COMS W4118:
OPERATING SYSTEMS I Spring 2008 |
HOME ANNOUNCEMENTS SYLLABUS HOMEWORKS POLICIES GRADES DISCUSSION RESOURCES |
Homework PolicyAll work is due by
the date and time specified in the respective assignment;
there are no extensions. It is much better to submit
partially
complete homework on time and get partial credit for your work than to
submit late homework for no credit. Homeworks submitted after the
respective deadlines when they are due are considered late. Late
homeworks will not be accepted unless there is a valid medical or
family condition with appropriate documentation submitted to the
instructor.
Submissions should be made electronically via Courseworks.
You can submit
multiple times, but the last submission is what counts. Each
submission will be time stamped. Proper submission is your
responsibility; we strongly urge you to make sure you understand the
submission process and submit early. You can always submit again up
until the deadline, so we strongly urge you to submit well before the
deadline and then submit again if you have a more updated assignment
to submit later. Grading PolicyIf
you disagree with any homework grade, submit your grievance via
email to the w4118 staff mailing list, documenting the merits of your
case.
The grader responsible will respond likewise via email. If you are
still
dissatisfied you may appeal in like manner to the instructor, who will
only examine the email record of the dispute, and will respond in
email. If you disagree with any exam grade, submit your exam and
grievance in
writing (not email) to the grader responsible, documenting the merits
of your case. The grader will respond likewise in writing. If you
are still dissatisfied you may appeal in like manner to the
instructor, who will only examine the written record of the dispute,
and will respond in email. For a grade dispute to be considered, the
written grievance must be submitted in writing within
two weeks of when the respective assignment or exam is returned.
Programming PolicyFor your
convenience, all programming can be developed on any
machine that can run Linux and VMware. However, only those programs
which compile using the gcc compiler on the CLIC
machines will be graded. Furthermore, it is critically important that
all submitted program listings and executions be thoroughly documented.
All programs must compile and all kernels you modify must also boot; programs and kernels that do not compile and boot will receive a grade of zero. Usually the homework assignments will only state the major objectives of the program to be written; it will be often up to you to make design decisions about things like I/O, efficiency, error handling, and so on. Make sure you provide adequate test cases to indicate the correctness and robustness of your approaches. Collaboration/Copying PolicyWe encourage you
to help one another in understanding the concepts, algorithms, or
approaches needed to do the homework assignments for
this class. However, what you turn in must be your own, or for group
projects, your group's own work. Copying other people's code, solution
sets, or from any other sources is strictly prohibited. Students in
previous years have often been caught cheating by copying answers from
the web, which turn out to be incorrect. The homework assignments
must be the work of the students turning them in. Anyone found
violating the class collaboration policy will be punished severely.
All students or
groups whose assignments are determined to
be obviously very similar will receive a zero on the respective
homework
assignment for the first offense, and will receive an F for the course
for
the second offense ("all" means both the copy-er and copy-ee). More
serious cases of cheating, such as copying someone's work without their
knowledge or cheating on exams, will result in the person cheating
receiving an F. In addition, offenses will be reported to the Dean's
office, which may result in further disciplinary action, including
suspension or expulsion from the program. Penalties will be given
without discussion or warning; the first notice you receive may be a
letter from the Dean. Note that you are responsible for not leaving
copies of your assignments lying around and for protecting your files
accordingly.
Open Door PolicyWe
would like the course to run smoothly and enjoyably. Feel free to
let us know what you find just, good, and interesting about the
course. Let us know sooner about the reverse. See us, leave us a
note, or send us email.
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