, W. S. (2002),A Discipline for Software Engineering. Reading,MA, Addison-Wesley Roger S.Pressman, Software Engineering, A Practitioners Approach,Tata McGraw Hill,Fifth Edition. Marc Roper, Software Testing, McGraw Hill Professional -1994 Ian Sommerville, Software Engineering, Addison-Wesley, V Edition, 1996.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 30 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SCSX5028

SOFTWARE PROJECT MANAGEMENT

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I BASIC CONCEPTS


Product, Process and Project - Definition: Product Life Cycle -Project Life Cycle Models.

10 hrs.

UNIT II FORMAT PROCESS MODELS AND THEIR USE

10 hrs.

Definition and format model for a process- The ISO 9001 and CMM models and their relevance to project management- Other emerging models like People CMM.

UNIT III UMBRELLA ACTIVITIES IN PROJECTS


Metrics- Configuration management-Software Quality Assurance- Risk Analysis

10 hrs.

UNIT IV IN STREAM ACTIVITIES IN PROJECTS

10 hrs.

Project Initiation - Project Planning, execution and tracking- Project Wind-up- Concept of process/project database.

UNIT V ENGINEERING AND PEOPLE ISSUES IN PROJECT MANAGEMENT

10 hrs.

Phases (Requirements, Design, Development, Testing, maintenance, deployment) - Engineering activities and management issues in each phase- Special considerations in project management for India and geographic distribution issues.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. 5. Ramesh, "Gopalaswamy: Managing Global Projects", Tata McGraw Hill, 2001. Humphrey, Watts, "Managing the Software Process", Addison Wesley, 1986. Pressman, Roger, "Software Engineering, A Practitioners approach, McGraw Hill, 1997. DeMarco and Lister, "Peopleware: Productive Projects and Teams ,Second Edition, 1987 Wheelwright and Clark: "Revolutionising Product Development", The Free Press, 1993.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 31 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SMTX5008

MATHEMATICAL FOUNDATIONS FOR COMPUTER SCIENCE

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I PRELIMINARIES AND INDUCTION

10 hrs.

Set Theory basic concepts-Relations and ordering- Functions, Recursion and its use in theorem provingAlphabets, strings and Languages and Grammars- Functions and Infinite sets Paring Functions Contors proofMathematical Induction proofs- the principle of mathematical induction Recursive definitions Structural Induction.

UNIT II FINITE AUTOMATA

10 hrs.

Finite Automata and Regular Languages - Regular Languages and regular expressions, Finite AutomataDistinguishing one string from another, union, intersections, and complements-Non-determinism and kleenes theoremNon-deterministic finite automata and NFA with transition-Kleenes theorem.

UNIT III REGULAR LANGUAGES AND CONTEXT-FREE LANGUAGES

10 hrs.

Regular and Non-regular Languages- A criterion for regularity-Minimal finite automata-The pumping lemma-Decision problems, Regular languages and computers. Context-free Grammars- Definition-More examples-Including some familiar languages- Union-Concatenations, and *s of CFLs.

UNIT IV DERIVATION TREES AND PUSHDOWN AUTOMATA

10 hrs.

Derivation Trees and Ambiguity- Unambiguous CFG for Algebraic Expressions-Simplified forms and Normal forms. Pushdown Automata- Introduction-Definition-Deterministic Pushdown automaton-PDA corresponding to a given Context-free Grammar- Context-free Grammar corresponding to PDA.

UNIT V TURING MACHINES AND THEIR LANGUAGES

10 hrs.

Turing Machines Models of computation and the Turing thesis-Definition of TM and TMs as Language Acceptor-Computing a partial Function with a TM, variations of TM-Non-deterministic TM-Universal Turing Machine. Recursively Enumerable and Recursive languages Recursively Enumerable and recursive sets- Enumerating a Language-Not all Languages are recursively enumerable-Language not Recursively enumerable

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1.John C. Martin, Theory of Computation ,Tata McGraw Hill, Third Edition. 2.Bernard M.Moret, The Theory of Computation , Addison Wesley,2002 Reprint. 3.Tremblay.P. and.Manohar. R, Discrete Mathematical Structures with applications to computer science Tata McGraw Hill

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 32 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SECX5079

WIRELESS SENSOR NETWORKS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I NETWORK ARCHITECTURE


Concept of sensor network Introduction, Applications, sensors.

10 hrs.

Single node architecture: Hardware and software components of a sensor node-Tiny OS operating system-nesC language. Wireless Sensor Network architecture: Typical network architectures- Data relaying strategies-Aggregation-Role of energy in routing decisions.

