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You're reading from  Linux Kernel Programming - Second Edition

Product typeBook
Published inFeb 2024
PublisherPackt
ISBN-139781803232225
Edition2nd Edition
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Kaiwan N. Billimoria
Kaiwan N. Billimoria
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Kaiwan N. Billimoria

Kaiwan N. Billimoria taught himself BASIC programming on his dad's IBM PC back in 1983. He was programming in C and Assembly on DOS until he discovered the joys of Unix, and by around 1997, Linux! Kaiwan has worked on many aspects of the Linux system programming stack, including Bash scripting, system programming in C, kernel internals, device drivers, and embedded Linux work. He has actively worked on several commercial/FOSS projects. His contributions include drivers to the mainline Linux OS and many smaller projects hosted on GitHub. His Linux passion feeds well into his passion for teaching these topics to engineers, which he has done for well over two decades now. He's also the author of Hands-On System Programming with Linux, Linux Kernel Programming (and its Part 2 book) and Linux Kernel Debugging. It doesn't hurt that he is a recreational ultrarunner too.
Read more about Kaiwan N. Billimoria

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Visualizing the flow

Multicore systems have led to processes – well, threads really (both user - and kernel-space ones) – executing concurrently on different processors. This is useful for gaining higher throughput and thus performance, but it also causes synchronization headaches when they work with shared writable data (we shall deal in depth with the really important topic of kernel synchronization in this book’s last two chapters).

So, for example, on a hardware platform with, say, six processor cores, we can expect processes (threads) to execute in parallel on them; this is nothing new. Is there a way, though, to actually see which processes or threads are executing on which CPU core – that is, a way to visualize a processor timeline? It turns out there are indeed a few ways to do so. In the following sections, we will look at a couple of interesting ways: with the gnome-system-monitor GUI program, perf, as well as other possibilities.

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Linux Kernel Programming - Second Edition
Published in: Feb 2024Publisher: PacktISBN-13: 9781803232225

Author (1)

author image
Kaiwan N. Billimoria

Kaiwan N. Billimoria taught himself BASIC programming on his dad's IBM PC back in 1983. He was programming in C and Assembly on DOS until he discovered the joys of Unix, and by around 1997, Linux! Kaiwan has worked on many aspects of the Linux system programming stack, including Bash scripting, system programming in C, kernel internals, device drivers, and embedded Linux work. He has actively worked on several commercial/FOSS projects. His contributions include drivers to the mainline Linux OS and many smaller projects hosted on GitHub. His Linux passion feeds well into his passion for teaching these topics to engineers, which he has done for well over two decades now. He's also the author of Hands-On System Programming with Linux, Linux Kernel Programming (and its Part 2 book) and Linux Kernel Debugging. It doesn't hurt that he is a recreational ultrarunner too.
Read more about Kaiwan N. Billimoria