OPERATING SYSTEMS A - L
Academic Year 2018/2019 - 2° YearCredit Value: 9
Taught classes: 36 hours
Exercise: 36 hours
Term / Semester: 2°
Learning Objectives
- Knowledge and understanding: the student will understand how a modern Operating System manages the hardware and software resources of a computer.
- Applying knowledge and understanding: the student will learn how judge the pros and cons of a solution in the ambit of Operating Systems; this by means of the study of the characteristics of existing approaches in hardware/software resource management.
- Making judgements: the student will learn how to analyse and formalize requirements of specific problems and to point the best solution.
- Communication skills: the student will learn the specific technical micro-language and he will be able to interface with technical documentation.
- Learning skills: the theoretical background and practical knowledge offered by this course allow the student to better understand the foundation used by any modern software solution; this usually helps in developing better software.
Course Structure
In class oral lessons on theoretical arguments and on laboratory-related aspects.
Detailed Course Content
The course is an introduction to principles and design of operating systems, as it is essential to coordinate activities and resources of a computing system. It covers the main topics from the software architectures to the management of processes and system resources. With reference to UNIX systems, the laboratory focuses on the use of the shell and on programming, using C language, of crucial aspects related to processes, memory and inter-process communication (IPC).
Textbook Information
authors: Andrew S. Tanenbaum, Herbert Bos
title: Modern Operating Systems (4th edition)
publication year: 2016
ISBN: 978-0133591620
authors: Abraham Silberschatz, Peter Baer Galvin, Greg Gagne
title: Operating System Concepts (9th edition)
publication year: 2014
ISBN: 978-0470128725