Book Image

C++ System Programming Cookbook

By : Onorato Vaticone
Book Image

C++ System Programming Cookbook

By: Onorato Vaticone

Overview of this book

C++ is the preferred language for system programming due to its efficient low-level computation, data abstraction, and object-oriented features. System programming is about designing and writing computer programs that interact closely with the underlying operating system and allow computer hardware to interface with the programmer and the user. The C++ System Programming Cookbook will serve as a reference for developers who want to have ready-to-use solutions for the essential aspects of system programming using the latest C++ standards wherever possible. This C++ book starts out by giving you an overview of system programming and refreshing your C++ knowledge. Moving ahead, you will learn how to deal with threads and processes, before going on to discover recipes for how to manage memory. The concluding chapters will then help you understand how processes communicate and how to interact with the console (console I/O). Finally, you will learn how to deal with time interfaces, signals, and CPU scheduling. By the end of the book, you will become adept at developing robust systems applications using C++.
Table of Contents (13 chapters)

Learning the basics of connectionless-oriented communication

In the Learning the basics of connection-oriented communication recipe, we learned that a connection-oriented communication with flow control is reliable. To make two processes in communication, we must establish a connection first. This obviously comes at a cost in terms of performance, which we cannot always pay—for example, when you watch an online movie, the available bandwidth might not be enough to support all the features that TCP takes with it.

In this case, it is likely that the underlying communication mechanism is connectionless. The de facto standard protocol for connectionless communication is the User Data Protocol (UDP), which is on the same logical level as TCP. In this recipe, we'll learn what UDP looks like on the command line.

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