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An Introduction to Symbian Operating System

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Title: An Introduction to Symbian Operating System


1
An Introduction to Symbian Operating System
  • Prepared by
  • Phang Seong Yee

2
Outline
  • Trends For Mobile Application
  • Mobile Application
  • Mobile Computing Platform
  • Mobile Operating System
  • Symbian Operating System
  • Evolution of Symbian OS
  • Symbian OS Architecture
  • Symbian Application Development
  • Symbian Developer Tools
  • Conclusion

3
Trends for Mobile Applications
  • Application Programming Interfaces (APIs)
  • - To enable third parties to provide new
    services, such as billing, messaging.
  • - To reduce the time for carriers to
    introduce new products to their customer.
  • - It would come to the stage of
    Programmable APIs.
  • Services Caching
  • - Due to the advance devices with
    sophisticated processor and more memory,
    sophisticated multimedia-based and web
    services-based applications become possible.
  • - The devices can be used to mask the
    vagaries of the network and services by caching
    services on the device itself.

4
Trends for Mobile Applications
  • 3. Further Service Differentiation for carriers
  • 4. XML-based Web Services
  • - To enable application developers to use the
    existing services over the Internet quickly
    create new applications for mobile devices.
  • - Since mobile terminal are constrained with
    respect to memory and processor power, new
    versions of XML processing had to be developed
    such as kXML, kSOAP, kUDDI.
  • 5. Real Time Data Streaming
  • - To enable the services beyond 3G, such as
    mobile TV (television channels from the mobile
    phone)

5
Applications 1 year ago
vMiles
Mobile Controls
Micrographs
Color Dialog
Signature Capture Control
Pocket ftCalc
Registry Control
Simple Wireless API
6
Applications Today
All Mobile Casino
GPS GolfPro
JL MobileXSales Rep
Microsoft CRMMobile
Pocket Humanity
Valentin IliescuChess
7
Mobile Application
  • The number of applications is growing
    exponentially and different applications have
    different requirements.
  • For example, distributed applications require
    interaction and coordination with remote
    applications, and therefore, leverage the
    middleware services.
  • Some applications require the runtime environment
    to execute, while other applications run natively
    and interact with the operating system kernel.

8
Mobile Application
  • Resource-poor mobile devices
  • Limited memory and buffer space (typically no
    disk)
  • Small screen
  • Low processing capabilities
  • Limited battery life
  • Location of a mobile device may change frequently
    due to mobility
  • Relative to network and other services
  • Relative to other hosts

9
Mobile Application
  • Capacity of the wireless channel is limited and
    may vary
  • Communication is often unreliable
  • Short-term fades high bit errors
  • Long-term disconnects disconnected
    operationForced or voluntary disconnection
  • Disconnected operation (read/write) requires
    system support
  • Data caching
  • Pre-fetching
  • Integration

10
Mobile Application
  • Applications in mobile computing fall into the
    following three broad categories
  • Stand-alone Applications- run entirely on mobile
    terminals in disconnect (detached) mode.
  • Simple Client-Server (C/S) applications - (e.g.,
    DB query). The connection time for C/S
    interactions is short.
  • Advanced mobile applications - (groupware and
    distributed multimedia) - information exchanged
    is time critical (i.e., real time)

11
Mobile Application Evolution
  • The functionality of the mobile terminals has
    evolved tremendously over last 10 years.
  • Voice Transmission -Short Message Service (SMS)
    and Web Browsing
  • (WAP and I-mode)
  • -Interaction with Vending Machine and Multimedia
    Message Service (MMS)
  • Video Conferencing and Interaction with the
    surrounding physical environment
    (I-area)-Object-to-Object Communication
    -Machine-to-Machine Communication -Car-to-Car
    Communication

12
Mobile Computing Platform
  • The evolution of cell phone functionality is the
    result of the sophistication of supporting
    infrastructure running in the phones.
  • The generic mobile computing platform that
    includes the building blocks shared by most
    existing approaches.
  • The building blocks are
  • Mobile Operating System
  • Runtime Environment
  • Middleware
  • Applications

13
Generic Mobile Computing Platform
14
Mobile Operating System (1)
  • It is the software responsible for managing,
    exporting and arbitrating the hardware resources
    provided by terminals.
  • It is vital component that hides the underlying
    hardware complexity and heterogeneity and enables
    the construction of software.
  • It is similar to the desktop operating system
    with restricted components.
  • It is including low memory footprint, low dynamic
    memory usage, efficient power management
    framework, real-time support for telephony and
    communication protocols and reliability.

