Sponsored Content
Full Discussion: research proposal for PG
Top Forums UNIX for Dummies Questions & Answers research proposal for PG Post 302330637 by iet.manish on Thursday 2nd of July 2009 01:32:43 AM
Old 07-02-2009
but thats the problem sir ... i dont have any proposal currently ....
and i only require it for interview it dosent mean that i have to work on that later in my course ...
so please suggest me a simple topic in OS for research like deadlock, synchronization, or memory management etc. and what can i do in these areas to make them better or efficient etc.
 

5 More Discussions You Might Find Interesting

1. Programming

Master's degree proposal, Router software

Hello everyone, After 8 years of being out of school I am trying to start my Masters degree. This specific type of degree is being done only by research (research mode vs. coursework mode). I need to prepare a research proposal and send it to the school. I will need a professor to accept me as a... (2 Replies)
Discussion started by: wmac
2 Replies

2. Forum Support Area for Unregistered Users & Account Problems

Registration proposal

Hello. I've been reading the feed via twitter for a long time, but though i'm willing to help, i can't post and register (russia's banned). IP is dynamic, it's (<ip address>) for now. DevOps, RH, python and unix shell scripting. (5 Replies)
Discussion started by: spider_fingers
5 Replies

3. UNIX for Beginners Questions & Answers

NAS Research

Good Afternoon, Are most NASs compatible with Solaris/RedHat? Specifically, I'm looking at Western Digital ones but none of them say they are - I like My Cloud Pro Series PR4100 My Cloud Pro Series PR4100 – Network Attached Storage | Western Digital (WD) (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Stellaman1977
3 Replies

4. What is on Your Mind?

Proposal to Eliminate Thread Icons Column

Without objection, open to comments, I would like to eliminate this column in various views that show topics and threads (forum view, search results, etc). https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums220-picture887.png https://www.unix.com/members/1-albums220-picture888.png Comments? (10 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
10 Replies

5. What is on Your Mind?

New Member Profile Pages (Proposal)

Hey, I am thinking to get rid of the old and clunky member profile pages and replace with a prototype from Brad at Traversy Media. Here is the prototype: Welcome To My Portfolio Basically, I will take the links in the user profile page and put them into the new format when I have time.... (3 Replies)
Discussion started by: Neo
3 Replies
TM::FAQ(3pm)						User Contributed Perl Documentation					      TM::FAQ(3pm)

NAME
TM::FAQ - Topic Maps, Frequently Angering Quirks FAQ, TIPS AND PITFALLS o Q: I am using MLDBM as persistent store and the larger the map grows the MUCH slower insertions become. A: The way MLDBM works is that at every access (read or write) a large portion of the map is loaded via DBM into memory (and written back). One option is to avoid needpin-like modifications and to exploit the fact that many routines accept lists as parameters. So DO NOT do this: for some changes { $tm->assert ( one change ); } But DO that: $tm->assert ( map { one change $_ } some changes ); Similar with topic changes. Another option is to use a second, in-memory map for additions and then "add" the modifications to the MLDBM based map: my $updates = new TM; $updates->internalize .... $updates->assert .... $dbm->add ($updates); o Q: I am using MLDBM as persistent store and receive very strange errors which indicate that the map is empty. A: You could be dealing with a sitation that the DBM file already exists, but is completely empty (maybe because tmpnam created it). This has been fixed in v1.54. o Q: How can I get rid of these annoying topics "occurrence", "name", etc. which I have not put into the map in the first place. They seem to be in each map I create. A: These infrastructure topics are needed to make the map complete (everything used is defined). Per se, you cannot remove them and, seriously you probably do not want that to happen. But you can filter these out when you retrieve a list of toplets: my @ts = $tm->toplets ( '+all -infrastructure'); o Q: How can I get all names and/or occurrences of a topic? A: If you have a topic identifier "mytopic" in your hand, then you can get all characteristics (= names and occurrences, but not associations) with my @cs = $tm->match_forall (char => 1, irole => $tm->tids ('mytopic')); Then you can filter occording the type, the scope, the data type value or the "KIND". The latter tells you whether an assertion is a name or occurrence. For example those occurrences which are "occurrence"s and not anything specials as, say, "homepage": my @occs = map { $_->[0] } map { TM::get_x_players ($tm, $_, 'value') } grep { $_->[TM->TYPE] eq 'occurrence' } @cs; o Q: Some of these maps I create have the trait "ResourceAble" and import therefore a method "mtime". How does this work? A: Every map which is attached to an external resource is said to be resourceable, hence the trait with the same name. You, the developer, decide which copy of the map is the authoritative, i.e. what should happen should the map infrastructure be forced to synchronize the content. While the synchronization (and when that is triggered) is handled by the trait TM::Synchronizable, the infrastructure needs to know (a) when the in-memory copy of the map was last modified and (b) when the resource to which it is attached has been modified last. This is the reasons for timestamps on the memory-stored map. The resources themselves also have these timestamps; when the resource is a file on a file system, then the "last modified" timestamps are take from there. The only complication is that TM is using a much higher time resolution as most file systems (HiRes::Time). o Q: When using AsTMa (1.x) it is very difficult to figure out where I make a syntax error. Is there a convenient and effective way? What about line numbers? A: One approach is to use the %cancel method: When added to the file, the parser will stop there and write a message onto STDERR. Another method is to use "%trace 1" within the AsTMa stream. Then the parser should let you know what it could detect successfully. Line numbers cannot be used because the file will be massively reduced before the parser actually sees it. o Q: When serializing large maps, the serializer is REALLY slow. How to make it faster? A: The problem was that some serializers have to call the method "is_reified" very often to find out whether there is a reification for the assertion. If this becomes a concern to you, simply add an index over reification (available since 1.53): use Class::Trait; Class::Trait->apply ($tm, 'TM::Serializable::XTM'); use TM::Index::Reified; my $idx = new TM::Index::Reified ($tm, closed => 1); print $tm->serialize; COPYRIGHT AND LICENSE
Copyright 20(0[3-68]|10) by Robert Barta, <drrho@cpan.org> This library is free software; you can redistribute it and/or modify it under the same terms as Perl itself. perl v5.10.1 2010-07-07 TM::FAQ(3pm)
All times are GMT -4. The time now is 08:00 AM.
Unix & Linux Forums Content Copyright 1993-2022. All Rights Reserved.
Privacy Policy