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  1. Computer Application
  2. UNIT III: Software Foundations: System, Application & Operating Systems
Types of Software : Application Software
UNIT III: Software Foundations: System, Application & Operating Systems

1) Plain-language idea

System software is everything that makes the computer itself run: it manages the CPU, memory, devices, files, users, and security, and provides services so applications can work.


2) Where it sits (the stack)

Users → Applications (Word, Browser, ERP)

        ↓ use

System Software

  ├─ Operating System (kernel + shell + services)

  ├─ Device Drivers

  ├─ Utilities/Tools

  ├─ Firmware/Boot software

  └─ Middleware (DB/app servers, VMs, runtimes)

        ↓ control

Hardware (CPU, RAM, Storage, I/O)


3) Main parts of system software (with roles & examples)

A) Operating System (OS)

  • Role: Runs the whole computer; allocates CPU time, memory, files, devices; enforces security; provides system calls/APIs.

  • Inside the OS

    • Kernel: Core that talks to hardware (scheduling, memory, I/O, files, networking).

    • Shell / UI: Interface to users (CLI—bash/powershell, or GUI—Windows/macOS desktops).

    • Services/Daemons: Background programs (print spooler, network service).

  • Examples: Windows, Linux, macOS, Android, iOS, ChromeOS.

Key OS functions (one-liners)

Function

What it does

Process management

Creates, schedules, and ends programs; switches the CPU between them.

Memory management

Gives RAM to processes; implements virtual memory/paging.

File system

Organizes data as files/folders; metadata, permissions.

Device & I/O mgmt

Uses drivers, buffers, DMA, interrupts.

Security

Logins, permissions, isolation, encryption, firewall.

Networking

TCP/IP stack, sockets, routing, DNS client.

User & job mgmt

Accounts, groups, priorities, quotas.

Resource accounting

Monitors CPU/RAM/disk/network usage.


B) Device Drivers

  • Role: Tiny translators between OS and specific hardware.

  • Examples: Printer driver, display/GPU driver, Wi-Fi driver, audio driver.

C) Utilities / System tools

  • Role: Maintenance, optimization, safety.

  • Examples: Antivirus, backup/restore, disk cleanup, defrag (HDD only), compression (ZIP), system monitor, partition manager, firmware updater.

D) Firmware / Boot software

  • Role: Low-level code on chips; starts hardware and loads the OS.

  • Examples: BIOS/UEFI on PCs, bootloader (GRUB), device firmware (router, SSD controller).

E) Middleware

  • Role: Common services between OS and apps so developers don’t talk to hardware directly.

  • Examples: Database engines (PostgreSQL), web/app servers (Nginx, Tomcat), JVM/.NET CLR, message brokers (RabbitMQ), graphics/AI runtimes.

F) Language translators (often grouped with system tools)

  • Compiler/Interpreter/Assembler—turn source code into runnable form.


4) Types of operating systems (quick tour)

Type

Idea

Example uses

Batch

Queue of jobs, little interaction

Historical mainframes, offline billing

Time-sharing / Multitasking

Many users/programs share CPU

Unix/Linux servers, desktops

Real-time OS (RTOS)

Deadlines matter (hard/soft)

Cars, robots, medical devices

Single vs Multi-user

One user vs many accounts

Home PC vs server

Single vs Multi-processing

One vs many CPUs/cores

Embedded vs modern PCs/servers

Distributed

Many machines act as one

Clusters, cloud OS features

Mobile/Embedded

Small footprint, sensors

Android, iOS, FreeRTOS, Zephyr

OS architecture styles: Monolithic (Linux), Microkernel (Minix), Hybrid (Windows/macOS kernels).


5) Core mechanisms (succinct explanations)

a) Process lifecycle & scheduling

NEW → READY → RUNNING → (I/O?) → BLOCKED → READY → … → TERMINATED

             ^ preempt (timer)

  • Context switch: Save one process state, load another.

  • Scheduling (names to know): FCFS, SJF/SRTF, Priority, Round Robin (time quantum); preemptive vs non-preemptive.

b) Memory management

  • Paging: RAM split into frames; process memory into pages; page table maps pages→frames.

  • Virtual memory: Uses disk swap/pagefile when RAM is low (slower).

  • Page fault: Needed page not in RAM → load from disk.

  • Segmentation: Memory divided by logical segments (code/data/stack).

  • TLB: Fast cache for address translations.

  • Thrashing: Too many page faults → performance collapse.

c) File system basics

  • Hierarchy: Root → folders → files; paths, extensions.

