搜索


会员资源切换至【手机版】

切换本帖至【手机版】


开启左侧

操作系统概念 (操作系统恐龙书) Operating System Concepts 英文第七版原版 [PDF]

[复制链接]
发表于 2021-7-27 23:41:37 | 显示全部楼层 |阅读模式

游客,本帖隐藏的内容需要积分高于 1 才可浏览,您当前积分为 0


资源信息:



中文名


: 操作系统概念 (操作系统恐龙书)


英文名


: Operating System Concepts


别名


: 操作系统恐龙书


版本


: 英文第七版原版 [PDF]


发行日期


: 2005年


地区


: 美国


对白语言


: 英语


概述


:




有名的恐龙书,经典之作。本书为第七版的英文原版。


本书讨论了操作系统中的基本概念和算法,并对大量实例(如Linux系统)进行了研究。全书内容共分七部分。第一部分概要解释了操作系统是什么、做什么、是怎样设计与构造的,也解释了操作系统概念是如何发展起来的,操作系统的公共特性是什么。第二部分进程管理描述了作为现代操作系统核心的进程以及并发的概念。第三部分存储管理描述了存储管理的经典结构与算法以及不同的存储管理方案。第四部分I/O系统对I/O进行了深入的讨论,包括I/O系统设计、接口、内部结构与功能等。第五部分分布式系统介绍了分布式系统的一般结构以及连接它们的网络,讨论了分布存取策略、分布式文件系统及分布式系统中同步、通信等机制。第六部分保护与安全介绍了操作系统中对文件、内存、CPU及其他资源进行操作的安全与保护机制。第七部分案例研究,分析与讨论了Linux系统、Windows 2000、WindowsXP、FreeBSD、Mach及Nachos等实例。 Operating System Concepts 7/e, the best-selling introductory text in the market, continues to evolve with emerging course needs and to provide a solid theoretical foundation for understanding operating systems. The seventh edition has been updated to offer coverage of the most current topics and applications, improved conceptual coverage and additional content to bridge the gap between concepts and actual implementations. The new two-color design allows for easier navigation and supports student motivation. New exercises, lab projects and review questions help to further reinforce important concepts. Wiley Plus, including a test bank, self-check exercises, and a student solutions manual, is now part of the comprehensive support package. New Adaptations * Increased coverage of user perspective in Chapter 1. * Increased coverage of OS design throughout. * A new chapter on real-time and embedded systems (Chapter 19). * A new chapter on multimedia (Chapter 20). * Additional coverage of security and protection. * Additional coverage of distributed programming. * New exercises at the end of each chapter. * New programming exercises and projects at the end of each chapter. * New student-focused pedagogy and a new two-color design to enhance the learning


