25
Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

Embed Size (px)

Citation preview

Page 1: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

Nachos Overview

Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu

TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo)

Date: 2008/09/18Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

Page 2: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

2

Nachos

• Nachos: – Not Another Completely Heuristic Operating

System

• Written by Tom Anderson and his students at UC Berkeley

http://www.cs.washington.edu/homes/tom/nachos/

Page 3: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

3

Nachos 4.0• An educational OS used to

– teach kernel design and implementation

– do experiments

• Fact:– Real hardware is difficult to handle.– May break if handled wrong.

• Approach:– Use a virtual MIPS machine– Provide some basic OS elements

Page 4: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

4

Nachos 4.0

Page 5: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

5

Nachos 4.0

• Simulates MIPS architecture on host system

(Unix /Linux/ Windows / MacOS X )

• User programs need a cross-compiler (target MIPS) – Eg. To compile user programs to MIPS on

Linux

• Nachos appears as a single threaded process to the host operating system

Page 6: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

6

Designated Platform in This Class

• Linux in Workstation Room 217– Installation guide

http://mll.csie.ntu.edu.tw/course/os_f08/217.htm

• If your project submission can’t execute on Linux in Workstation Room 217, we will consider it as fail.

– The Linux kernel in Workstation Room 217 is 2.6.26.

– Please contact me to apply a workstation account if you need it.

Page 7: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

7

How does it work?

Page 8: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

8

How does it work? (Cont.)

Page 9: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

9

How does it work? (Cont..)

Page 10: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

10

Setup the System

• Refer to the following document:

http://mll.csie.ntu.edu.tw/course/os_f08/217.htm

• You need:– Nachos source code

– MIPS Cross compiler

– A patch for Nachos to work on 217 workstations

Page 11: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

11

Nachos content

Page 12: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

12

Setup the System (cont.)

• You can build Nachos on Linux– Your linux– Virtual machine– 217 linux (1~14) (recommended)

• 217 runs 64-bit machines– Apply the patch before you build

anything

Page 13: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

13

Setup the System (cont.)

• MIPS Cross compiler– Nachos simulates MIPS machine– The user program built by this compiler

cannot run on Linux• Please make sure that you follow the

steps in the instruction– You should extract Nachos and the cross

compiler to the same directory(NachOS-4.0 and usr)

– Or, user programs could not be built

Page 14: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

14

Test files

• There are some test user programs in NachOS-4.0/code/test/– Use “make” to build them, the MIPS binary

would be generated in the same directory

• Use these files to test if your Nachos is properly modified and built

Page 15: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

15

How to run

• “nachos –x userprog –d u”– Nachos binaries is in NachOS-4.0/code/build.linux/nachos

– Use –x to run the user programs– Use –d to show debug messages

A full list of options is under NachOS-4.0/code/lib/debug.h

• Nachos would startup, load and run the user program, then halt

Page 16: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

16

GLOBAL

• A source code tag system for you to trace large source files (Eg. Nachos)

• Useful for hacking a large project containing many subdirectories, many #ifdef and many main() functions.

• You can download GLOBAL fromhttp://www.gnu.org/software/global/download.html

Page 17: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

17

GLOBAL (Cont.)

• How To Start?– http://www.gnu.org/software/global/download.ht

ml

– Installation% ./configure% make% make install

• Two utilities– gtags, htags

Page 18: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

18

GLOBAL (Cont..)

• gtags – Create Tag Database% cd NachOS-4.0/% gtags

• htags – Create Hypertext Files (under HTML/) for a Web-Based Interface for Global% htags –Ff

• The GLOBAL for NachOS-4.0http://www.csie.ntu.edu.tw/~artoo/NachOS-4.0/HTML/

Page 19: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

19

How to Start Trace Codes

• Read interfaces in the *.h files first.– To have overview of the whole

system.• Then, read the implementations in the

*.cc files.– See how the executable code

supports each interface. • Documentation

– http://www.cs.duke.edu/~narten/110/nachos/main/main.html

Page 20: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

20

C++

• Object-Oriented

• Looks like JAVA, based on C

• C C++

• C++ has lots of features, but Nachos only uses a few– So take it easy

Page 21: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

21

C++ Class

• Declaration (Usually in header files)class CoffeCup {private: // or protected, these members can only be // accessed by CoffeeCup members int max_volume, current; char name[100]; bool checkVolume (void);public: // these members can be accessed by anyone CoffeeCup (char * new_name); // constructor ~CoffeeCup (); // destructor int fill (int vol); int drink (int vol);};

Page 22: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

22

C++ Class (cont.)

• Definition (Usually in .cc or .cpp files)CoffeeCup::CoffeeCup (char *new_name) : max_volume(100), current(0){ strcpy(name, new_name);}CoffeeCup::~CoffeeCup () { if(current > 0) cout << “You left ” << current << “ in the cup ” << name << endl;}bool CoffeeCup::checkVolume (void) { return (current <= max_volume);}

Page 23: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

23

C++ Class (cont.)

void CoffeeCup::fill (int vol) { current += vol; if(!checkVolume()) { cout << “Too much!” << endl; current = max_volume; }}

void CoffeeCup::drink (int vol) { current -= vol; if(current < 0) current = 0;}

Page 24: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

24

C++ Class (cont.)

// We demonstrate the difference between an object and // a pointer to objectCoffeeCup cup1(“Espresso”);CoffeeCup *cup2 = new CoffeeCup(“Latte”);

cup1.fill(50);cup2->fill(60);cup1.drink(30);(*cup2).drink(30);

// Delete or we’ll have memory leakdelete cup2;

// Now cup1 has 20, cup2 has 30

Page 25: Nachos Overview Lecturer: Hao-Hua Chu TA: Chun-Po Wang (Artoo) Date: 2008/09/18 Material Provided by Yuan-Hao Chang, Yung-Feng Lu

25

Other features

• Dynamic allocated array char *array = new char[100];

array[0] = …delete [] array;

• “this”– A pointer point to the class instance itself– “checkVolumne()” is equal to “this->checkVolume()”

• ASSERT(…)– Check if the condition is meet. Abort if it is not.– Not really a C++ feature, though

• ASSERTNOTREACHED( )– Check if this line is not executed– Eg. placed after a “return”

• Feel free to ask me if you have C++ problems