|
|
UNIX
MEMORY MANAGEMENT
1. What is the difference between Swapping and Paging?
Swapping:
Whole process is moved from the swap device to the main memory for execution.
Process size must be less than or equal to the available main memory. It is
easier to implementation and overhead to the system. Swapping systems does not
handle the memory more flexibly as compared to the paging systems.
Paging:
Only the required memory pages are moved to main memory from the swap device
for execution. Process size does not matter. Gives the concept of the virtual
memory.
It provides greater flexibility in mapping the virtual address space into the
physical memory of the machine. Allows more number of processes to fit in the
main memory simultaneously. Allows the greater process size than the available
physical memory. Demand paging systems handle the memory more flexibly.
2. What is major difference between the Historic Unix and the new BSD release
of Unix System V in terms of Memory Management?
Historic Unix uses Swapping – entire process is transferred to the main memory
from the swap device, whereas the Unix System V uses Demand Paging – only the
part of the process is moved to the main memory. Historic Unix uses one Swap
Device and Unix System V allow multiple Swap Devices.
3. What is the main goal of the Memory Management?
It decides which process should reside in the main memory,
Manages the parts of the virtual address space of a process which is
non-core resident,
Monitors the available main memory and periodically write the processes into
the swap device to provide more processes fit in the main memory
simultaneously.
4. What is a Map?
A Map is an Array, which contains the addresses of the free space in the swap
device that are allocatable resources, and the number of the resource units
available there.
This allows First-Fit allocation of contiguous blocks of a resource. Initially
the Map contains one entry – address (block offset from the starting of the
swap area) and the total number of resources.
Kernel treats each unit of Map as a group of disk blocks. On the allocation
and freeing of the resources Kernel updates the Map for accurate information.
5. What scheme does the Kernel in Unix System V follow while choosing a swap
device among the multiple swap devices?
Kernel follows Round Robin scheme choosing a swap device among the multiple
swap devices in Unix System V.
6. What is a Region?
A Region is a continuous area of a process’s address space (such as text, data
and stack). The kernel in a ‘Region Table’ that is local to the process
maintains region. Regions are sharable among the process.
7. What are the events done by the Kernel after a process is being swapped out
from the main memory?
When Kernel swaps the process out of the primary memory, it performs the
following:
Kernel decrements the Reference Count of each region of the process. If the
reference count becomes zero, swaps the region out of the main memory,
Kernel allocates the space for the swapping process in the swap device,
Kernel locks the other swapping process while the current swapping operation
is going on,
The Kernel saves the swap address of the region in the region table.
8. Is the Process before and after the swap are the same? Give reason.
Process before swapping is residing in the primary memory in its original
form. The regions (text, data and stack) may not be occupied fully by the
process, there may be few empty slots in any of the regions and while swapping
Kernel do not bother about the empty slots while swapping the process out.
After swapping the process resides in the swap (secondary memory) device. The
regions swapped out will be present but only the occupied region slots but not
the empty slots that were present before assigning.
While swapping the process once again into the main memory, the Kernel
referring to the Process Memory Map, it assigns the main memory accordingly
taking care of the empty slots in the regions.
9. What do you mean by u-area (user area) or u-block?
This contains the private data that is manipulated only by the Kernel. This is
local to the Process, i.e. each process is allocated a u-area.
10. What are the entities that are swapped out of the main memory while
swapping the process out of the main memory?
All memory space occupied by the process, process’s u-area, and Kernel stack
are swapped out, theoretically.
Practically, if the process’s u-area contains the Address Translation Tables
for the process then Kernel implementations do not swap the u-area.
11. What is Fork swap?
fork() is a system call to create a child process. When the parent process
calls fork() system call, the child process is created and if there is short
of memory then the child process is sent to the read-to-run state in the swap
device, and return to the user state without swapping the parent process. When
the memory will be available the child process will be swapped into the main
memory.
12. What is Expansion swap?
At the time when any process requires more memory than it is currently
allocated, the Kernel performs Expansion swap. To do this Kernel reserves
enough space in the swap device. Then the address translation mapping is
adjusted for the new virtual address space but the physical memory is not
allocated. At last Kernel swaps the process into the assigned space in the
swap device. Later when the Kernel swaps the process into the main memory this
assigns memory according to the new address translation mapping.
