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Course Information

Course Information. Andy Wang COP 5611 Advanced Operating Systems. Contact Information. Andy Wang (awang@cs.fsu.edu) Office: 269 Love Building Office hours: after class (also by appointments) Class website: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~awang/courses/cop5611_s2014. Objectives.

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Course Information

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  1. Course Information Andy Wang COP 5611 Advanced Operating Systems

  2. Contact Information • Andy Wang (awang@cs.fsu.edu) • Office: 269 Love Building • Office hours: after class (also by appointments) • Class website: http://www.cs.fsu.edu/~awang/courses/cop5611_s2014

  3. Objectives • Become exposed to classic and current OS literature • Gain experience in doing OS research • Develop projects that lead to publishable results

  4. Prerequisites • COP 4610 (operating systems) • CDA 3101 (computer organizations) • Knowledge of the UNIX environment • Proficiency in C

  5. Course Materials • Lecture notes and papers • Posted on the class website • No required textbooks

  6. Recommended Textbooks • Tanenbaum and Van Steen, Distributed Systems Principles and Paradigms • Singhal and Shivaratri, Advanced Concepts in Operating Systems

  7. Background Textbooks • Tanenbaum, Modern Operating Systems • Silberschatz, Galvin, Gagne, Operating System Concepts • Nutt, Operating Systems: A Modern Perspective

  8. Kernel-Hacking Aids • Nutt, Kernel Projects for Linux • Kernighan, Ritchie, The C Programming Language • Maxwell, Linux Core Kernel Commentary • Corbet, Rubini, and Kroah-Hartman, Linux Device Drivers

  9. Grading • Paper summaries and critiques 5% • Project 40% • Peer evaluation of projects 5% • Entrance exam 5% • Exam 1 10% • Exam 2 10% • Final 25%

  10. Individual Critiques • Ten one-page single-spaced critiques on recent papers (< 1 yr), from the following venues, or from other venues with prior approval: • Conferences: SOSP, OSDI, EuroSys, HotOS, HotStorage, HotCloud, Usenix FAST, Usenix ATC, Sigmetrics, ASPLOS, Usenix Security, StorageSS, MobiCom, MobiSys

  11. Side Note: Research Cycle • Having an idea • 2 months later • Submit a grant proposal to NSF • 6 months later • Funded • 3 months later • Prototype built • Submit to WIP • 6 months later • Evaluation done • WIP published • 3 months later • Submit to a conference • 6 months later • Paper published

  12. Critiques • One due each week • Both in class and through turnitin.com (via blackboard), for the first 10 weeks • A few words on plagiarism • Dire consequences • Academically • Financially

  13. Critiques • Need to address the following: • Summary • Problems/existing & new approaches/results • Intriguing aspects of the paper • Observations/trends/assumptions/techniques • How can the research be improved? • Techniques/experiments/handling of corner cases and assumptions

  14. Project • You need to develop a project in teams of two or three • It should take about at least 100 to 120 hours • Goal: • Publishable results

  15. Types of Papers • Survey papers • Position papers • Simulation papers • Measurement papers • System papers

  16. Some Example Projects • Feasibility of using sound cues for debugging operating systems • Feasibility study of applying economic models for distributed resource management • Feasibility study of life-long storage of sensory inputs

  17. Weekly Project Reports • Per person • Demonstrate steady progress • Papers read • Obstacles encountered • New ideas • Software pieces built • Experiments

  18. Project Proposal • Due on the 5th week • Group presentation • All team members are required to participate • 2-page written proposal • Motivation • The state-of-the-art • Methodology • Expected results • Show stoppers • Plan B • Timeline

  19. Project Proposal Include: • 5-10 references • Division of labor amongst teams

  20. Project Presentation • During the last two weeks of the course • 12 to 15-page (max) written paper due by the last lecture (double column, single-space, 10-pt font) • Critiques on two other projects, not including yours

  21. Exams • In-class and closed-book, unless specified otherwise • Essays and short answers • Open research questions

  22. Entrance Exam • Make sure that you have the necessary background • Too late to drop the class after exam 1 • You need to pay extra to make up the dropped credit hours

  23. Overall Expectations • Not like an undergraduate course • Need to take your own initiative • Lots of time spent on reading, writing, and working on your project • Need to limit your course load • Find out about taking research hours

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