Operating System Exercises - Chapter 9 Sol
Operating System Exercises - Chapter 9 Sol
9
CHAPTER
Memory
Practice Exercises
9.1 Under what circumstances do page faults occur? Describe the actions
taken by the operating system when a page fault occurs.
Answer: A page fault occurs when an access to a page that has not been
brought into main memory takes place. The operating system verifies
the memory access, aborting the program if it is invalid. If it is valid, a
free frame is located and I/O is requested to read the needed page into
the free frame. Upon completion of I/O, the process table and page table
are updated and the instruction is restarted.
9.2 Assume that you have a page-reference string for a process with m
frames (initially all empty). The page-reference string has length p; n
distinct page numbers occur in it. Answer these questions for any page-
replacement algorithms:
a. What is a lower bound on the number of page faults?
b. What is an upper bound on the number of page faults?
Answer:
a. n
b. p
9.3 Which of the following programming techniques and structures are
“good” for a demand-paged environment ? Which are “not good”? Ex-
plain your answers.
a. Stack
b. Hashed symbol table
29
30 Chapter 9 Virtual Memory
c. Sequential search
d. Binary search
e. Pure code
f. Vector operations
g. Indirection
Answer:
a. Stack—good.
b. Hashed symbol table —not good.
c. Sequential search—good.
d. Binary search—not good.
e. Pure code —good.
f. Vector operations—good.
g. Indirection—not good.
9.4 Consider the following page-replacement algorithms. Rank these al-
gorithms on a five-point scale from “bad” to “perfect” according to
their page-fault rate. Separate those algorithms that suffer from Belady’s
anomaly from those that do not.
a. LRU replacement
b. FIFO replacement
c. Optimal replacement
d. Second-chance replacement
Answer:
words, and the paging device is a drum that rotates at 3000 revolutions
per minute and transfers 1 million words per second. The following
statistical measurements were obtained from the system:
Calculate the effective instruction time on this system, assuming that the
system is running one process only and that the processor is idle during
drum transfers.
Answer:
1, 2, 3, 4, 2, 1, 5, 6, 2, 1, 2, 3, 7, 6, 3, 2, 1, 2, 3, 6.
32 Chapter 9 Virtual Memory
How many page faults would occur for the following replacement al-
gorithms, assuming one, two, three, four, five, six, or seven frames?
Remember all frames are initially empty, so your first unique pages will
all cost one fault each.
• LRU replacement
• FIFO replacement
• Optimal replacement
Answer:
9.9 Suppose that you want to use a paging algorithm that requires a refer-
ence bit (such as second-chance replacement or working-set model), but
the hardware does not provide one. Sketch how you could simulate a
reference bit even if one were not provided by the hardware, or explain
why it is not possible to do so. If it is possible, calculate what the cost
would be.
Answer: You can use the valid/invalid bit supported in hardware to
simulate the reference bit. Initially set the bit to invalid. On first reference
a trap to the operating system is generated. The operating system will
set a software bit to 1 and reset the valid/invalid bit to valid.
9.10 You have devised a new page-replacement algorithm that you think may
be optimal. In some contorted test cases, Belady’s anomaly occurs. Is the
new algorithm optimal? Explain your answer.
Answer: No. An optimal algorithm will not suffer from Belady’s
anomaly because —by definition—an optimal algorithm replaces the
page that will not be used for the longest time. Belady’s anomaly occurs
when a page-replacement algorithm evicts a page that will be needed
in the immediate future. An optimal algorithm would not have selected
such a page.
9.11 Segmentation is similar to paging but uses variable-sized “pages.” De-
fine two segment-replacement algorithms based on FIFO and LRU page-
replacement schemes. Remember that since segments are not the same
size, the segment that is chosen to be replaced may not be big enough
to leave enough consecutive locations for the needed segment. Consider
strategies for systems where segments cannot be relocated, and those
for systems where they can.
Answer:
Practice Exercises 33
a. FIFO. Find the first segment large enough to accommodate the in-
coming segment. If relocation is not possible and no one segment
is large enough, select a combination of segments whose mem-
ories are contiguous, which are “closest to the first of the list”
and which can accommodate the new segment. If relocation is
possible, rearrange the memory so that the first N segments large
enough for the incoming segment are contiguous in memory. Add
any leftover space to the free-space list in both cases.
b. LRU. Select the segment that has not been used for the longest
period of time and that is large enough, adding any leftover space
to the free space list. If no one segment is large enough, select
a combination of the “oldest” segments that are contiguous in
memory (if relocation is not available) and that are large enough.
If relocation is available, rearrange the oldest N segments to be
contiguous in memory and replace those with the new segment.
9.12 Consider a demand-paged computer system where the degree of mul-
tiprogramming is currently fixed at four. The system was recently mea-
sured to determine utilization of CPU and the paging disk. The results
are one of the following alternatives. For each case, what is happening?
Can the degree of multiprogramming be increased to increase the CPU
utilization? Is the paging helping?
a. CPU utilization 13 percent; disk utilization 97 percent
b. CPU utilization 87 percent; disk utilization 3 percent
c. CPU utilization 13 percent; disk utilization 3 percent
Answer:
a. Thrashing is occurring.
b. CPU utilization is sufficiently high to leave things alone, and in-
crease degree of multiprogramming.
c. Increase the degree of multiprogramming.
9.13 We have an operating system for a machine that uses base and limit
registers, but we have modified the machine to provide a page table.
Can the page tables be set up to simulate base and limit registers? How
can they be, or why can they not be?
Answer: The page table can be set up to simulate base and limit registers
provided that the memory is allocated in fixed-size segments. In this
way, the base of a segment can be entered into the page table and the
valid/invalid bit used to indicate that portion of the segment as resident
in the memory. There will be some problem with internal fragmentation.