A real-time operating system (RTOS) is an operating system that guarantees a certain capability within a specified time constraint. For example, an operating system might be designed to ensure that a certain object was available for a robot on an assembly line....
A real-time operating system (RTOS) is an operating system that guarantees a certain capability within a specified time constraint. For example, an operating system might be designed to ensure that a certain object was available for a robot on an assembly line....
Lecture 1 : Introduction
28mLecture 2 : Basics of Tast scheduling
26mLecture 3 : Cyclic executives
27mLecture 4 : Cyclic Scheduler
30mLecture 5 : Cyclic Scheduler
29mLecture 6 : Exercises on Frame size Selectoin
28mLecture 7: Event-driven schedulers
31mLecture 8 : Rate Monotonic Algorithm
27mLecture 9 RMA Task Schedulability?
30mLecture 10 : Rate Monotonic Analysis
29mLecture 11 : RMA Generalizations
28mLecture 12 : Further RMA Generalizations
26mLecture 13 : Resource Sharing among Real-Time Tasks
27mLecture 14 : Solution to Priority Inversion Problem
28mLecture 15 : Highest Locker Protocol
28mLecture 16 : Priority Ceiling Protocol
30mLecture 17: PCP Priority Inversions
27mLecture 18 : Analysis of PCP priority inversions
29mLecture 19 : Some basic issues in Real-Time Operating Systems
28mLecture 20 : Unix as a Real-Time operating System
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