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Module 2.2: Process Synchronization

This module discusses process synchronization, including the shared variable problem and ways to achieve mutual exclusion. Examples and solutions are provided, such as semaphores, critical regions, and monitors.

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Module 2.2: Process Synchronization

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  1. Module 2.2: Process Synchronization • Too Much Milk Story • Examples of Shared Variable Problem • Mutual Exclusion • Solutions to ME • Semaphores • Critical Regions • Monitors • Process synchronization means coordination among processes. K. Salah

  2. Concurrent Processes • Too much milk story – An appetizer!! • Concurrent processes (or threads) often need to share data (maintained either in shared memory or files) and resources • If there is no controlled access to shared data, some processes will obtain an inconsistent view of this data • The action performed by concurrent processes will then depend on the order in which their execution is interleaved • This order can not be predicted • Activities of other processes • Handling of I/O and interrupts • Scheduling policies of the OS K. Salah

  3. Process P1 and P2 are running this same procedure and have access to the same variable “a” Processes can be interrupted anywhere If P1 is first interrupted after user input and P2 executes entirely Then the character echoed by P1 will be the one read by P2 !! Shared variable problemAn Example static char a; void echo() { cin >> a; cout << a; } K. Salah

  4. A Second Example • Example (Simple Shared Variable) • Two processes are each reading characters typed at their respective terminals • Want to keep running count of total number of characters typed on both terminals • A Shared variable V is introduced; each time a character is typed, a process uses the code: V := V + 1;to update the count. During testing it is observed that the count recorded in V is less than the actual number of characters typed. What happened? Þ The programmer failed to realize that the assignment was not executed as a single indivisible action, but rather as the following sequence of instructions: • MOVE V, r0 • INCR r0 • MOVE r0, V K. Salah

  5. The Producer/Consumer ProblemThird Example consumer producer buffer • from time to time, the producer places an item in the buffer • the consumer removes an item from the buffer • careful synchronization/coordination required • the consumer must wait if the buffer empty • the producer must wait if the buffer full • typical solution would involve a shared variable count (recall previous example) • also known as the Bounded Buffer problem P C process process K. Salah

  6. The Mutual Exclusion Problem • The previous two examples are typical of kind of “race condition” problem that arises in operating system programming. • Occurs when more than one process has simultaneous access to shared data, whose values are supposed to obey some integrity constraint. • Other examples: airline reservation system, bank transaction system • Problem generally solved by making access to shared variables mutually exclusive: at most one process can access shared variables at a time • The period of time when one process has exclusive access to the data is called a critical section. K. Salah

  7. The Critical Section Problem • Definition. A critical section is a sequence of activities (or statements) in a process during which a mutually excluded resource(s) (either hardware or software) must be accessed. • The critical section problem is to ensure that two concurrent activities do not access shared data at the same time. • A solution to the mutual exclusion problem must satisfy the following three requirements: • Mutual Exclusion • Progress • Bounded waiting (no starvation) K. Salah

  8. Requirement to Critical-Section Problem 1. Mutual Exclusion. If process Pi is executing in its critical section, then no other processes can be executing in their critical sections. 2. Progress. If no process is executing in its critical section and there exist some processes that wish to enter their critical section, then the selection of the processes that will enter the critical section next cannot be postponed indefinitely. 3. Bounded Waiting. A bound must exist on the number of times that other processes are allowed to enter their critical sections after a process has made a request to enter its critical section and before that request is granted. • Assume that each process executes at a nonzero speed • No assumption concerning relative speed of the n processes. K. Salah

  9. Methods for Mutual Exclusion 1. Disable interrupts (hardware solution) 2. Strict alternation and Peterson’s solution (software solution) 3. Switch variables (assume atomic read and write) 4. Locks (hardware solution with TSL or TAS) 5. Semaphores (software solution) 6. Critical Regions and Monitors (HLL solution) K. Salah

  10. Disable Interrupts process A process B ... ... disable interrupts disable interrupts CS CS enable interrupts enable interrupts • Prevents scheduling during CS, since the timer interrupt is disabled. • May hinder real-time response and delays • All processes are excluded even if they do not access the same variables • This is sometimes necessary (to prevent further interrupts during interrupt handling), used by the kernel when updating its variables and lists, e.g. ready and blocked lists. K. Salah

  11. Lock Variables • Not used in any system. It does not work properly. • The idea is to have a lock variable guarding the CS: • If the lock is 0, the process sets the lock to 1 and enter CS • If the lock is 1, the process waits until the lock becomes 0 • Has the same problem as shared variables. Both processes may read simultaneously the lock 0. K. Salah

  12. Strict Alternation • Process B • While (TRUE){ • while (turn != B); /* wait */ • CS; • turn = A; • ... • } Process A While (TRUE){ while (turn != A); /* wait */ CS; turn = B; ... } • turn is a shared variable and initially set to A • different CS's can be implemented using different switch variables • busy waiting is a waste of CPU cycles and causes the priority inversion problem. Priority inversion problem can occur if there are 2 processes H and L with H to be run whenever it is “ready”. • danger of long blockage since A and B strictly alternates, i.e., Process A or B can not run twice in a row. • We need a solution that does not require strict alternation K. Salah

