scispace - formally typeset
Journal ArticleDOI

Aspects of a Dynamically Adaptive Operating System

TLDR
Investigating aspects of this evolutionary extension of the operating system called the dynamically adaptive operating system (DAOS) include the general methodology and the real-time modeling and estimation of resource demands and a dynamically partitioned second moment model is described.
Abstract
-Real-time optimization of the overall performance of a large computer system or network such as an air-traffic control system or teleprocessing network inherently requires the introduction of adaptive control into selected control functions or sets of control functions. Such adaptive control is necessitated by the high variance of the available resource inventory and the workload resource demands within the system environment. Global management of the resulting multiloop control system becomes the responsibility of the operating system. Investigated aspects of this evolutionary extension of the operating system called the dynamically adaptive operating system (DAOS) include the general methodology and the real-time modeling and estimation of resource demands. The methodology specifies the general identification, decision, and modification processes required for an adaptive operating system. Support of such processes could be attractively provided by a peripheral or miniprocessor. The problem of estimating resource service times both with and without partial service times is explored and statistical models possessing utility for real-time modeling are developed. In particular, a dynamically partitioned second moment model (DPSMM) is described. The feasibility of such models is established with respect to a General Principle of Locality. Selected simulation results are presented to evaluate selected developments with respect to an adaptive central processing unit (CPU) scheduling discipline.

read more

Citations
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

Feedback Control Real-Time Scheduling: Framework, Modeling, and Algorithms*

TL;DR: Performance evaluation results demonstrate that the analytically tuned FCS algorithms provide robust transient and steady state performance guarantees for periodic and aperiodic tasks even when the task execution times vary by as much as 100% from the initial estimate.
Journal ArticleDOI

Feedback–Feedforward Scheduling of Control Tasks

TL;DR: A scheduling architecture for real-time control tasks is proposed that uses feedback from execution-time measurements and feedforward from workload changes to adjust the sampling periods of the control tasks so that the combined performance of the controllers is optimized.
Proceedings Article

Automated response using system-call delays

TL;DR: The paper presents the rationale for pH, its design and implementation, and a set of initial experimental results which can successfully detect and stop intrusions before the target system is compromised.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

The case for feedback control real-time scheduling

TL;DR: This paper presents a new scheduling paradigm, which is a starting point in the long-term endeavor of creating a theory and practice of feedback control real-time scheduling, and presents a practical feedback control Real-time Scheduling Algorithm, FC-EDF.
Proceedings ArticleDOI

Design and evaluation of a feedback control EDF scheduling algorithm

TL;DR: This paper presents a feedback control real-time scheduling algorithm and its evaluation, and demonstrates the effectiveness of the algorithm when execution times vary from the worst case and when there are major shifts of total load in the system.
References
More filters
Journal ArticleDOI

The working set model for program behavior

TL;DR: A new model, the “working set model,” is developed, defined to be the collection of its most recently used pages, which provides knowledge vital to the dynamic management of paged memories.
Journal ArticleDOI

Statistical forecasting for inventory control

TL;DR: In this article, the authors present a model for estimating the average rate of demand and the maximum reasonable demand during a lead time based on the Z-transform, which can be applied to the analysis and solution of inventory control problems.
Journal ArticleDOI

Properties of the working-set model

TL;DR: The independent-reference model, in which page references are statistically independent, is used to assess the effects of interpage dependencies on working-set size observations and under general assumptions, working- set size is shown to be normally distributed.
Related Papers (5)