Who should take 6.1810 // Communication // Grading // Labs // Text books // Homework // Collaboration // Class meetings // Staff // TA office hours
6.1810 is intended for undergraduates who enjoyed 6.1910 (6.004) and want to learn about design and implementation of operating systems, and their use as a foundation for systems programming.
We will distribute assignments on the course web site, and make all announcements through piazza. The course web site has the schedule for the term on the schedule page.
Grades in 6.1810 will be based on:
You must submit all labs in order to pass the class.
There are two exams, one during the term and one in finals week.
To turn in each lab, run make zipball in your lab directory and upload the resulting lab.zip file to Gradescope. The submission deadline is 11:59:59pm on the day that the lab is due. You can turn in as many times as you like before the deadline. The Gradescope autograder uses make grade to assign a grade to your submission.
You have a total of 72 late hours for the semester. Each hour late in excess of 72 hours will penalize your total lab grade by 1%, up to a maximum of 50%. Late hours are allocated greedily, so they are allocated to earlier labs before later labs. Due to institute regulations, late hours may not be used for the last lab (due on Dec 6).
We suggest that you save your late hours for unexpected emergencies. For predictable situations (athletic events, deadlines in other classes, job interviews, etc.) we expect you to manage your time so as to finish assignments by the due date. If you have exhausted your late hours but nevertheless encounter an emergency that causes you to need an extension, we ask that you talk to S3 and ask them to send us a letter supporting your request.
The lecture questions/homeworks are intended to make you think about the lecture topic. They are due before the start of lecture (i.e., 1pm) on the specified due dates. We would appreciate if you submit lecture questions well before 1p (e.g., the night before) so that we can prepare to answer your questions during lecture. You can miss a few lecture questions/homeworks over the semester without any penalty.
6.1810 relies on the following books:
You are welcome to discuss the labs (and homeworks) with other students, but all of your written work and code must be your own and must carefully acknowledge all contributions of ideas by others, whether from classmates or from sources you have read. Please don't look at anyone else's code for the labs or homework. Please feel free to ask and answer questions on Piazza, about labs, homework, readings, and lectures.
Do not post your lab or homework solutions on publicly accessible web sites (such as GitHub) or file spaces (such as your Athena Public directory).
Lectures will be held on Monday and Wednesday from 1:00pm to 2:30pm in person.
Lecturer
Frans Kaashoek
Robert Morris
Teaching assistants
Elie Cuevas (eliec)
Kenneth Choi (kenchoi)
Aryan Kumar (aryan02)
Si Liang Lei (siliangl)
Ivy Wu (ivywu)
Staff mailing list
61810-staff@lists.csail.mit.edu, but we would prefer that you
use Piazza.
For office hours with TBD locations, we will currently hold them in the Stata Center (Building 32) G9 lounge (right outside the elevators).
Monday: 7pm-10pm (34-303, Ivy)
Tuesday: 10:30am-1pm (24-319, Elie)
Tuesday: 1pm-3:30pm (24-323, Brandon)
Tuesday: 4:30pm-7pm (34-304, Aryan & Kenneth)
Wednesday: 10am-12pm (24-321, Ivy)
Wednesday: 5pm-7:30pm (34-303, Kenneth)
Wednesday: 7:30pm-10pm (34-303, Aryan)
Thursday: 10:30am-1pm (24-319, Elie)
Friday: 1pm-3:30pm (24-319, Brandon)
Questions or comments regarding 6.1810? Send e-mail to the course staff at 61810-staff@lists.csail.mit.edu.
Top // 6.1810 home // Last updated Sunday, 20-Oct-2024 20:39:55 EDT