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  • Book Overview & Buying Systems Programming with C# and .NET
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Systems Programming with C# and .NET

Systems Programming with C# and .NET

By : Dennis Vroegop
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Systems Programming with C# and .NET

Systems Programming with C# and .NET

5 (3)
By: Dennis Vroegop

Overview of this book

If you want to explore the vast potential of C# and .NET to build high-performance applications, then this book is for you. Written by a 17-time awardee of the Microsoft MVP award, this book delves into low-level programming with C# and .NET. The book starts by introducing fundamental concepts such as low-level APIs, memory management, and performance optimization. Each chapter imparts practical skills, guiding you through threads, file I/O, and network protocols. With a focus on real-world applications, you’ll learn how to secure systems, implement effective logging, and deploy applications seamlessly. The book particularly emphasizes debugging, profiling, and addressing challenges unique to multithreaded and asynchronous code. You’ll also gain insights into cybersecurity essentials to help you safeguard data and establish secure communications. Moreover, a dedicated chapter on systems programming in Linux will help you broaden your horizons and explore cross-platform development. For those venturing into embedded systems, the final chapter offers hands-on guidance. By the end of this book, you’ll be ready to deploy, distribute, and maintain applications in production systems.
Table of Contents (18 chapters)
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Using the right privilege level

Most systems do not need to run as admin. Requiring your application to have admin rights is a potential security risk. It would be best to ensure your application runs on the lowest security level possible to avoid potential leaks.

However, sometimes you have no choice. There are certain cases where admin-level privilege is needed. The bad news is that this happens often in the world where we, system programmers, live. Our systems need an admin level more than a regular program does.

Admin-level scenarios

Let’s investigate some areas where elevated privileges are needed if we want our system to do what it needs to do:

  • Filesystem operations:

    Accessing or modifying system files, such as updating or reading configuration files stored in protected directories. For instance, the C:\Windows\System32 directory is a good example of a protected directory. You need elevated rights if you want to read something from that folder.

  • Registry...
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