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The Complete Rust Programming Reference Guide

You're reading from   The Complete Rust Programming Reference Guide Design, develop, and deploy effective software systems using the advanced constructs of Rust

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Product type Course
Published in May 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781838828103
Length 698 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Concepts
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Authors (3):
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Vesa Kaihlavirta Vesa Kaihlavirta
Author Profile Icon Vesa Kaihlavirta
Vesa Kaihlavirta
Rahul Sharma Rahul Sharma
Author Profile Icon Rahul Sharma
Rahul Sharma
Claus Matzinger Claus Matzinger
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Claus Matzinger
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Toc

Table of Contents (29) Chapters Close

Title Page
Copyright
About Packt
Contributors
Preface
1. Getting Started with Rust FREE CHAPTER 2. Managing Projects with Cargo 3. Tests, Documentation, and Benchmarks 4. Types, Generics, and Traits 5. Memory Management and Safety 6. Error Handling 7. Advanced Concepts 8. Concurrency 9. Metaprogramming with Macros 10. Unsafe Rust and Foreign Function Interfaces 11. Logging 12. Network Programming in Rust 13. Building Web Applications with Rust 14. Lists, Lists, and More Lists 15. Robust Trees 16. Exploring Maps and Sets 17. Collections in Rust 18. Algorithm Evaluation 19. Ordering Things 20. Finding Stuff 21. Random and Combinatorial 22. Algorithms of the Standard Library 1. Other Books You May Enjoy Index

Programs and memory


"If you’re willing to restrict the flexibility of your approach, you can almost always do something better."

John Carmack

As a motivation to understand memory and its management, it's important for us to have a general idea of how programs are run by the operating system and what mechanisms are in place that allow it to use memory for its requirements.

Every program needs memory to run, whether it's your favorite command-line tool or a complex stream processing service, and they have vastly different memory requirements. In major operating system implementations, a program in execution is implemented as a process. A process is a running instance of a program. When we execute ./my_program in a shell in Linux or double-click on my_program.exe on Windows, the OS loads my_program as a process in memory and starts executing it, along with other processes, giving it a share of CPU and memory. It assigns the process with its own virtual address space, which is distinct from the...

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