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C++ Programming for Linux Systems

You're reading from  C++ Programming for Linux Systems

Product type Book
Published in Sep 2023
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781805129004
Pages 288 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Authors (2):
Desislav Andreev Desislav Andreev
Profile icon Desislav Andreev
Stanimir Lukanov Stanimir Lukanov
Profile icon Stanimir Lukanov
View More author details

Table of Contents (15) Chapters

Preface 1. Part 1:Securing the Fundamentals
2. Chapter 1: Getting Started with Linux Systems and the POSIX Standard 3. Chapter 2: Learning More about Process Management 4. Chapter 3: Navigating through the Filesystems 5. Chapter 4: Diving Deep into the C++ Object 6. Chapter 5: Handling Errors with C++ 7. Part 2:Advanced Techniques for System Programming
8. Chapter 6: Concurrent System Programming with C++ 9. Chapter 7: Proceeding with Inter-Process Communication 10. Chapter 8: Using Clocks, Timers, and Signals in Linux 11. Chapter 9: Understanding the C++ Memory Model 12. Chapter 10: Using Coroutines in C++ for System Programming 13. Index 14. Other Books You May Enjoy

Introducing coroutines

At the end of your journey, we’d like to remind you about the knowledge you received in Chapter 1 and Chapter 2 about processes and threads. If you remember well, a process is simply a running instance of a program. It has its respective address space, which is not shared with others, except through shared memory. Threads reside in a process, and they cannot exist outside of them, although both processes and threads are treated as tasks in Linux. They are scheduled in the same manner and have the same controlling structures on the kernel level. Still, threads are considered lightweight because the bigger overhead for the initial load of a program is taken by the parent process.

But this is not the full picture. There are fibers and coroutines as well. If the processes and threads are truly concurrent and working in parallel over shared resources, fibers are just like threads but are not concurrency-compliant. While threads often depend on preemptive...

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