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Lädt ... Operating System Concepts (Original 1983; 1994. Auflage)von Abraham; Galvin Silberschatz, Peter B.
Werk-InformationenOperating System Concepts (World Student) von Abraham Silberschatz (1983)
![]() Keine aktuelle Diskussion zu diesem Buch. I’ve lost count of how many operating systems books I’ve read. It’s probably less than 5, and it’s definitely greater than or equal to 3. Nevertheless, I’ve enjoyed reading them, for the most part. Operating System Concepts by Abraham Silberschatz, among others, finds itself in its seventh edition. It is a massive tome, covering the major aspects of operating systems, including in-depth examples of the major OSes of the time: Linux, XP, and some others, detailing their strengths, their weaknesses, and how they handle the complex things geeks keep trying to get them to do speedily. I must admit, I doubt I’ll ever implement an operating system (other than the one I did in a college course, which was essentially a subset of Linux), but I still find it interesting to see the state of the art, and you might too, if that sort of thing is up your alley. I’d imagine, as well, if you are the type of person who has the yen for operating systems, that this book, and the other few I’ve read, might be indispensable resources for your technical library, or likewise if that book you’re using for your Operating Systems 101 course isn’t cutting it. What with a new version of Windows and a significant improvement to the Linux kernel, as well as the ubiquity of portable OSes, I’m curious what the eighth edition will have, and how many more thousands of pages it’ll be. . . Preface Contents 1. Introduction 2. Computer-System Structures 3. Operating-System Structures 4. Processes 5. CPU Scheduling 6. Process Synchronization 7. Deadlocks 8. Memory Management 9. Virtual Memory 10. File-System Interface 11. File-System Implementation 12. I/O Systems 13. Secondary-Storage Structure 14. Tertiary-Storage Structure 15. Network Structures 16. Distributed System Structures 17. Distributed File Systems 18. Distributed Coordination 19. Protection 20. Security 21. The Unix System 22. The Linux System 23. Windows NT 24. Historical Perspective Bibliography Credits Index Zeige 3 von 3 keine Rezensionen | Rezension hinzufügen
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![]() GenresMelvil Decimal System (DDC)005.43Information Computer Science; Knowledge and Systems Computer programming, programs, data, security Systems programming and programs Systems programsKlassifikation der Library of Congress [LCC] (USA)BewertungDurchschnitt:![]()
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Reading it again ... it's a good book. It's possibly a good reference, given that my particular copy is ancient. But I have to wonder if there's anything in this book that can't be reconstructed from wikipedia and other resources out there. There are also many great legitimately free operating systems books, like Operating Systems: Three Easy Pieces, that it's hard for me to justify it except as a well-curated and well-written, if not pedagogically unique, guide.
CLRS is a book I'll keep forever because it and maybe "The Algorithms Design Manual" have not been replaced by any other resource. It's hard for me to say the same thing here. (