Opering Systems

  1. What is LILO?
                Ans: LILO stands for Linex boot loader. It will load the MBR, master boot record, into the memory, which tell the system which                                      partition and harddrive to boot.
  1. What is the main advantage of creating links to a file instead of copies of the file?
                Ans: The main advantage is not really that it saves disk space (though it does that too) but, rather, that a change of permissions on                           the file is applied to all the link access points. The link will show permissions of lrwxrwxrwx but that is for the link itself and not                           the access to the file to which the link points. Thus if you want to change the permissions for a command, such as su, you only                           have to do it on the original. With copies you have to find all of the copies and change permission on each of the copies.
  1. Write a command to find all of the files which have been accessed within the last 30 days.
                Ans: find / -type f -atime -30 > December.files &
                         This command will find all the files under root, which is '/', with file type is file. '-atime -30' will give all the files accessed less                               than 30 days ago. And the output will put into a file call December.files.   

     4.  What is the most graceful way to get to run level single user mode?
                         
                Ans: The most graceful way is to use the command init s.
                         If you want to shut everything down before going to single user mode then do init 0 first and from the ok prompt do a boot -s.  

     5.  What does the following command line produce? Explain each aspect of this line.           
          $ (date ; ps -ef | awk {print $1}' | sort | uniq | wc -l ) >> Activity.log

                Ans: First let's dissect the line: The date gives the date and time as the first command of the line, this is followed by the a list of all                              running processes in long form with UIDs listed first, this is the ps -ef. These are fed into the awk which filters out all but the                                UIDs; these UIDs are piped into sort for no discernible reason and then onto uniq (now we see the reason for the sort - uniq                                only works on sorted data - if the list is A, B, A, then A, B, A will be the output of uniq, but if it's A, A, B then A, B is the output)                              which produces only one copy of each UID. These UIDs are fed into wc -l which counts the lines - in this case the number of                              distinct UIDs running processes on the system. Finally the results of these two commands, the date and the wc -l, are                                          appended to the file "Activity.log". Now to answer the question as to what this command line produces. This writes the date                                and time into the file Activity.log together with the number of distinct users who have processes running on the system at that                              time. If the file already exists, then these items are appended to the file, otherwise the file is created.             
  1. What is MUTEX ?

  2. What isthe difference between a 'thread' and a 'process'?

  3. What is INODE?

  4. Explain the working of Virtual Memory.

  5. How does Windows NT supports Multitasking?

  6. Explain the Unix Kernel.

  7. What is Concurrency? Expain with example Deadlock and Starvation.

  8. What are your solution strategies for "Dining Philosophers Problem" ?

  9. Explain Memory Partitioning, Paging, Segmentation.

  10. Explain Scheduling.

  11. Operating System Security.

  12. What is Semaphore?

  13. Explain the following file systems : NTFS, Macintosh(HPFS), FAT .

  14. What are the different process states?

  15. What is Marshalling?

  16. Difference - Loading and Linking ?