以下是目录: PART ONE OVERVIEW Chapter 1 Introduction 1.1 What Operating Systems Do 3 1.2 Computer-System Organization 6 1.3 Computer-System Architecture 12 1.4 Operating-System Structure 15 1.5 Operating-System Operations 17 1.6 Process Management 20 1.7 Memory Management 21 1.8 Storage Management 22 1.9 Protection and Security 26 1.10 Distributed Systems 28 1.11 Special-Purpose Systems 29 1.12 Computing Environments 31 1.13 Summary 34 Exercises 36 Bibliographical Notes 38 Chapter 2 Operating-System Structures 2.1 Operating-System Services 39 2.2 User Operating-System Interface 41 2.3 System Calls 43 2.4 Types of System Calls 47 2.5 System Programs 55 2.6 Operating-System Design and Implementation 56 2.7 Operating-System Structure 58 2.8 Virtual Machines 64 2.9 Java 67 2.10 Operating-System Generation 73 2.11 System Boot 74 2.12 Summary 75 Exercises 76 Bibliographical Notes 81 PART TWO PROCESS MANAGEMENT Chapter 3 Processes 3.1 Process Concept 85 3.2 Process Scheduling 89 3.3 Operations on Processes 94 3.4 Interprocess Communication 101 3.5 Examples of IPC Systems 110 3.6 Communication in Client- Server Systems 113 3.7 Summary 124 Exercises 125 Bibliographical Notes 130 xvii xviii Contents Chapter 4 Threads 4.1 Overview 133 4.2 Multithreading Models 135 4.3 Thread Libraries 137 4.4 Java Threads 140 4.5 Threading Issues 147 4.6 Operating-System Examples 156 4.7 Summary 159 Exercises 159 Bibliographical Notes 165 Chapter 5 CPU Scheduling 5.1 Basic Concepts 167 5.2 Scheduling Criteria 171 5.3 Scheduling Algorithms 172 5.4 Multiple-Processor Scheduling 183 5.5 Thread Scheduling 186 5.6 Operating System Examples 187 5.7 Java Scheduling 195 5.8 Algorithm Evaluation 199 5.9 Summary 203 Exercises 204 Bibliographical Notes 207 Chapter 6 Process Synchronization 6.1 Background 209 6.2 The Critical-Section Problem 211 6.3 Peterson’s Solution 213 6.4 Synchronization Hardware 214 6.5 Semaphores 217 6.6 Classic Problems of Synchronization 222 6.7 Monitors 231 6.8 Java Synchronization 236 6.9 Synchronization Examples 250 6.10 Atomic Transactions 255 6.11 Summary 263 Exercises 264 Bibliographical Notes 271 Chapter 7 Deadlocks 7.1 System Model 273 7.2 Deadlock Characterization 275 7.3 Methods for Handling Deadlocks 280 7.4 Deadlock Prevention 284 7.5 Deadlock Avoidance 287 7.6 Deadlock Detection 293 7.7 Recovery from Deadlock 296 7.8 Summary 298 Exercises 299 Bibliographical Notes 303 PART THREE MEMORY MANAGEMENT Chapter 8 Main Memory 8.1 Background 307 8.2 Swapping 314 8.3 Contiguous Memory Allocation 316 8.4 Paging 320 8.5 Structure of the Page Table 329 8.6 Segmentation 334 8.7 Example: The Intel Pentium 337 8.8 Summary 341 Exercises 342 Bibliographical Notes 344 Contents xix Chapter 9 VirtualMemory 9.1 Background 347 9.2 Demand Paging 351 9.3 Copy-on-Write 357 9.4 Page Replacement 359 9.5 Allocation of Frames 372 9.6 Thrashing 375 9.7 Memory-Mapped Files 379 9.8 Allocating Kernel Memory 384 9.9 Other Considerations 387 9.10 Operating-System Examples 393 9.11 Summary 396 Exercises 397 Bibliographical Notes 401 PART FOUR STORAGE MANAGEMENT Chapter 10 File-System Interface 10.1 The Concept of a File 405 10.2 Access Methods 413 10.3 Directory Structure 417 10.4 File-System Mounting 427 10.5 File Sharing 429 10.6 Protection 434 10.7 Summary 439 Exercises 440 Bibliographical Notes 441 Chapter 11 File-System Implementation 11.1 File-System Structure 443 11.2 File-System Implementation 445 11.3 Directory Implementation 451 11.4 Allocation Methods 453 11.5 Free-Space Management 461 11.6 Efficiency and Performance 463 11.7 Recovery 467 11.8 Log-Structured File Systems 469 11.9 NFS 470 11.10 Example: The WAFL File System 476 11.11 Summary 478 Exercises 479 Bibliographical Notes 487 Chapter 12 Mass-Storage Structure 12.1 Overview of Mass-Storage Structure 489 12.2 Disk Structure 492 12.3 Disk Attachment 493 12.4 Disk Scheduling 494 12.5 Disk Management 500 12.6 Swap-Space Management 504 12.7 RAID Structure 506 12.8 Stable-Storage Implementation 515 12.9 Tertiary-Storage Structure 516 12.10 Summary 526 Exercises 527 Bibliographical Notes 533 Chapter 13 I/O Systems 13.1 Overview 535 13.2 I/O Hardware 536 13.3 Application I/O Interface 545 13.4 Kernel I/O Subsystem 551 13.5 Transforming I/O Requests to Hardware Operations 558 13.6 STREAMS 560 13.7 Performance 562 13.8 Summary 565 Exercises 566 Bibliographical Notes 567 xx Contents PART FIVE PROTECTION AND SECURITY Chapter 14 Protection 14.1 Goals of Protection 571 14.2 Principles of Protection 572 14.3 Domain of Protection 573 14.4 Access Matrix 578 14.5 Implementation of Access Matrix 582 14.6 Access Control 585 14.7 Revocation of Access Rights 586 14.8 Capability-Based Systems 587 14.9 Language-Based Protection 590 14.10 Summary 595 Exercises 596 Bibliographical Notes 597 Chapter 15 Security 15.1 The Security Problem 599 15.2 Program Threats 