Sponsored Content
Special Forums News, Links, Events and Announcements Modern Operating Systems: Tanenbaum Post 20498 by Neo on Saturday 27th of April 2002 10:56:08 PM
Old 04-27-2002
Modern Operating Systems: Tanenbaum

Chapters on Linux and Unix:

http://www.prenhall.com/divisions/es.../custom/mos2e/

Slides, figures, code, lots of goodies on-line!

Code:
CHAPTER 10 CASE STUDY 1: UNIX AND LINUX 671 


        10.1. HISTORY OF UNIX 672 
                10.1.1. UNICS 672 
                10.1.2. PDP-11 UNIX 673 
                10.1.3. Portable UNIX 674 
                10.1.4. Berkeley UNIX 675 
                10.1.5. Standard UNIX 676 
                10.1.6. MINIX 677 
                10.1.7. Linux 678 

        10.2. OVERVIEW OF UNIX 681 
                10.2.1. UNIX Goals 681 
                10.2.2. Interfaces to UNIX 682 
                10.2.3. The UNIX Shell 683 
                10.2.4. UNIX Utility Programs 686 
                10.2.5. Kernel Structure 687 

        10.3. PROCESSES IN UNIX 690 
                10.3.1. Fundamental Concepts 690 
                10.3.2. Process Management System Calls in UNIX 692 
                10.3.3. Implementation of Processes in UNIX 699 
                10.3.4. Booting UNIX 708 

        10.4. MEMORY MANAGEMENT IN UNIX 710 
                10.4.1. Fundamental Concepts 711 
                10.4.2. Memory Management System Calls in UNIX 714 
                10.4.3. Implementation of Memory Management in UNIX 715 

        10.5. INPUT/OUTPUT IN UNIX 723 
                10.5.1. Fundamental Concepts 724 
                10.5.2. Input/Output System Calls in UNIX 726 
                10.5.3. Implementation of Input/Output in UNIX 727 
                10.5.4. Streams 730 

        10.6. THE UNIX FILE SYSTEM 732 
                10.6.1. Fundamental Concepts 732 
                10.6.2. File System Calls in UNIX 736 
                10.6.3. Implementation of the UNIX File System 740 
                10.6.4. NFS: The Network File System 747 

        10.7. SECURITY IN UNIX 753 
                10.7.1. Fundamental Concepts 753 
                10.7.2. Security System Calls in UNIX 755 
                10.7.3. Implementation of Security in UNIX 756 

        10.8. SUMMARY 757

 

9 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Filesystems, Disks and Memory

Operating Systems??

We are currently running two servers each with remote file systems mounted on each other. They need upgrading from Solaris 2.6 to 8. Does anyone know if there is a problem with having one server running Solaris 2.6 and the other v8?? Until we have time to upgrade them both. (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: hesmas
2 Replies

2. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Opinions on db operating systems Wanted

I am interested in hearing anyones opinions on what OS they would choose to run a MySQl db and the reasons why, of course. I have a task to build a db server for a project that will be very busy if things work as the creative minds think that it will. I am running a FreeBSD box right now on... (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: smtpgeek
0 Replies

3. Shell Programming and Scripting

Unix Operating Systems Information Document

Hi all, I prepared a document on UNIX OS. Its an humble attempt to share my knowledge. Please review the document attached and correct if any mistakes and any suggestions to make it more useful and any troubleshooting information if needed to add. Please help in making the document to add... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: gurukottur
2 Replies

4. UNIX for Advanced & Expert Users

Where the operating systems are going

Dear administrators I want to post the following question and, honestly, I don't know in which forum to post it since its general meaning. my question is: Where the operating system are going? Microkernel, monolithich or hybrid ? Because this question involves more forums at the same but... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: Puntino
2 Replies

5. UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers

unix Operating Systems 5

Hi :) I have unix Operating Systems 5 I need working for user logout befor 10 minutes,In the case that he is not active :o what do I do? :rolleyes: (4 Replies)
Discussion started by: fakhwork
4 Replies

6. Fedora

Unix-based operating systems

Hello. I own a MacBook (black) running Leopard (Mac OS X 10.5.8), and I'm curious about a few things -- any help will be very, very much appreciated. I'm pretty much a newbie to Unix, although I have some very basic command-line skills with Mac OS X's Terminal. So while I know how to work the... (13 Replies)
Discussion started by: Tron55555
13 Replies

7. Programming

Does the assembler output differ between operating systems ?

