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Systems Programming with C# and .NET

You're reading from   Systems Programming with C# and .NET Building robust system solutions with C# 12 and .NET 8

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jul 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781835082683
Length 474 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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Dennis Vroegop Dennis Vroegop
Author Profile Icon Dennis Vroegop
Dennis Vroegop
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Table of Contents (18) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Overview of Systems Programming FREE CHAPTER 2. Chapter 1: The One with the Low-Level Secrets 3. Chapter 2: The One Where Speed Matters 4. Chapter 3: The One with the Memory Games 5. Chapter 4: The One with the Thread Tangles 6. Chapter 5: The One with the Filesystem Chronicles 7. Chapter 6: The One Where Processes Whisper 8. Chapter 7: The One with the Operating System Tango 9. Chapter 8: The One with the Network Navigation 10. Chapter 9: The One with the Hardware Handshakes 11. Chapter 10: The One with the Systems Check-Ups 12. Chapter 11: The One with the Debugging Dances 13. Chapter 12: The One with the Security Safeguards 14. Chapter 13: The One with the Deployment Dramas 15. Chapter 14: The One with the Linux Leaps 16. Index 17. Other Books You May Enjoy

Working with pipes for local IPC

Pipes originally came from Unix but have also found their way to other platforms. A pipe is like a direct connection between two systems. It is very lightweight and easy to set up. You can use them to communicate between processes on the same machine and between machines across a network. Theoretically, you can communicate between Linux and Windows using pipes. I said theoretically because since the implementation of the pipes on both platforms is so different, you have to jump through many loops to get that working. In fact, the work you must do to get it working is so intensive that you might as well use other ways, such as sockets, to achieve that same result. That will be much easier to pull off.

There are two types of pipes: named pipe and anonymous pipe. The named pipe is the simplest of them.

Named pipes

Named pipes are a great solution if you want to communicate from one process to another on the same machine. Communicating over a network...

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