For more than twenty years, serious C programmers have relied on one book for practical, in-depth knowledge of the programming interfaces that drive the UNIX and Linux kernels: W. Richard Stevens’ Advanced Programming in the UNIX® Environment . Now, once again, Rich’s colleague Steve Rago has thoroughly updated this classic work. The new third edition supports today’s leading platforms, reflects new technical advances and best practices, and aligns with Version 4 of the Single UNIX Specification.
Steve carefully retains the spirit and approach that have made this book so valuable. Building on Rich’s pioneering work, he begins with files, directories, and processes, carefully laying the groundwork for more advanced techniques, such as signal handling and terminal I/O. He also thoroughly covers threads and multithreaded programming, and socket-based IPC.
This edition covers more than seventy new interfaces, including POSIX asynchronous I/O, spin locks, barriers, and POSIX semaphores. Most obsolete interfaces have been removed, except for a few that are ubiquitous. Nearly all examples have been tested on four modern platforms: Solaris 10, Mac OS X version 10.6.8 (Darwin 10.8.0), FreeBSD 8.0, and Ubuntu version 12.04 (based on Linux 3.2).
As in previous editions, you’ll learn through examples, including more than ten thousand lines of downloadable, ISO C source code. More than four hundred system calls and functions are demonstrated with concise, complete programs that clearly illustrate their usage, arguments, and return values. To tie together what you’ve learned, the book presents several chapter-length case studies, each reflecting contemporary environments.
Advanced Programming in the UNIX® Environment has helped generations of programmers write code with exceptional power, performance, and reliability. Now updated for today’s systems, this third edition will be even more valuable.
The late W. Richard Stevens was the acclaimed author of UNIX® Network Programming, Volumes 1 and 2, widely recognized as the classic texts in UNIX networking; TCP/IP Illustrated, Volumes 1-3; and the first edition of this book.
Stephen A. Rago is the author of UNIX® System V Network Programming (Addison-Wesley, 1993). Rago was one of the Bell Laboratories developers who built UNIX System V Release 4. He served as a technical reviewer for the first edition of Advanced Programming in the UNIX® Environment. Rago currently works as a research staff member in the Storage Systems Group at NEC Laboratories America.
第21章,与网络打印机通信 printd.c的代码中,从863到878行,如果读的缓冲区刚好在"Content-Length:xxxx"(xxxx代表一个数字)中的数字部分截断,那得到的content-length就不是真实长度了。 求证。
评分Rich Stevens显然不是Dennis Richie, Brian Kernighan那个贝尔实验室圈子的人。他对Unix的深入了解,是自己翻烂手册、钻研系统得到的。这个切入点,和我们多数用户是一样的。所以,我们想知道的东西,也许正是Stevens关心过的。看看他在N个系统上做的代码测试和对不同标准的比...
评分这本书是操作系统课用的教材。第一遍看是被逼无奈,只觉得云里雾里。最大的感受就是这TM写的神马玩意?这书也能得9点几分?于是乎考完试就放下再也没管过了。 直到几个月前再次翻阅时,感受却已经大不相同。 所以我得更新一下评价,五星好评了。 每本书都有它的受众,技术书...
评分适合老手查阅和补充知识,不建议新手入门时翻阅。原因是本书针对的是unix标准接口,而实际上各家遵循unix标准并不是那么完整,所以你会发现对书上的代码进行验证时往往得不到期望的结果;再有,本书的例程也比较意识流,对章节知识点的代表性不足。总之新手翻阅本书会头大的
评分第21章,与网络打印机通信 printd.c的代码中,从863到878行,如果读的缓冲区刚好在"Content-Length:xxxx"(xxxx代表一个数字)中的数字部分截断,那得到的content-length就不是真实长度了。 求证。
就算读过吧
评分假装看过
评分就算读过吧
评分就算读过吧
评分假装看过
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