603 15.3 System and Network Threats 611 15.4 Cryptography as a Security Tool 617 15.5 User Authentication 628 15.6 Implementing Security Defenses 632 15.7 Firewalling to Protect Systems and Networks 639 15.8 Computer-Security Classifications 641 15.9 An Example: Windows XP 642 15.10 Summary 644 Exercises 645 Bibliographical Notes 646 PART SIX DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS Chapter 16 Distributed System Structures 16.1 Motivation 651 16.2 Types of Network- based Operating Systems 653 16.3 Network Structure 657 16.4 Network Topology 660 16.5 Communication Structure 662 16.6 Communication Protocols 668 16.7 Robustness 671 16.8 Design Issues 673 16.9 An Example: Networking 676 16.10 Summary 677 Exercises 678 Bibliographical Notes 684 Chapter 17 Distributed File Systems 17.1 Background 685 17.2 Naming and Transparency 687 17.3 Remote File Access 690 17.4 Stateful Versus Stateless Service 695 17.5 File Replication 696 17.6 An Example: AFS 698 17.7 Summary 703 Exercises 704 Bibliographical Notes 705 Chapter 18 Distributed Coordination 18.1 Event Ordering 707 18.2 Mutual Exclusion 710 18.3 Atomicity 713 18.4 Concurrency Control 716 18.5 Deadlock Handling 720 18.6 Election Algorithms 727 18.7 Reaching Agreement 730 18.8 Summary 732 Exercises 733 Bibliographical Notes 734 Contents xxi PART SEVEN SPECIAL -PURPOSE SYSTEMS Chapter 19 Real-Time Systems 19.1 Overview 739 19.2 System Characteristics 740 19.3 Features of Real-Time Kernels 742 19.4 Implementing Real-Time Operating Systems 744 19.5 Real-Time CPU Scheduling 748 19.6 VxWorks 5.x 754 19.7 Summary 756 Exercises 757 Bibliographical Notes 757 Chapter 20 Multimedia Systems 20.1 What Is Multimedia? 759 20.2 Compression 762 20.3 Requirements of Multimedia Kernels 764 20.4 CPU Scheduling 766 20.5 Disk Scheduling 767 20.6 Network Management 769 20.7 An Example: CineBlitz 772 20.8 Summary 774 Exercises 775 Bibliographical Notes 777 PART EIGHT CASE STUDIES Chapter 21 The Linux System 21.1 Linux History 781 21.2 Design Principles 786 21.3 Kernel Modules 789 21.4 Process Management 792 21.5 Scheduling 795 21.6 Memory Management 800 21.7 File Systems 808 21.8 Input and Output 814 21.9 Interprocess Communication 817 21.10 Network Structure 818 21.11 Security 821 21.12 Summary 823 Exercises 824 Bibliographical Notes 825 Chapter 22 Windows XP 22.1 History 827 22.2 Design Principles 829 22.3 System Components 831 22.4 Environmental Subsystems 855 22.5 File System 858 22.6 Networking 866 22.7 Programmer Interface 873 22.8 Summary 880 Exercises 880 Bibliographical Notes 881 Chapter 23 Influential Operating Systems 23.1 Early Systems 883 23.2 Atlas 889 23.3 XDS-940 890 23.4 THE 891 23.5 RC 4000 892 23.6 CTSS 893 23.7 MULTICS 893 23.8 IBM OS/360 894 23.9 Mach 895 23.10 Other Systems 897 Exercises 897 xxii Contents PART EIGHT APPENDICES Appendix A BSD UNIX (contents online) A.1 UNIX History 899 A.2 Design Principles 904 A.3 Programmer Interface 906 A.4 User Interface 913 A.5 Process Management 916 A.6 Memory Management 920 A.7 File System 922 A.8 I/O System 930 A.9 Interprocess Communication 933 A.10 Summary 938 Exercises 939 Bibliographical Notes 940 Appendix B TheMach System (contents online) B.1 History of the Mach System 941 B.2 Design Principles 943 B.3 System Components 944 B.4 Process Management 947 B.5 Interprocess Communication 953 B.6 Memory Management 958 B.7 Programmer Interface 963 B.8 Summary 964 Exercises 965 Bibliographical Notes 966 Credits 967 Appendix C Windows 2000 (contents online) C.1 History 969 C.2 Design Principles 970 C.3 System Components 971 C.4 Environmental Subsystems 987 C.5 File System 989 C.6 Networking 996 C.7 Programmer Interface 1001 C.8 Summary 1008 Exercises 1008 Bibliographical Notes 1009 Appendix D Distributed Communication (contents online) D.1 Sockets 1011 D.2 UDP Sockets 1018 D.3 Remote Method Invocation 1022 D.4 Other Aspects of Distributed Communication 1027 D.5 Web Services 1029 D.6 Summary 1033 Exercises 1034 Bibliographical Notes 1035 Appendix E Java Primer (contents online) E.1 Basics 1037 E.2 Inheritance 1046 E.3 Interfaces and Abstract Classes 1048 E.4 Exception Handling 1052 E.5 Applications and Applets 1053 E.6 Summary 1055 Bibliographical Notes 1055 Bibliography 899 Credits 929 Index 929



[已通过安全测试] [杀毒软件]:Symantec AntiVirus [杀毒引擎版本]: 10.0.2.2000 [病毒库]:2007-8-26 [共享服务器]:DonkeyseverNo.2 [共享时间]:不定时,一般在白天 [已通过安装测试]WindowsXP SP2 [免责声明]该下载内容仅限于个人测试学习之用,不得用于商业用途,并且请在下载后24小时内删除。版权归原作者所有,如果你喜欢,请购买正版。



主题推广




回复

使用道具 举报

您需要登录后才可以回帖 登录 | 立即注册

本版积分规则

切换至【手机版】| 主站| Archiver|

JS of wanmeiff.com and vcpic.com Please keep this copyright information, respect of, thank you!JS of wanmeiff.com and vcpic.com Please keep this copyright information, respect of, thank you!

|网站地图

GMT+8, 2026-3-24 10:23 , Processed in 1.628576 second(s), 124 queries .

 

快速回复 返回顶部 返回列表