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Extreme C

Extreme C

By : Kamran Amini
4.5 (29)
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Extreme C

Extreme C

4.5 (29)
By: Kamran Amini

Overview of this book

There’s a lot more to C than knowing the language syntax. The industry looks for developers with a rigorous, scientific understanding of the principles and practices. Extreme C will teach you to use C’s advanced low-level power to write effective, efficient systems. This intensive, practical guide will help you become an expert C programmer. Building on your existing C knowledge, you will master preprocessor directives, macros, conditional compilation, pointers, and much more. You will gain new insight into algorithm design, functions, and structures. You will discover how C helps you squeeze maximum performance out of critical, resource-constrained applications. C still plays a critical role in 21st-century programming, remaining the core language for precision engineering, aviations, space research, and more. This book shows how C works with Unix, how to implement OO principles in C, and fully covers multi-processing. In Extreme C, Amini encourages you to think, question, apply, and experiment for yourself. The book is essential for anybody who wants to take their C to the next level.
Table of Contents (27 chapters)
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Index

Thread Synchronization

In the previous chapter, we explained how to create and manage a POSIX thread. We also demonstrated two of the most common concurrency issues: race conditions and data races.

In this chapter, we are going to complete our discussion about multithreaded programming using the POSIX threading library and give you the required skills to control a number of threads.

If you remember from Chapter 14, Synchronization, we showed that concurrency-related problems are not actually issues; rather, they are consequences of the fundamental properties of a concurrent system. Therefore, you are likely to encounter them in any concurrent system.

We showed in the previous chapter that we could indeed produce such issues with the POSIX threading library as well. Examples 15.2 and 15.3 from the previous chapter demonstrated the race condition and data race issues. Therefore, they will be our starting point to use the synchronization mechanisms provided by the pthread...

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Extreme C
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