- Interprocess communication using shared memory requires communicating processes to establish a region of shared memory. Typically, a shared-memory region resides in the address space of the process creating the shared-memory segment.
- Other processes that wish to communicate using this shared-memory segment must attach it to their address space.
- Recall that, normally, the OS tries to prevent one process from accessing another process's memory. Shared memory requires that two or more processes agree to remove this restriction. They can then exchange information by reading and writing data in the shared areas.
- The form of the data and the location are determined by these processes and are not under the OS's control. The processes
are also responsible for ensuring that they are not writing to the same location simultaneously.
- To illustrate the concept of cooperating processes, let's consider the producer-consumer problem, which is a common paradigm for cooperating processes. A producer process produces information that is consumed by a consumer process.
- One solution to the producer-consumer problem uses shared memory. To allow producer and consumer processes to run concurrently, we must have available a buffer of items that can be filled by the producer and emptied by the consumer.
- This buffer will reside in a region of memory that is shared by the producer and consumer processes. A producer can produce one item while the consumer is consuming another item.
- The producer and consumer must be synchronized, so that the consumer does not try to consume an item that has not yet been produced.
- Two types of buffers can be used.
- The unbounded buffer places no practical limit on the size of the buffer. The consumer may have to wait for new items,
but the producer can always produce new items.
- The bounded buffer assumes a fixed buffer size. In this case, the consumer must wait if the buffer is empty, and the producer must wait if the buffer is full.
Cem Ozdogan
2010-03-09