Addison-Wesley / Prentice Hall
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Operating Systems: Internals and Design Principles, 4/E
ISBN-10: 0130319996
ISBN-13: 9780130319999
Publisher: Prentice Hall
Copyright: 2001
Format: Cloth; 779 pp
Published: 11/09/2000
For one-semester, introductory courses in Operating Systems in Computer Science, Computer Engineering, and Electrical Engineering programs.
Blending up-to-date theory with broad coverage of fundamentals, this text offers a comprehensive treatment of operating systems, with an emphasis on internals and design issues. The book provides a thorough discussion of the fundamentals of operating systems design and relates these principles to contemporary design issues and to current trends in the development of operating systems. It helps students develop a solid understanding of the key structures and mechanisms of operating systems, the types of trade-offs and decisions involved in OS design, and the context within which the operating system functions (hardware, other system programs, application programs, interactive users).
Reflects ongoing changes in the field in areas such as thread and process management, concurrency and deadlocks, virtual memory, scheduling, I/O, file systems, distributed processing, and security. Ex.___
Illustrates and reinforces design concepts with a modern operating system that is growing in popularity. Ex.___
Provide more opportunity for students to practice the concepts they learn in each chapter. Ex.___
Illustrate and reinforce design concepts and ties them to real-world design choices that must be made. The new Windows 2000 operating system incorporates in a clean fashion many of the latest developments in operating system technology and it is one of the first important commercial operating systems to rely heavily on object-oriented design principles. The different flavors of UNIX presented allow students to learn the most widely used commercial version of UNIX that includes multithreading and other features not found in SVR4 (Solaris) and an open-source version of UNIX that is rapidly gaining in popularity (Linux). Ex.___
Helps instructors supplement the course with research or modeling projects that give students hands-on experience, reinforcing concepts and helping to develop a broader perspective. Ex.___
Helps students understand the relationship between process and thread and the way in which threads are managed and used. Ex.___
Helps students understand these topics which are especially important in multimedia applications and networking. Ex.___
Teaches students about this critical part of all operating systems. Ex.___
Introduces students to the most important current research and development area in operating systems design. Ex.___
Exposes students to this increasingly important area. Ex.___
Provides students with an extremely clear and systematic treatment of this central aspect of operating systems design. Ex.___
Exposes students to this very important topic. Virtually all servers and many workstations and PCs have an SMP architecture that requires operating system support. Ex.___
Provides students with current information in this area where there is a lot of current research and a flood of new products. Ex.___
Teaches students about this increasingly important design element in OS design. Ex.___
Provide a variety of assignments for students to complete. Ex.___
Assures that students have read and absorbed the material from each chapter. Ex.___
Helps students review important technical terms. Ex.___
Clarifies concepts. Ex.___
Provide up-to-date and reputable sources for further exploration or research. Ex.___
Help students master key terminology. Ex.___
Reflects ongoing changes in the field in areas such as thread and process management, concurrency and deadlocks, virtual memory, scheduling, I/O, file systems, distributed processing, and security. Ex.___
Illustrates and reinforces design concepts with a modern operating system that is growing in popularity. Ex.___
Provide more opportunity for students to practice the concepts they learn in each chapter. Ex.___
(NOTE: Each chapter concludes with Summary, Key Terms, Review Questions and/or Recommended Reading, and Problems.)
Reader's Guide.
I. BACKGROUND.
II. PROCESSES.
III. MEMORY.
IV. SCHEDULING.
V. INPUT/OUTPUT AND FILES.
VI. DISTRIBUTED SYSTEMS.
VII. SECURITY.
APPENDICES.

Companion Website - Stallings, 4/E
Stallings
©2001 | Prentice Hall | On-line Supplement; 0 pp | Instock
ISBN-10: 013032065X |
ISBN-13: 9780130320650
Companion Website - Stallings, 4/E
Stallings
©2001 | Prentice Hall | On-line Supplement; 0 pp | Instock
ISBN-10: 013032065X |
ISBN-13: 9780130320650
Companion Website - Stallings, 4/E
Stallings
©2001 | Prentice Hall | On-line Supplement; 0 pp | Instock
ISBN-10: 013032065X |
ISBN-13: 9780130320650
Companion Website - Stallings, 4/E
Stallings
©2001 | Prentice Hall | On-line Supplement; 0 pp | Instock
ISBN-10: 013032065X |
ISBN-13: 9780130320650
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