13. How the Swapper works?
The swapper is the only process that swaps the processes. The Swapper operates
only in the Kernel mode and it does not uses System calls instead it uses
internal Kernel functions for swapping. It is the archetype of all kernel
process.
14. What are the processes that are not bothered by the swapper? Give Reason.
Zombie process: They do not take any up physical memory.
Processes locked in memories that are updating the region of the process.
Kernel swaps only the sleeping processes rather than the ‘ready-to-run’
processes, as they have the higher probability of being scheduled than the
Sleeping processes.
15. What are the requirements for a swapper to work?
The swapper works on the highest scheduling priority. Firstly it will look for
any sleeping process, if not found then it will look for the ready-to-run
process for swapping. But the major requirement for the swapper to work the
ready-to-run process must be core-resident for at least 2 seconds before
swapping out. And for swapping in the process must have been resided in the
swap device for at least 2 seconds. If the requirement is not satisfied then
the swapper will go into the wait state on that event and it is awaken once in
a second by the Kernel.
16. What are the criteria for choosing a process for swapping into memory from
the swap device?
The resident time of the processes in the swap device, the priority of the
processes and the amount of time the processes had been swapped out.
17. What are the criteria for choosing a process for swapping out of the
memory to the swap device?
The process’s memory resident time,
Priority of the process and
The nice value.
18. What do you mean by nice value?
Nice value is the value that controls {increments or decrements} the priority
of the process. This value that is returned by the nice () system call. The
equation for using nice value is:
Priority = (“recent CPU usage”/constant) + (base- priority) + (nice value)
Only the administrator can supply the nice value. The nice () system call
works for the running process only. Nice value of one process cannot affect
the nice value of the other process.
19. What are conditions on which deadlock can occur while swapping the
processes?
All processes in the main memory are asleep.
All ‘ready-to-run’ processes are swapped out.
There is no space in the swap device for the new incoming process that are
swapped out of the main memory.
There is no space in the main memory for the new incoming process.
20. What are conditions for a machine to support Demand Paging?
Memory architecture must based on Pages,
The machine must support the ‘restartable’ instructions.
21. What is ‘the principle of locality’?
It’s the nature of the processes that they refer only to the small subset of
the total data space of the process. i.e. the process frequently calls the
same subroutines or executes the loop instructions.
22. What is the working set of a process?
The set of pages that are referred by the process in the last ‘n’, references,
where ‘n’ is called the window of the working set of the process.
23. What is the window of the working set of a process?
The window of the working set of a process is the total number in which the
process had referred the set of pages in the working set of the process.
24. What is called a page fault?
Page fault is referred to the situation when the process addresses a page in
the working set of the process but the process fails to locate the page in the
working set. And on a page fault the kernel updates the working set by reading
the page from the secondary device.
25. What are data structures that are used for Demand Paging?
Kernel contains 4 data structures for Demand paging. They are,
Page table entries,
Disk block descriptors,
Page frame data table (pfdata),
Swap-use table.
26. What are the bits that support the demand paging?
Valid, Reference, Modify, Copy on write, Age. These bits are the part of the
page table entry, which includes physical address of the page and protection
bits.
Page address
Age Copy on write Modify Reference Valid Protection
27. How the Kernel handles the fork() system call in traditional Unix and in
the System V Unix, while swapping?
Kernel in traditional Unix, makes the duplicate copy of the parent’s address
space and attaches it to the child’s process, while swapping. Kernel in System
V Unix, manipulates the region tables, page table, and pfdata table entries,
by incrementing the reference count of the region table of shared regions.
28. Difference between the fork() and vfork() system call?
During the fork() system call the Kernel makes a copy of the parent process’s
address space and attaches it to the child process.
But the vfork() system call do not makes any copy of the parent’s address
space, so it is faster than the fork() system call. The child process as a
result of the vfork() system call executes exec() system call. The child
process from vfork() system call executes in the parent’s address space (this
can overwrite the parent’s data and stack ) which suspends the parent process
until the child process exits.