15
Mobile Operating System (2)
  • Symbian OS
  • Palm OS
  • Windows CE .NET OS
  • Embedded Linux
  • Qualcomm BREW

Note All the OS above follow the architecture
presented in previous slide except BREW
16
Mobile OS Example
PalmOS PocketPC Symbian OS
17
Market Leader
  • Symbian leads the smartphone market with a 70
    share
  • Linux 19, Microsoft 5, PalmSource 3
  • (Source Canalys Q2 2006 worldwide smart
    mobile device research)
  • 100m cumulative shipments since the formation of
    Symbian
  • 12.3m Symbian OS shipments in Q2 2006
  • A new Symbian OS smartphone model was shipped
    every
  • week in Q2 2006

18
Symbian Platform Mobile Phone
19
Symbian Operating System
  • Symbian OS is licenced to a large number of
    handset manufacturers, which account for over 80
    of annual worldwide mobile phone sales (Symbian
    2003).
  • Symbian OS is an operating system, designed for
    mobile devices, with associated libraries, user
    interface frameworks and reference
    implementations of common tools, produced by
    Symbian Ltd.
  • The version 8 is the first version that provides
    a real-time OS kernel and supports the following
    features
  • 1) Rich suite of application services,
    including services for contacts,
    schedule, messaging, browsing and system control
  • 2) Java support, Real time, Hardware Support
    (different CPUs, peripherals, and memory types),
    messaging with support for MMS, EMS, SMS, POP3,
    SMTP, and MHTML
  • 3) Graphics with a graphic accelerator API,
    Mobile Telephony, International Support, Data
    Synchronuization, Device Management, Security,
    wireless connectivity, including Bluetooth and
    802.11b

20
Is Symbian OS opensource???
  • A common question is whether Symbian OS is
    "open". It is not open in the sense of Open
    Source software - the source code is not publicly
    available. However, nearly all the source code is
    provided to Symbian OS phone manufacturers and
    many other partners. Moreover, the APIs are
    publicly documented and anyone can develop
    software for Symbian OS. This contrasts with
    traditional embedded phone operating systems,
    which typically cannot accept any aftermarket
    software with the exception of Java applications.

21
Evolution of Symbian OS (I)
  • EPOC16-Psion released several Series 3 devices
    from 1991 to 1998 which used the EPOC16 OS, also
    known as SIBO.
  • EPOC OS Releases 13-The Series 5 device,
    released in 1997, used the first iterations of
    the EPOC32 OS.
  • EPOC Release 4-Oregon Osaris and Geofox 1 were
    released using ER4.In 1998, Symbian Ltd. was
    formed as a partnership between Ericsson, Nokia,
    Motorola and Psion, to explore the convergence
    between PDAs and mobile phones.
  • EPOC Release 5 a.k.a. Symbian OS v5-Psion Series
    5mx, Series 7, Psion Revo, Psion Netbook, netPad,
    Ericsson MC218 were released in 1999 using ER5.

EPOC is a family of operating systems developed
by Psion for portable devices, primarily PDAs
22
Evolution of Symbian OS (II)
  • ER5u a.k.a. Symbian OS v5.1
  • u Unicode. The first phone, the Ericsson R380
    was released using ER5u in 2000. It was not an
    'open' phone - software could not be installed.
    Notably, a number of never released Psion
    prototypes for next generation PDAs, including a
    Bluetooth Revo successor codenamed Conan were
    using ER5u.
  • Symbian OS v6.0 and v6.1-Sometimes called ER6.
    The first 'open' Symbian OS phone, the Nokia
    9210, was released on 6.0.
  • Symbian OS v7.0 and v7.0s-First shipped in 2003.
    This is an important Symbian release which
    appeared with all contemporary user interfaces
    including UIQ (Sony Ericsson P800, P900, P910,
    Motorola A925, A1000), Series 80 (Nokia 9300,
    9500), Series 90 (Nokia 7710), S60 (Nokia 6600,
    7310) as well as several FOMA phones in Japan.In
    2004, Psion sold its stake in Symbian.

23
Evolution of Symbian OS (III)
  • Symbian OS v8.0
  • First shipped in 2004, one of its
    advantages would have been a choice of two
    different kernels (EKA1 or EKA2). However, the
    EKA2 kernel version did not ship until SymbianOS
    v8.1b. The kernels behave more or less
    identically from user-side, but are internally
    very different. EKA1 was chosen by some
    manufacturers to maintain compatibility with old
    device drivers, whilst EKA2 offered advantages
    such as a hard real-time capability. v8.0b was
    deproductized in 2003.
  • Symbian OS v8.1
  • Basically a cleaned-up version of 8.0, this was
    available in 8.1a and 8.1b versions, with EKA1
    and EKA2 kernels respectively. The 8.1b version,
    with EKA2's single-chip phone support but no
    additional security layer, was popular among
    Japanese phone companies desiring the realtime
    support but not allowing open application
    installation.

