Book Image

Hands-On System Programming with Linux

By : Kaiwan N. Billimoria, Tigran Aivazian
Book Image

Hands-On System Programming with Linux

By: Kaiwan N. Billimoria, Tigran Aivazian

Overview of this book

The Linux OS and its embedded and server applications are critical components of today’s software infrastructure in a decentralized, networked universe. The industry's demand for proficient Linux developers is only rising with time. Hands-On System Programming with Linux gives you a solid theoretical base and practical industry-relevant descriptions, and covers the Linux system programming domain. It delves into the art and science of Linux application programming— system architecture, process memory and management, signaling, timers, pthreads, and file IO. This book goes beyond the use API X to do Y approach; it explains the concepts and theories required to understand programming interfaces and design decisions, the tradeoffs made by experienced developers when using them, and the rationale behind them. Troubleshooting tips and techniques are included in the concluding chapter. By the end of this book, you will have gained essential conceptual design knowledge and hands-on experience working with Linux system programming interfaces.
Table of Contents (21 chapters)

Granularity of resource limits

In the previous example with dd(1), we saw that we can indeed impose a limit upon the maximum file size. An important question arises: what is the scope or granularity of the resource limit? Is it system-wide?

The short answer: no, it's not system-wide, it's process-wide, implying that the resource limits apply at the granularity of a process and not the system. To clarify this, consider two shellsnothing but the bash processshell A and shell B. We modify the maximum file-size resource limit for shell A (with the usual ulimit -f <new-limit> command), but leave the resource limit for maximum file size for shell B untouched. If now they both use dd (as we did), we would find that the dd process invoked within shell A would likely die with the 'File size limit exceeded (core dumped)' failure message, whereas...