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Systems Programming with Zig

Systems Programming with Zig

By : Mihalis Tsoukalos
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Systems Programming with Zig

Systems Programming with Zig

By: Mihalis Tsoukalos

Overview of this book

Build reliable systems software with Zig through a project-driven approach focused on practical engineering challenges. Guided by UNIX systems engineer & bestselling author Mihalis Tsoukalos, you will learn modern systems programming techniques while creating production-ready applications, UNIX tools, & network services. This book takes you from essential UNIX tooling and build infrastructure to advanced topics such as direct memory access, binary formats, filesystem monitoring, networking, concurrency, asynchronous I/O, & database integration. Through hands-on projects, you will create command-line utilities, TCP and UDP services, HTTP applications, file indexing tools, cache servers, & a domain-specific language interpreter that combines memory management, comptime metaprogramming, parsing, evaluation, & error handling. Each chapter demonstrates how Zig features solve practical systems programming problems. You will work with memory management, process control, synchronization primitives, event-driven architectures, SQLite integration, protocol design, & performance-focused data structures while learning the reasoning behind key engineering decisions. By the end of this book, you will be able to build efficient and maintainable systems software in Zig & confidently apply the language to production projects.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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Lock Free Chapter
1
Part 1: Zig Foundations
6
Part 2: Systems Programming in Practice
17
Index

Exercises

  • Negative number literals. The current lexer has no concept of a leading minus sign; the expression let x = ‑5; will fail to parse. Extend the grammar with a unary negation rule at the Primary level. In the parser, detect a .Minus token in parsePri and, if found, parse the following primary and wrap it in a Binary node that subtracts from zero. Verify that expressions like let x = ‑5; return x + 3; evaluate to ‑2.
  • A print statement. Add a Print variant to TokenType and teach lookupIdent() to recognize the keyword print. Add a corresponding Print variant to Stmt and parse it in parseStmt() by consuming the keyword and then delegating to parseExpr(). In eval(), handle the .Print case by evaluating the expression and writing its value to standard output without wrapping it in a ReturnWrapper(). This exercise forces you to touch all three stages of the pipeline for a single feature.
  • A while loop. Extend the EBNF grammar with the rule WhileStatement...
CONTINUE READING
83
Tech Concepts
36
Programming languages
73
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Systems Programming with Zig
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