24
Evolution of Symbian OS (IV)
  • Symbian OS v9.0
  • This version was used for internal Symbian
    purposes only. It was deproductised in 2004. v9.0
    marked the end of the road for EKA1. v8.1a is the
    final EKA1 version of SymbianOS.Symbian OS has
    generally maintained reasonable binary
    compatibility. In theory the OS was BC from
    ER1-ER5, then from 6.0 to 8.1b. Substantial
    changes were needed for 9.0, related to tools and
    security, but this should be a one-off event. The
    move from requiring ARMv4 to requiring ARMv5 did
    not break backwards compatibility.
  • A Symbian developer proclaims that porting from
    Symbian 8.x to Symbian 9.x is a more daunting
    process than Symbian says.

25
Evolution of Symbian OS (V)
  • Symbian OS v9.1
  • Released early 2005. It includes many new
    security related features, particularly a
    controversial platform security module
    facilitating mandatory code signing. Symbian
    argues that applications and content, and
    therefore a developers investment, are better
    protected than ever, however others contend that
    the requirement that every application be signed
    (and thus approved) violates the rights of the
    end-user, the owner of the phone, and limits the
    amount of free software available. The new ARM
    EABI binary model means developers need to retool
    and the security changes mean they may have to
    recode. S60 3rd Edition phones have Symbian OS
    9.1. Sony Ericsson is shipping the M600i based on
    Symbian OS 9.1 and should ship the P990 in Q3
    2006. The earlier versions had a fatal defect
    where the phone hangs temporarily after the owner
    sent hundreds of SMSes. However, on 13 September
    2006, Nokia released a small program to fix this
    defect.

26
Evolution of Symbian OS (VI)
  • Symbian OS v9.2
  • Released Q1 2006. Support for Bluetooth 2.0 (was
    1.2) and OMA Device Management 1.2 (was 1.1.2).
    S60 3rd Edition Feature Pack 1 phones have
    Symbian OS 9.2.
  • Symbian OS v9.3
  • Released on 12 July 2006. Upgrades include
    native support for Wifi 802.11, HSDPA, Vietnamese
    language support.
  • On November 16, 2006, the 100 millionth
    smartphone running the OS was shipped.
  • Symbian OS v9.5
  • Released in March 2007. Featured up to 25
    reduced RAM usage resulting in better battery
    life thanks to introduction of Demand paging.
    Applications should launch up to 75 faster.
    Native support for mobile digital television
    broadcasts DVB-H ja ISDB-T and location services.
    Also supports SQL.

27
Symbian Product
28
Symbian Based Platform
MOAP-mobile-phone-oriented application platform
(NTT DoCoMo's Symbian based MOAP
platform ) UIQ- User Interface Quartz
29
References Model
Series 60 UIQ Series 80 Series 90
Nokia N-Gage, N-Gage QDNokia 7650, 3650, 3660Nokia 6600, 6620, 6630, 6670, 6680, 6681, 6682, 7610Sendo X, Siemens SX-1, Nokia 3250, E60, E61, E70, N70, N80, N90, N91 and others, coming out each month Sony Ericsson P800, P900, P910i, P990i, W950i, M600Motorola A920/A925/A1000 Nokia 9210, 9210iNokia 9300, 9300i, 9500 Nokia 7710
30
UIQ
  • UIQ is stylus-based interface (heavily influenced
    by the easy-to-use Palm OS one). The best known
    examples of UIQ devices are the Sony Ericsson
    P800 and P900/P910i, although there are others,
    including the Motorola A920/925/1000. Look beyond
    the Palm-like interface and you'll see glimpses
    of stuff that's familiar from Psion days.
  • But only glimpses. The biggest downside of UIQ 2
    is that some of the benefits of multitasking have
    been removed by the way programs revert to a
    neutral state when sent to the background. So you
    switch away to check your calendar or answer the
    phone and then have to re-open your document and
    find your place all over again. And again.
  • UIQ 3 promises to restore proper multitasking,
    thankfully, but this won't be available until the
    Sony Ericsson P990i, W950 and M600 arrive mid to
    late 2006.