  13. Peterson’s Solution #define N 2 /* 2 processes: 0 and 1 */ int interested[N] = {FALSE,FALSE}; int turn; void enter_region (int process) { int other; other = 1 – process; interested[process] = TRUE; /* resolves the strict alternation */ turn = process; /* resolves simultaneous enter_region call. Last turn only counts. In other words, turn is used to break ties! */ while (turn == process && interested[other] == TRUE); } void leave_region(int process) { interested[process] = FALSE; } K. Salah

  14. Peterson’s Solution (cont.) • Properties: • Complex and unclear • Busy waiting • Mutual exclusion is preserved • Strict alternation is resolved • Can be extended for n processes K. Salah

  15. TSL or TAS Instruction • TSL: Test and Set Lock (or TAS: TestAndSet) is implemented in HW, e.g. Motorola 68000 microprocessor. The Test/read and Set/write bus cycles are done atomically (not interrupted). • enter_region: • tsl r0, flag ; if flag is 0, set flag to 1 • cmp r0, #0 • jnz enter_region • ret • leave_region: • mov flag, #0 • ret • If not supported by hardware, TAS can be implemented by disabling and enabling interrupts. • TAS can also be implemented using atomic swap(x,y). K. Salah

  16. Properties 1. Busy waiting problem. Better to have the process blocked on IPC primitive (semaphore, event counter, message) and then awakened later. 2. Starvation is possible: • If we have P1, P2, and P3. With improper scheduling, P1 and P2 may always execute and not P3. P1 and P2 may have higher priority than P3. P3 will starve. • Does the other schemes have it? 3. Different locks may be used for different shared resources. • Examples: (1) VAX 11, (2) B6500 • MIPS -- Load-Linked/Store Conditional (LL/SC) • Pentium -- Compare and Exchange, Exchange, Fetch and Add • SPARC -- Load Store Unsigned Bit (LDSTUB) in v9 • PowerPC -- Load Word and Reserve (lwarx) K. Salah

  17. Semaphores P V Dijkstra ‘65 wait signal Per Brinch Hansen The semaphore has a value that is invisible to the users and a queue of processes waiting to acquire the semaphore. Code for counting semaphores: type semaphore = record value : integer; L : list of process; end P(S):[ S.value := S.value-1; if S.value < 0 then add this process to S.L; block; end if ] V(S):[ S.value := S.value + 1; if S.value <= 0 then remove a process P from S.L; wakeup(P); // place it on the ready queue. end if ] K. Salah

  18. Properties of semaphore parbegin S.value = 1 P1: ... P(S); CS1; V(S); ... P2: ... P(S); CS2; V(S); ... . . . Pn: ... P(S); CSn; V(S); ... parend • Properties • 1. No busy waiting • 2. May starve unless FCFS (scheduling left to the implementer of semaphores) • 3. Can handle multiple users by proper initialization. Example: 3 tape drivers • 4. If S is either 1 or 0, it is called a binary semaphore or mutex. How to implement a counting semaphore using mutex? K. Salah

  19. Code for Binary Semaphores waitB(S): if (S.value = 1) { S.value := 0; } else { place this process in S.L; block; } signalB(S): if (S.L is empty) { S.value := 1; } else { remove a process P from S.L; wakeup(P); } K. Salah

  20. How to implement a counting semaphore using mutex? S: counting semaphore S1: mutex = 1; S2: mutex = 0; C: integer P(S): P(S1) C := C-1; if (C < 0) { V(S1); P(S2); } V(S1); V(S): P(S1); C := C+1; if (C <= 0) V(S2); else V(S1); K. Salah

  21. mutex vs. futex • futex is part of recent version of Linux 2.6 • Stands for fast userspace mutex. Gives better performance. There is less system call done. • System calls are only done on blocking and waking up a process • _down and _up operations are atomic instructions (no need for system calls.) K. Salah

  22. More properties and examples 5. Can implement scheduling of activities using a precedence graph. Here we use semaphores for synchronizing different activities, not resolving mutual exclusion. An activity is a work done by a specific process. Initially system creates all processes to do these specific activities. For example, process x that performs activity x doesn’t start performing activity x unless it is signaled (or told) by process y. Example of process synchronization: Router fault detection, fault logging, alarm reporting, and fault fixing. 1. Draw process precedence graph 2. Write psuedo code for process synchronization using semaphores 6. Proper use can't be enforced by compiler. e.g. P(S) V(S) CS CS V(S) P(S) e.g. S1, S2 P1: P(S1) P2: P(S2) P(S2) P(S1) CS CS V(S2) V(S1) V(S1) V(S2) This is a deadlock situation K. Salah

  23. Classical problems • The bounded buffer problem • The readers and writers problems • The dining philosophers problem K. Salah

