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You're reading from  Linux Kernel Programming - Second Edition

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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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Understanding CPU caching basics, cache effects, and false sharing

Modern processors on multicore symmetric multi-processing (SMP) systems make use of several levels of parallel cache memory within them, in order to provide a very significant speedup when working on memory (we briefly touched upon this in Chapter 8, Kernel Memory Allocation for Module Authors – Part 1, in the Allocating slab memory section). FYI, this kind of computer architecture is often classified as a Multiple Instruction, Single Data (MISD) stream (as instructions can run concurrently in several cores while working upon a single shared data item).

Here’s a purely conceptual diagram (Figure 13.4) showing two CPU cores, each core having two internal caches (Level 1 and Level 2, abbreviated as L1 and L2, respectively), plus a shared or unified L3 cache and the main memory (RAM):

Figure 13.4: Conceptual diagram – 2 CPU cores with internal L1, L2 caches, a shared (unified) L3 cache...

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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