wisemonkeys logo
FeedNotificationProfileManage Forms
FeedNotificationSearchSign in
wisemonkeys logo

Blogs

Process State

profile
Nikhil Singh
Jul 12, 2023
0 Likes
0 Discussions
39 Reads

States of a Process in Operating Systems

A process has several stages that it passes through from beginning to end. There must be a minimum of five states. Even though during execution, the process could be in one of these states, the names of the states are not standardized. Each process goes through several stages throughout its life cycle.

 

Process States in Operating System

The states of a process are as follows: 

 

New (Create): In this step, the process is about to be created but not yet created. It is the program that is present in secondary memory that will be picked up by OS to create the process.

Ready: New -> Ready to run. After the creation of a process, the process enters the ready state i.e. the process is loaded into the main memory. The process here is ready to run and is waiting to get the CPU time for its execution. Processes that are ready for execution by the CPU are maintained in a queue called ready queue for ready processes.

Run: The process is chosen from the ready queue by the CPU for execution and the instructions within the process are executed by any one of the available CPU cores.

Blocked or Wait: Whenever the process requests access to I/O or needs input from the user or needs access to a critical region(the lock for which is already acquired) it enters the blocked or waits for the state. The process continues to wait in the main memory and does not require CPU. Once the I/O operation is completed the process goes to the ready state.

Terminated or Completed: Process is killed as well as PCB is deleted. The resources allocated to the process will be released or deallocated.

Suspend Ready: Process that was initially in the ready state but was swapped out of main memory(refer to Virtual Memory topic) and placed onto external storage by the scheduler is said to be in suspend ready state. The process will transition back to a ready state whenever the process is again brought onto the main memory.

Suspend wait or suspend blocked: Similar to suspend ready but uses the process which was performing I/O operation and lack of main memory caused them to move to secondary memory. When work is finished it may go to suspend ready.


Comments ()


Sign in

Read Next

From Procrastinator to Performer: How to Beat the Last-Minute Rush

Blog banner

RACI model in IT services

Blog banner

MoSCoW METHOD IN DATA SCIENCE

Blog banner

Operation system

Blog banner

Navigation With Indian Constellation(NavIC) by ISRO in Geographic Information Systems

Blog banner

Google classroom

Blog banner

Cloud Computing

Blog banner

Importance of internet

Blog banner

The Power of Cyber Forensic in Solving Crimes

Blog banner

Linux Memory Management

Blog banner

Buffering

Blog banner

Dos (Denial of service) Attack

Blog banner

Is Pursuing a Dance Career in India Worth it?

Blog banner

Linux Threads:

Blog banner

Deadlock

Blog banner

Risk management in IT

Blog banner

Mumbai local ......

Blog banner

HOW CAN SOCIAL MEDIA MAKE YOU HAPPIER?

Blog banner

Threads

Blog banner

Scheduling

Blog banner

Service Operations in ITSM

Blog banner

Internet: The Vast Ocean Of Knowledge.

Blog banner

ProofHub

Blog banner

Concurrency and memory

Blog banner

NETWORK SECURITY RISKS

Blog banner

COMMUNICATION

Blog banner

Threats To Computer System

Blog banner

AOL Mail

Blog banner

Cache Memory(142)

Blog banner

Steganography

Blog banner

Big Data Architecture

Blog banner

R Programming

Blog banner

Broken Authentication Attacks

Blog banner

Biometric Authentication and Privacy: Balancing Ethical Concerns

Blog banner

How social media affect

Blog banner

Security and E-mail

Blog banner

Know your Processors!

Blog banner

semaphores

Blog banner

Introduction to Solidity Programming for Blockchain Development

Blog banner

Cache memory

Blog banner

Memory managment

Blog banner

IT Service as as Value Creation

Blog banner