UNIT II MAC LAYER

10 hrs.

MAC layer strategies: MAC layer protocols-Scheduling sleep cycles-Energy management-contention based protocols-schedule based protocols, 802.15.4 standard. Naming and addressing: Addressing services, Publish-subscribe topologies. Clock Synchronization: Clustering for synchronization-Sender-receiver and Receiver-receiver synchronization-Error analysis. Power Management Per node-System-wide-Sentry services-Sensing coverage

UNIT III NODE LOCALIZATION AND DATA GATHERING

10 hrs.

Node Localization: Absolute and relative localization-Triangulation-Multi-hop localization and error analysis-Anchoring, geographic localization-Target tracking, localization and identity management-Walking GPS-Range free solutions. Data Gathering - Tree construction algorithms and analysis - Asymptotic capacity- Lifetime optimization formulations- Storage and retrieval. Deployment & Configuration - Sensor deployment, scheduling and coverage issues-Self configuration and topology control.

UNIT IV ROUTING AND DISTRIBUTED COMPUTATION

10 hrs.

Routing: Agent-based routingRrandom walk-Trace routing data centric-Hierarchical, location-based, energy efficient routing Querying - Data collection and processing-Collaborative information processing and group connectivity. Distributed Computation - Detection, estimation, and classification problems - Energy-efficient distributed algorithms.

UNIT V SENSOR NETWORK TOOLS

10 hrs.

Sensor Network Platforms and Tools: Sensor node hardware-Programming challenges-Node level software platform-Node level simulators-Programming beyond individual nodes.- Security - Privacy issues - Attacks and countermeasures.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. Feng Zhaoand Leonidas J Guibas, Wireless Sensor Networks Morgan Kaufmann Publishers and imprint of Elsevier, 2004. 2. Raghavendra. C. S., Krishna M. Sivalingam, Taieb F. Znati, Wireless Sensor Networks, 2nd edition, Springer, 2004. 3. Holger Karl, Andreas Willig, Protocols and Architectures for Wireless Sensor Networks, John Wiley and Sons, 2005.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 33 REGULATIONS 2010

SATHYABAMA UNIVERSITY

FACULTY OF COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING

SECX5080

HIGH PERFORMANCE NETWORKS

L 3

T 0

P 0

Credits 3

Total Marks 100

UNIT I HIGH SPEED LAN

10 hrs.

Fast Ethernet technology-FDDI, SONET and SDH standards-Performance of high speed LAN Throughput, delay and reliability-Wavelength division multiplexed LAN Routing and switching in WDM networks-Gigabit LAN

UNIT II ISDN

10 hrs.

Overview of ISDN User interface - Architecture and standards-Packet switched call over ISDN,B and D channels-Link access procedure (LAPD)-ISDN layered architecture-Signaling-Limitations of Narrow band ISDN(N-ISDN) and evolution of Broadband ISDN(B- ISDN)

UNIT III ASYNCHRONOUS TRANSFER MODE NETWORKS

10 hrs.

TM protocol architecture-ATM adaption layer-Fast packet switching techniques and VP/VC encapsulation-Source characteristics.

UNIT IV ATM TRAFFIC MANAGEMENT

10 hrs.

Traffic management issues in ATM- Resource management-Connection management-Policing and reactive control principles-Discrete time queue analysis and application to CAC-Leaky bucket and ECN/ICN.

UNIT V ATM SIGNALING AND DATA COMMUNICATION OVER ATM

10 hrs.

ATM signaling fundamentals and Meta signaling-TCP/IP over ATM-Challenges and proposals-LAN emulation over ATM- Performance of data communication over ATM.

REFERENCE BOOKS:
1. 2. 3. 4. Onvural R.O, Asyncronous Transfer mode Networks Performance Issues, Artech House, 1995. Stallings. W, High Speed Networks, TCP/IP and ATM Design Principle, PHI,1998. Craig Partridge, Gigabit Networking, Addison Wesley, 1997. William Stallings, ISDN B ISDN with Frame relay and ATM, PHI, 1995.

UNIVERSITY EXAM QUESTION PAPER PATTERN


Max. Marks : 80 Exam Duration : 3 hrs. PART A : 6 questions of 5 marks each without choice 30 marks PART B : 5 questions from each of the five units of internal choice, each carrying 10 marks 50 marks
M.E(COMPUTER SCIENCE AND ENGINEERING) 34 REGULATIONS 2010

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