BenQP30
Motorola M1000
Arima U300
MotorolaMOTORIZR Z8
SE P990
31
Series 60
  • Down at the other size extreme, Nokia has been
    very successful with their small-screen 'Series
    60' interface. Again this is recognizable Symbian
    under the hood, but again there's no touch-screen
    and this time Nokia has written many of its own
    applications from scratch, ditching the standard
    Psion/Symbian ones presumably because they
    wouldn't suit the one-handed, button-driven
    interface and generally smaller screen.
  • There's multi-tasking power here under the hood
    and many third party applications have been
    ported to Series 60/S60, but everything's
    restricted to some degree by the screen size and
    keypad text input.

LG KS10 JoY
Samsung SGH - D720
Panasonic X800
Nokia N93i
Nokia N95
32
Series 80
  • Historically, Nokia have opted for Symbian
    devices which don't need a fragile touch-screen.
    The well-known Nokia 9210 effectively ran EPOC
    version 6 and is extremely similar to an old
    Psion Series 5mx in many, many ways, with the
    minor difference that the lack of a touch-screen
    necessitated a set of programmable command
    buttons to the right of the screen. Nokia refer
    to this interface as 'Series 80'.
  • You get almost the full range of built-in
    applications (including Word, Sheet, etc.) and
    there's full (and proper) multi-tasking, so you
    can have dozens of programs and documents open at
    once, switching between them as needed.

Nokia 9500
33
Series 90
  • 'Series 90', as seen in Nokia's idiosyncratic
    7710. It uses much the same operating system and
    applications as Series 80, but tweaked to support
    a slightly larger, touch-sensitive screen. But
    there's no keyboard, of course, so input is via
    gesture recognition, virtual keyboard or
    Bluetooth keyboard. The interface has been
    orphaned by Nokia, alas. The 7710 is still a good
    choice for ex-Psion owners though, with similar
    software and interface - just make sure you use
    it with a Bluetooth keyboard!

Nokia 7710
34
Symbian OS Architecture
35
System view of Symbian OS
36
Symbian OS v8
37
Symbian OS v9
38
(No Transcript)
39
Symbian Development
40
Software Development Kits (SDK)
  • Software development kits
  • The starting point for developing applications
    for Symbian OS is to obtain a
  • software development kit (SDK). SDKs for
    Symbian OS support development in
  • both C and Java. They provide
  • -binaries and tools to facilitate building and
    deployment of Symbian OS applications
  • -full system documentation for APIs and tools
  • For the independent software developer, the
    most important thing to know in targeting a
    particular phone is the associated UI platform.
    Next you need to know the Symbian OS version the
    phone was based on. This combined knowledge
    defines to a large degree the target phone as a
    platform for independent software development.
    You can then decide which SDK you need to obtain.
    In most cases you will, working with this SDK, be
    able to target with a single version of your
    application all phones based on the same UI
    platform and Symbian OS version. The Symbian OS
    System Definition papers give further details of
    possible differences between phones based on a
    single SDK.

41
What are the Symbian OS Development Kits?
  • Symbian creates 4 development environments
  • 1.) Symbian OS Customisation Kit (CustKit)
  • The Symbian OS Customisation Kit is the
    development environment
  • that is licensed to handset manufacturers. It
    is a superset of the Symbian
  • OS Development Kit, including some extra
    tools and source. The license terms are different
    to those for the DevKit.
  • 2.) Symbian OS Development Kit (DevKit)
  • Colloquial name for the Symbian OS Development
    Kit.
  • 3.) Symbian OS Binary Access Kit (BAK)
  • A binary-only DevKit. Provides access to
    most APIs in the DevKit but does not contain
  • the source tree
  • 4.) Symbian OS Technology Preview SDK (TPSDK)
  • Technology Preview SDK. An early release SDK

42
Developer tools (I)
  • Nokia Carbide Development Tools for Symbian OS
    C
  • Carbide.c is a family of Eclipse-based
    development tools supporting Symbian OS
    development on S60, Series 80, UIQ and MOAP. The
    Carbide family consists of
  • Carbide.c Professional, performance
    tools for advanced users
  • Carbide.c Developer Edition
    Productivity tools for creating applications
  • Carbide.c Express For developers new
    to Symbian, Academia
  • Nokia Carbide Development Tools for Java -
    Carbide.j
  • Carbide.j (formerly Nokia Developer's Suite for
    J2ME) is a software development tool for Java
    Platform, Micro Edition (Java ME) developers
    that enhances the development and verification of
    applications for Nokia devices.
  • It provides tools for creating Mobile
    Information Device Profile (MIDP) and Personal
    Profile (PP) applications and deployment
    packages, signing applications, and deploying
    applications to devices. It is also an essential
    tool for managing, configuring, and running
    emulators for various Nokia platform and device
    SDKs.

