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Full Discussion: Nucleus to Linux porting
Top Forums Programming Nucleus to Linux porting Post 302258861 by taklubaba on Sunday 16th of November 2008 11:01:32 AM
Old 11-16-2008
Nucleus to Linux porting

I am new to Linux programming and my work involves changing an abstraction layer which made Nucleus calls, to Linux calls.

In Case of Events Nucleus has calls like
NU_Set_Events()
NU_Retrieve_Events()

Can I use the POSIX thread conditional variables for Linux?
Can I use the System V calls for events for threads of a same process? Please let me know how I can go about doing it.
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In Case of Pipes Nucleus has calls like
NU_Send_To_Pipe()
NU_Receive_From_Pipe()
NU_Send_To_Front_Of_Pipe()

These calls have a suspend as one parameter by which the pipe can be suspended or can return back immediately if the pipe cannot be written into or read from.
But in Linux, in case of pipes created by pipe() or open() system call, the pipe has only the suspend functionality where in it will suspend till it can read from or write to pipe.

Moreover in Nucleus, NU_Send_To_Front_Of_Pipe() writes to front of the pipe for urgent messages.

How do I implement these functionalities in Linux?

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In case of Mutexes and Semaphores,
The Nucleus has functionalities where the thread can try locking mutexes or acquiring semaphores for a specified amount of time, after which they return back if mutex/semaphore is unavailable.
How can this be implemented in Linux? Can nanosleep() be used here?

Kindly suggest some solutions.
Thanks.

Taklu.
 

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UNIMPLEMENTED(2)					     Linux Programmer's Manual						  UNIMPLEMENTED(2)

NAME
afs_syscall, break, ftime, gtty, lock, mpx, phys, prof, profil, stty, ulimit - unimplemented system calls SYNOPSIS
Unimplemented system calls. DESCRIPTION
These system calls are not implemented in the Linux 2.0 kernel. RETURN VALUE
These system calls always return -1 and set errno to ENOSYS. NOTES
Note that ftime(3), profil(3) and ulimit(3) are implemented as library functions. Some system calls, like ioperm(2), iopl(2), ptrace(2) and vm86(2) only exist on certain architectures. Some system calls, like ipc(2) and {create,init,delete}_module(2) only exist when the Linux kernel was built with support for them. SEE ALSO
obsolete(2) Linux 2.0 1998-06-12 UNIMPLEMENTED(2)
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