The assembly code generated by assembler, from a C-source code depends on the CPU architecture underlying it, eg x-86 . Then does the assembler output of a simple C-source code (containing common function-calls of both windows and linux) differ between Operating Systems ? (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: vishwamitra
1 Replies

8. Google Chrome OS

Do we need many Operating Systems?

we have windows linux- redhat ubuntu -or more i don't know unix- solares snow-lepord and recently chrome what do you think well when i sow that all has extentions like exe -dsb i felt scared (1 Reply)
Discussion started by: Anna Hussie
1 Replies

9. Solaris

Modern systems and login parameters

With Solaris newer versions where SSH is enabled by default, do we still need to configure security parameters in /etc/default/login for e.g. SLEEPTIME, CONSOLE etc? (0 Replies)
Discussion started by: kurumi
0 Replies
Graphics::Primitive::Component(3pm)			User Contributed Perl Documentation		       Graphics::Primitive::Component(3pm)

NAME
Graphics::Primitive::Component - Base graphical unit DESCRIPTION
A Component is an entity with a graphical representation. SYNOPSIS
my $c = Graphics::Primitive::Component->new({ origin => Geometry::Primitive::Point->new({ x => $x, y => $y }), width => 500, height => 350 }); LIFECYCLE
prepare Most components do the majority of their setup in the prepare. The goal of prepare is to establish it's minimum height and width so that it can be properly positioned by a layout manager. $driver->prepare($comp); layout This is not a method of Component, but a phase introduced by the use of Layout::Manager. If the component is a container then each of it's child components (even the containers) will be positioned according to the minimum height and width determined during prepare. Different layout manager implementations have different rules, so consult the documentation for each for details. After this phase has completed the origin, height and width should be set for all components. $lm->do_layout($comp); finalize This final phase provides and opportunity for the component to do any final changes to it's internals before being passed to a driver for drawing. An example might be a component that draws a fleuron at it's extremities. Since the final height and width isn't known until this phase, it was impossible for it to position these internal components until now. It may even defer creation of this components until now. It is not ok to defer all action to the finalize phase. If you do not establish a minimum hieght and width during prepare then the layout manager may not provide you with enough space to draw. $driver->finalize($comp); draw Handled by Graphics::Primitive::Driver. $driver->draw($comp); METHODS
Constructor new Creates a new Component. Instance Methods background_color Set this component's background color. border Set this component's border, which should be an instance of Border. callback Optional callback that is fired at the beginning of the "finalize" phase. This allows you to add some sort of custom code that can modify the component just before it is rendered. The only argument is the component itself. Note that changing the position or the dimensions of the component will not re-layout the scene. You may have weird results of you manipulate the component's dimensions here. class Set/Get this component's class, which is an abitrary string. Graphics::Primitive has no internal use for this attribute but provides it for outside use. color Set this component's foreground color. fire_callback Method to execute this component's "callback". get_tree Get a tree for this component. Since components are -- by definiton -- leaf nodes, this tree will only have the one member at it's root. has_callback Predicate that tells if this component has a "callback". height Set this component's height. inside_bounding_box Returns a Rectangle that defines the edges of the 'inside' box for this component. This box is relative to the origin of the component. inside_height Get the height available in this container after taking away space for padding, margin and borders. inside_width Get the width available in this container after taking away space for padding, margin and borders. margins Set this component's margins, which should be an instance of Insets. Margins are the space outside the component's bounding box, as in CSS. The margins should be outside the border. maximum_height Set/Get this component's maximum height. Used to inform a layout manager. maximum_width Set/Get this component's maximum width. Used to inform a layout manager. minimum_height Set/Get this component's minimum height. Used to inform a layout manager. minimum_inside_height Get the minimum height available in this container after taking away space for padding, margin and borders. minimum_inside_width Get the minimum width available in this container after taking away space for padding, margin and borders. minimum_width Set/Get this component's minimum width. Used to inform a layout manager. name Set this component's name. This is not required, but may inform consumers of a component. Pay attention to that library's documentation. origin Set/Get the origin point for this component. outside_height Get the height consumed by padding, margin and borders. outside_width Get the width consumed by padding, margin and borders. finalize Method provided to give component one last opportunity to put it's contents into the provided space. Called after prepare. padding Set this component's padding, which should be an instance of Insets. Padding is the space inside the component's bounding box, as in CSS. This padding should be between the border and the component's content. page If true then this component represents stand-alone page. This informs the driver that this component (and any children) are to be renderered on a single surface. This only really makes sense in formats that have pages such as PDF of PostScript. prepare Method to prepare this component for drawing. This is an empty sub and is meant to be overridden by a specific implementation. preferred_height Set/Get this component's preferred height. Used to inform a layout manager. preferred_width Set/Get this component's preferred width. Used to inform a layout manager. to_string Get a string representation of this component in the form of: $name $x,$y ($widthx$height) visible Set/Get this component's visible flag. width Set/Get this component's width. AUTHOR
Cory Watson, "<gphat@cpan.org>" BUGS
Please report any bugs or feature requests to "bug-geometry-primitive at rt.cpan.org", or through the web interface at http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Geometry-Primitive <http://rt.cpan.org/NoAuth/ReportBug.html?Queue=Geometry-Primitive>. I will be notified, and then you'll automatically be notified of progress on your bug as I make changes. COPYRIGHT &; LICENSE Copyright 2008-2009 by Cory G Watson. This program is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.12.3 2011-06-02 Graphics::Primitive::Component(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 09:50 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy