- Deadlock is defined as the permanent blocking of a set of processes that compete for system resources, including database records or communication lines
- Unlike other problems in multiprogramming systems, there is no efficient solution to the deadlock problem in the general case
- Deadlock prevention, by design, is the ``best'' solution
- Deadlock occurs when a set of processes are in a wait state, because each process is waiting for a resource
that is held by some other waiting process
- None will release what they hold until they get what they
are waiting for
- Therefore, all deadlocks involve conflicting resource needs by two or more processes
- Example: Unordered Mutex; Two threads accessing two locks
- What happens if Thread1 grabs and Thread2 grabs ?
(P means down operation and V means up operation)
Subsections
2004-05-25