29. What is BSS(Block Started by Symbol)?
A data representation at the machine level, that has initial values when a
program starts and tells about how much space the kernel allocates for the
un-initialized data. Kernel initializes it to zero at run-time.
30. What is Page-Stealer process?
This is the Kernel process that makes rooms for the incoming pages, by
swapping the memory pages that are not the part of the working set of a
process. Page-Stealer is created by the Kernel at the system initialization
and invokes it throughout the lifetime of the system. Kernel locks a region
when a process faults on a page in the region, so that page stealer cannot
steal the page, which is being faulted in.
31. Name two paging states for a page in memory?
The two paging states are:
The page is aging and is not yet eligible for swapping,
The page is eligible for swapping but not yet eligible for reassignment to
other virtual address space.
32. What are the phases of swapping a page from the memory?
Page stealer finds the page eligible for swapping and places the page number
in the list of pages to be swapped.
Kernel copies the page to a swap device when necessary and clears the valid
bit in the page table entry, decrements the pfdata reference count, and places
the pfdata table entry at the end of the free list if its reference count is
0.
33. What is page fault? Its types?
Page fault refers to the situation of not having a page in the main memory
when any process references it.
There are two types of page fault :
Validity fault,
Protection fault.
34. In what way the Fault Handlers and the Interrupt handlers are different?
Fault handlers are also an interrupt handler with an exception that the
interrupt handlers cannot sleep. Fault handlers sleep in the context of the
process that caused the memory fault. The fault refers to the running process
and no arbitrary processes are put to sleep.
35. What is validity fault?
If a process referring a page in the main memory whose valid bit is not set,
it results in validity fault.
The valid bit is not set for those pages:
that are outside the virtual address space of a process,
that are the part of the virtual address space of the process but no
physical address is assigned to it.
36. What does the swapping system do if it identifies the illegal page for
swapping?
If the disk block descriptor does not contain any record of the faulted page,
then this causes the attempted memory reference is invalid and the kernel
sends a “Segmentation violation” signal to the offending process. This happens
when the swapping system identifies any invalid memory reference.
37. What are states that the page can be in, after causing a page fault?
On a swap device and not in memory,
On the free page list in the main memory,
In an executable file,
Marked “demand zero”,
Marked “demand fill”.
38. In what way the validity fault handler concludes?
It sets the valid bit of the page by clearing the modify bit.
It recalculates the process priority.
39. At what mode the fault handler executes?
At the Kernel Mode.
40. What do you mean by the protection fault?
Protection fault refers to the process accessing the pages, which do not have
the access permission. A process also incur the protection fault when it
attempts to write a page whose copy on write bit was set during the fork()
system call.
41. How the Kernel handles the copy on write bit of a page, when the bit is
set?
In situations like, where the copy on write bit of a page is set and that page
is shared by more than one process, the Kernel allocates new page and copies
the content to the new page and the other processes retain their references to
the old page. After copying the Kernel updates the page table entry with the
new page number. Then Kernel decrements the reference count of the old pfdata
table entry.
In cases like, where the copy on write bit is set and no processes are sharing
the page, the Kernel allows the physical page to be reused by the processes.
By doing so, it clears the copy on write bit and disassociates the page from
its disk copy (if one exists), because other process may share the disk copy.
Then it removes the pfdata table entry from the page-queue as the new copy of
the virtual page is not on the swap device. It decrements the swap-use count
for the page and if count drops to 0, frees the swap space.
42. For which kind of fault the page is checked first?
The page is first checked for the validity fault, as soon as it is found that
the page is invalid (valid bit is clear), the validity fault handler returns
immediately, and the process incur the validity page fault. Kernel handles the
validity fault and the process will incur the protection fault if any one is
present.
43. In what way the protection fault handler concludes?
After finishing the execution of the fault handler, it sets the modify and
protection bits and clears the copy on write bit. It recalculates the
process-priority and checks for signals.
44. How the Kernel handles both the page stealer and the fault handler?
The page stealer and the fault handler thrash because of the shortage of the
memory. If the sum of the working sets of all processes is greater that the
physical memory then the fault handler will usually sleep because it cannot
allocate pages for a process. This results in the reduction of the system
throughput because Kernel spends too much time in overhead, rearranging the
memory in the frantic pace.
NEXT
|