  • Metadata: Name, size, owner, timestamps, permissions.

  • Permissions: rwx for user/group/others (Unix). ACLs on Windows/NTFS.

  • Journaling FS: NTFS, ext4, APFS—help recover after crashes.

d) Device I/O

  • Interrupts: Device signals CPU when work needed/done.

  • DMA: Large device↔RAM transfers without hogging CPU.

  • Buffering/Caching: Smooths speed mismatch.

  • Spooling (printing): Simultaneous Peripheral Operations On-Line—queue prints to disk then feed printer.

e) Security essentials

  • AAA: Authentication, Authorization, Accounting.

  • Isolation: Process/user spaces, permissions, sandboxes.

  • Crypto: Disk/file encryption, TLS; firewall rules.

  • Patching: Regular updates close vulnerabilities.

f) Networking

  • TCP/IP stack, sockets, DHCP, DNS, routing, NAT; OS exposes APIs to apps.


6) Boot process (PC, short sequence)

Power On → Firmware (POST) → Boot Device → Bootloader (GRUB) → Load Kernel

→ Init/Systemd → Start services (network, display, print) → Login screen


7) Virtualization & containers (modern system software)

  • Hypervisors:

    • Type-1 (bare-metal): ESXi, Hyper-V, KVM (host is the hypervisor).

    • Type-2 (hosted): VirtualBox, VMware Workstation (runs on top of an OS).

  • VMs vs Containers:

    • VM: Full guest OS; strong isolation; heavier.

    • Container: Shares host kernel; lightweight (Docker, containerd, Kubernetes).

Why use them? Isolation, consolidation, portability, efficient server/cloud usage.


8) Classic contrasts (exam favorites)

Pair

Key difference

Kernel vs Shell

Kernel talks to hardware; shell is user interface/command interpreter.

Driver vs Firmware

Driver in OS; firmware lives on the device’s chip.

Utility vs Application

Utility maintains system; application serves user’s task.

RTOS vs GP OS

RTOS meets deadlines; GP OS optimizes average performance.

Virtual memory vs RAM

VM extends memory using disk (slow); RAM is real physical memory (fast).


9) Mini ASCII diagrams

System call path

App → (API) → System Call → Kernel → Driver → Device

I/O with DMA

Device ──DMA──► RAM   (CPU just sets up transfer; interrupt on completion)


10) Practice questions (with brief answers)

1.   Define system software and list its components.
Ans: Software that runs the computer; OS, drivers, utilities, firmware, middleware, translators.

2.   Name any four functions of an OS.
Ans: Process scheduling, memory management, file system, device/I-O management (also security, networking, user mgmt).

3.   What is a device driver?
Ans: Software that lets the OS communicate with a specific hardware device.

4.   Explain ‘Round Robin’ scheduling in one line.
Ans: CPU cycles through ready processes, giving each a fixed time quantum.

5.   What is virtual memory and a page fault?
Ans: Disk-backed extension of RAM; page fault occurs when the needed page isn’t in RAM and must be loaded from disk.

6.   Differentiate kernel and shell.
Ans: Kernel = core managing hardware; Shell = user command interface (CLI/GUI).

7.   Why use DMA?
Ans: To move large data between device and RAM without tying up the CPU.

8.   What is spooling? Give one example.
Ans: Queueing device jobs to disk for sequential processing; print spooler.

9.   Type-1 vs Type-2 hypervisor (one line).
Ans: Type-1 runs on hardware; Type-2 runs on top of a host OS.

10.                     Two differences between RTOS and general-purpose OS.
Ans: RTOS guarantees deadlines & deterministic latency; GP OS optimizes throughput/fairness.


11) One-page recap

  • System software runs the machine and exposes services to apps.

  • OS (kernel+shell) handles processes, memory, files, devices, security, networking.

  • Drivers talk to hardware; utilities maintain/secure/optimize; firmware boots; middleware provides shared services; translators build/run code.

  • Mechanics to know: Scheduling (FCFS/SJF/RR/Priority), paging & virtual memory, file permissions & journaling, interrupts/DMA/spooling, AAA security.

  • Boot chain: Firmware → Bootloader → Kernel → Services → Login.

  • Modern layer: Virtualization (Type-1/2), containers for lightweight isolation.

  • Key contrasts: Kernel≠Shell, Driver≠Firmware, Utility≠Application, RTOS≠GP OS, VM≠Container.


 

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