..................Operating System CO1 to CO6" refers to the typical Course Outcomes (COs) for an OS subject, covering foundational concepts (CO1), processes/scheduling (CO2, CO3), memory/file management (CO4, CO5), and advanced topics like Linux/mobile OS (CO6), explaining key OS functions from basics to practical implementations like < process scheduling, memory allocation, file systems, and security.
Here's a breakdown of common COs for Operating Systems:
- CO1: Introduction to OS
- Understanding basic concepts, history, functions, and types (batch, multiprogramming, real-time, distributed) of operating systems.
- CO2: Processes & CPU Scheduling
- Learning about processes, threads, process coordination, and various CPU scheduling algorithms (FCFS, SJF, Priority, Round Robin).
- CO3: Process Synchronization & Deadlocks
- Analyzing process synchronization mechanisms (semaphores, monitors) and techniques for handling deadlocks.
- CO4: Memory Management
- Understanding memory allocation (contiguous, non-contiguous), virtual memory, paging, and segmentation.
- CO5: File Systems & I/O
- Studying file system structures, disk scheduling, I/O management, and device management.
- CO6: Advanced Topics
- Exploring security, protection, networking basics, distributed systems, real-time systems, or specific OSs like Linux/Android.
These COs progress from foundational knowledge (CO1) to detailed analysis and application (CO4, CO5, CO6), guiding students through the core components of modern operating systems.
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