  24. The Producer-Consumer Problem • bounded buffer (of size n) • one set of processes (producers) write to it • one set of processes (consumers) read from it semaphore: full = 0 /* counting semaphores */ empty = n mutex = 1 /* binary semaphore */ process Producer process Consumerdoforeverdoforever . P(full) /* produce */ P(mutex) . /* take from buffer */ P(empty) V(mutex) P(mutex) V(empty) /* add to buffer */ . V(mutex) /* consume */ V(full) .endend K. Salah

  25. The Readers and Writers Problem Shared data to be accessed in two modes: reading and writing. Any number of processes permitted to read at one time; writes must exclude all other operations. Read WriteRead Y N conflictWrite N N matrix Intuitively: Reader: | Writers:when(#writers==0) do | when(#readers==0 #readers=#readers+1 | and #writers==0) do | #writers = 1 | <read> | <write> | #readers=#readers-1 | #writers = 0 . | . . | . . | . K. Salah

  26. Semaphore Solution to Readers and Writers Semaphore: mutex = 1 /* mutual excl. for updating readcount */ wrt = 1 /* mutual excl. writer */ int variable: readcount = 0 Reader: P(mutex) readcount = readcount + 1if readcount == 1 then P(wrt) V(mutex) <read> P(mutex) readcount = readcount – 1if readcount == 0 then V(wrt) V(mutex) Writer: P(wrt) <write> V(wrt) Notes: wrt also used by first/last reader that enters/exits critical section. Solution gives priority to readers in that writers can be starved by stream of readers. K. Salah

  27. The Dining Philosopher Problem • Five philosopher spend their lives thinking + eating. • One simple solution is to represent each chopstick by a semaphore. • P before picking it up & V after using it. var chopstick: array[0..4] of semaphores=1philosopher i repeat P( chopstick[i] ); P( chopstick[i+1 mod 5] ); ... eat ... V( chopstick[i] ); V( chopstick[i+1 mod 5] ); ... think ...forever • Is deadlock possible? K. Salah

  28. Concurrent Programming • An OS consists of a large number of programs that execute asynchronously and cooperate. • Traditionally, these programs were written in assembly language for the following reasons: • High-level languages (HLL) did not provide mechanisms for writing machine-dependent code (such as device drivers). • HLL did not provide the appropriate tools for writing concurrent programs. • HLL for concurrent programs were not efficient. • HLL for OS must provide facilities for synchronization and modularization. • Two ways used by HLL: • Critical Regions and Conditional Critical Regions • Monitors K. Salah

  29. Motivating examples • P and V operations are better than shared variables but still susceptible to programming errors • P(S) P(S) . ==> . . .V(S) P(S) • P(S1) P(S1) . .P(S2) P(S2) . ==> . . .V(S2) V(S1) . .V(S1) V(S2) K. Salah

  30. Critical Regions • A higher-level programming language construct proposed in 1972 by Brinch Hansen and Hoare. • if a variable is to be shared, it must be declared as such • access to shared variables only in mutual exclusion var a: shared int var b: shared intregion a do -- access variable a -- Compiler generates equivalent code using P and V: P(Sa) -- access variable a -- V(Sa) K. Salah

  31. Critical Regions aren't perfect Process 1: region a do region b do stmt1; Process 2: region b do region a do stmt2; K. Salah

  32. Conditional Critical Regions • Critical regions are basically a mutex • They are not easily adapted to general synchronization problems, i.e. those requiring a counting semaphore • Hoare, again in 1972, proposed conditional critical regions: • region X when B do S • X will be accessed in mutual exclusion in S • process delayed until B becomes true K. Salah

  33. The Producer-consumer problem Var buffer: sharedrecord pool: array[0...n-1] of item; count, in, out: integer = 0; Producer: region buffer when count < ndobegin pool[in] := item_produced in : = in + 1 mod n count := count + 1end Consumer: region buffer when count > 0dobegin item_consumed := pool[out] out := out + 1 mod n count := count – 1end K. Salah

  34. Monitors • A monitor is a shared data object together with a set of operations whichs manipulate it. • To enforce mutual exclusion, at most one process may execute operations defined for the data object at any given time. • All uses of shared variables are governed by monitors. • Support data abstraction (hide implementation details) • Only one process may execute a monitor's procedure at a time • data type “condition” for synchronization(can be waited or signaled within a monitor procedure) • Two operations on “condition” variables: • wait: Forces the caller to be delayed. Exclusion released. Hidden Q of waiters. • signal: One waiting process is resumed if there are waiters. K. Salah

  35. Semaphore using monitors • type semaphore = monitor var busy: boolean nonbusy: condition procedure entry P begin if busy then nonbusy.wait fi busy := true end {P} procedure entry V begin busy := false nonbusy.signal end {V} begin busy := false end {monitor} What could be other ways to implement semaphores? Solving Dinning Philosopher’s problem using Monitors in textbook. K. Salah

  36. Further Readings • Solving Dining Philosophers using Monitors. K. Salah

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