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Author - Robert Love ... [Goo?] [Posters]This Paperback Book item from O´Reilly Media, Inc. was reviewed on 10-Aug-2008. Search ISBN:0596009585 offer from Abebooks or used books from Alibris. Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library Reference Book. Classifications : Computer Science Artificial Intelligence Circuitry General Human-Computer Interaction Information Theory Modeling & Simulation Research Software Engineering Systems Analysis & Design Computers & Inter . Click the following link to view the cover of Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library. Related topics: Computer Science. Circuitry. General. Information Theory. Research. Subjects. Books. Hacking. Business & Culture. Subjects. requestid: 1f3e47e3-7d68-4896-958c-c32c9c53800frequestprocessingtime: 0.0700060000000000 salesrank: 226482 numberofitems: 1 packagedimensions: 94906146701 1) Paperback Book Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by O´Reilly Media, Inc.. I have been programming C/C++ professionally since 1986 and was surprised at how much I´ve learned in the first few chapters.
2) Paperback Book Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by O´Reilly Media, Inc.. If you expect the quality of the author´s other books from this book, you´ll be disappointed. It just lists system calls and their descriptions that you can find from man pages without any serious examples. It doesn´t provide any insight or thorough coverage you can find from other books such as Steven´s book (Advance Programmng in Unix environment).
3) Paperback Book Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by O´Reilly Media, Inc.. Up-side
4) Paperback Book Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by O´Reilly Media, Inc.. nothing really useful in this book, too shallow to do anything with it, i like his other books though, but this one certainly is not good, if at all.¤ 5) Paperback Book Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by O´Reilly Media, Inc.. I have to agree completely with the previous reviewer that this book lacks meat. In this book, after discussing each issue, the author typically hints that there exists a solution, but does not tell you exactly how to implement the solution. The book is sprinkled with snippets of code that are almost always incomplete, and very rarely explained.
6) Paperback Book Linux System Programming: Talking Directly to the Kernel and C Library by O´Reilly Media, Inc.. This book is about writing software that makes the most effective use of the system you´re running on -- code that interfaces directly with the kernel and core system libraries, including the shell, text editor, compiler, debugger, core utilities, and system daemons. The majority of both Unix and Linux code is still written at the system level, and Linux System Programming focuses on everything above the kernel, where applications such as Apache, bash, cp, vim, Emacs, gcc, gdb, glibc, ls, mv, and X exist. Written primarily for engineers looking to program (better) at the low level, this book is an ideal teaching tool for any programmer. Even with the trend toward high-level development, either through web software (such as PHP) or managed code (C#), someone still has to write the PHP interpreter and the C# virtual machine. Linux System Programming gives you an understanding of core internals that makes for better code, no matter where it appears in the stack. Debugging high-level code often requires you to understand the system calls and kernel behavior of your operating system, too. Key topics include: An overview of Linux, the kernel, the C library, and the C compiler Reading from and writing to files, along with other basic file I/O operations, including how the Linux kernel implements and manages file I/O Buffer size management, including the Standard I/O library Advanced I/O interfaces, memory mappings, and optimization techniques The family of system calls for basic process management Advanced process management, including real-time processes File and directories-creating, moving, copying, deleting, and managing them Memory management -- interfaces for allocating memory, managingthe memory you have, and optimizing your memory access Signals and their role on a Unix system, plus basic and advanced signal interfaces Time, sleeping, and clock management, starting with the basics and continuing through POSIX clocks and high resolution timers With Linux System Programming, you will be able to take an in-depth look at Linux from both a theoretical and an applied perspective as you cover a wide range of programming topics.¤ Page Updated: Robert N. Goolsby, 7-Sep-2008, 05960095859780596009588, 480-760-560-520-850-Q0B-8
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