Figure 5:
An example to Deadlock.
|
- Four conditions that must hold for a deadlock to be possible:
- 1. Mutual exclusion: processes require exclusive control of its resources (not
sharing), only one process may use a resource at a time
- 2. Hold and wait: process may wait for a resource while holding others
- 3. No preemption: process will not give up a resource until it is finished with it. Also, processes are irreversible: unable to reset to an earlier state where resources not held
- 4. Circular wait: each process in the chain holds a resource requested by
another, there exists set {, , , } of
waiting processes such that waiting for resource held by
, waiting for resource held by , ,
waiting for resource held by , waiting for
resource held by
- If any one of the necessary conditions is prevented a deadlock need not occur. For example:
- Systems with only simultaneously shared resources cannot deadlock; Negates mutual exclusion.
- Systems that abort processes which request a resource that is in use; Negates hold and wait.
- Preemptions may be possible if a process does not use its resources until it has acquired all it needs; Negates no preemption.
- Transaction processing systems provide checkpoints so that processes may back out of a transaction; Negates irreversible process.
- Systems that prevent, detect, or avoid cycles; Negates circular wait. Often, the preferred solution.
2004-04-18