DEPARTMENT OF COMPUTER SCIENCE
Thursday 4.30 - 7.10
P.M.
ST I Room
126
Description: This course covers the principles of operating systems
theory and practice. Fundamental concepts such as processes, synchronization,
scheduling and memory management will be presented. Another emphasis will be on
the principles of distributed operating systems.
Prerequisites: CS 310 and CS 365, or equivalent. A solid background in
Computer Architecture is required. In order to be able to work on the
programming projects, the students must be comfortable with C/C++ or
Java programming languages.
Required Textbook: "Operating System Concepts", by Silberschatz,
Galvin and Gagne (7th Edition, John Wiley & Sons 2005, ISBN 0-471-69466-5).
"Modern Operating Systems" (2nd edition, Prentice Hall 2001, ISBN:
0-13-031358-0), by A. S. Tanenbaum is another good book on the principles of
operating systems.
As additional reference on distributed systems, the following book can be
recommended: "Distributed Systems: Concept and Design" (4th Edition,
Addison-Wesley 2005, ISBN 0321263545), by Coulouris, Dollimore and Kindberg.
Office Hours: Wednesday: 3.00 PM - 4.00 PM, Thursday: 7.20 PM - 8.20 PM,
and by appointment (Office: ST II, Room 401)
Topics:
Tentative Exam Dates:
Grading:
The students must achieve a total score of at least 85 (out of
100) to be considered for an A. No early exams will be given and make-up exams
are strongly discouraged.
GMU Honor Code will
be enforced. The students are supposed to work individually on the
assignments/projects. Collaboration will be allowed only for the group
projects, within each group. We reserve the right to use MOSS to detect plagiarism.
Violations of GMU Honor Code or a total score of 49 (or less) will result in an
F.
Teaching Assistant: Chandana Anand (canand@gmu.edu)
TA Office: ST II, Rm. 365
TA Office Hours: Wednesday, 5.00 - 7.00 PM; Thursday, 2.00 - 4.00 PM
Course Web Page: http://cs.gmu.edu/~aydin/cs571
Computer Accounts: All students should have accounts on the central
Mason Unix system mason.gmu.edu
(also known as
osf1.gmu.edu) and on IT&E Unix cluster zeus.ite.gmu.edu
(Instructions and related links are here). Students
can work
in IT&E computer labs for programming projects during the
specified hours.
Distance Education Session: CS 571 Spring 2007 session will be simultaneously offered to GMU Distance Education students. The distance education students will be given the midterm and final exam in campus, on the same day as in-class students. The location of exams will be announced in due course.
The due dates for the assignments will be the same for in-class
and distance education students. Each project will have a soft copy and hard
copy component that must be submitted by the specified date on the project
handouts. Students in all sections will be required to give the demo of Project 3 in
person, in the instructor’s office.
The course is delivered to the Internet section online by Network EducationWare (NEW), developed by Prof. Mark Pullen and his students at GMU.
Students in all sections have accounts on NEW and can play back the lectures and download the PDF slide files at http://disted.ite.gmu.edu.
Students enrolled to the on-line (distance education) section can find detailed information about the system,
requirements and installation/connection issues at
Distance Education Web Page (http://disted.ite.gmu.edu). If you are not able find an answer to a
technical issue regarding the NEW software, please send e-mail to disted@netlab.gmu.edu