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)

Summary

This chapter initially delved into the motivation behind per-process resource limits and why we require them. We also explained the granularity and the types of resource limits, distinguishing between soft and hard limits. Then we looked at how a user (or system administrator) can query and set the per-process resource limits using appropriate CLI frontends (ulimit(1), prlimit(1)).

Finally, we explored the programming interfaces (APIs)practically speaking, the prlimit(2) system callin detail. Two detailed code examples, querying the limits and setting a limit on CPU usage, rounded out the discussion.

In the next chapter, we will learn about the crucial, dynamic memory-management APIs and their correct usage. We'll go well beyond the basics of using the typical malloc() API, delving into a few subtle and important inner details.

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