43
Developer tools (II)
  • AppForge Crossfire 6.5
  • Crossfire is a unique technology platform that
    allows Microsoft Visual Studio Developers to
    leverage the skills and knowledge they have and
    apply them to create mobile applications that
    will run on market leading devices and operating
    systems. Crossfire includes integration and
    support for the following
  • Microsoft IDE Integration
  • -Visual Studio .NET (2005 / 2003)
  • -Visual C .NET 2003
  • -Visual Basic .NET 2003
  • -Visual Studio 6.0 Professional
  • -Visual Basic 6.0
  • Language Support
  • -Visual Basic .NET
  • -C
  • -Visual Basic 6.0

44
Developer tools (III)
  • Wirelexsoft VistaMax
  • Wirelexsoft is a provider of technology and
    solutions for the mobile, the web and the
    desktop. We provide Rapid Application Development
    (RAD) Tools and IDEs that save significant
    development effort and reduce cost and time to
    market.
  • Wirelexsoft offers VistaMax for development on
    Symbian - S60 and UIQ - and VistaFei for AJAX
    Application Development based on Google Web
    Toolkit. VistaMax and VistaFei are based on
    Eclipse.

45
Opensource developer tools
  • SymbDev
  • This is a set of free and open source plug-ins
    for Eclipse that provide support for the
    development of Symbian C applications. The
    plug-ins can automatically detect the installed
    SDKs while the building process is based on the
    Symbian command-line building tools which are
    executed as background tasks from the Eclipse
    IDE.
  • Xcode Plugin for Symbian OS
  • This is a free and open source plugin for the
    Apple Xcode development environment for Apple
    Macintosh computers running the MacOS X operating
    system. It was developed by Tom Sutcliffe and it
    currently has the following main features
  • -Import MMP files into Xcode projects
  • -Edit settings and build targets (exactly like
    you would for any other Xcode project)
  • -Work with multiple SDKs - UIQ, S60, Series 80
  • -Build SIS files and send them via Bluetooth to
    your Symbian OS phone for testing, as part of the
    build process
  • -GCC and other Symbian OS-specific tools
    included (no need to download or compile them
    yourself)
  • -Projects mostly work 'straight from the box'
    i.e. no change is needed to code developed on a
    PC for it to compile in Xcode
  • -The plugin is free and open source. The source
    is covered by the GPL and is available on
    tigris.org

46
Development Language
  • C
  • Java
  • Open source -
  • -Ruby
  • -OPL-dev
  • -Perl
  • -Python for S60
  • -Python for UIQ
  • -Simkin

47
Conclusion
  • In summary, mobile phone manufacturers are given
    a large amount of way in relation to how much or
    how little of Symbian OS they incorporate into
    their phones.
  • They have taken only limited advantage of this
    freedom, differentiating products by adding
    functionality rather than removing or replacing
    Symbian OS components. Where components have been
    removed this trends to be at the UI platform
    level, i.e. the components removed are perceived
    as inappropriate for the class of phone at which
    the UI platform (SDK) is targeted.
  • Where components have been replaced, this is
    because handset manufacturers have previously
    developed their own versions of those components,
    sometimes with additional capabilities, which
    they prefer to use.

48
References-Useful Link (I)
  • http//www.symbian.com/
  • -symbian ltd website
  • http//developer.symbian.com/
  • -tools,tutorial,source code on symbian
    software development
  • http//www.allaboutsymbian.com/
  • -all about symbian news ,software
  • http//www.allaboutseries80.com
  • -Sites on S80 devices, applications
  • http//www.s60.com/
  • -Sites on S60 devices, applications
  • http//www.i-symbian.com/
  • -Latest news on symbian phones and application
  • http//www.uiq.com/
  • -UIQ technology site
  • http//www.newlc.com/ (symbian C developer
    forum)
  • -SDK, Development tools, Guide, Example source
    code

49
References-Useful Link (II)
  • http//pf128.krakow.sdi.tpnet.pl/symbdev/
  • -symDev opensource developer tools
  • http//www.wirelexsoft.com/
  • -website for wirelexsoft IDE
  • http//www.appforge.com/
  • -website for appforge IDE
  • http//www.forum.nokia.com
  • -everything on starting to develop
  • symbian application
  • http//symbian.org
  • -opensource project for Symbian OS
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