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System Programming Essentials with Go

You're reading from   System Programming Essentials with Go System calls, networking, efficiency, and security practices with practical projects in Golang

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Product type Paperback
Published in Jun 2024
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781837634132
Length 408 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
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Author (1):
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Alex Rios Alex Rios
Author Profile Icon Alex Rios
Alex Rios
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Table of Contents (24) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Part 1: Introduction
2. Chapter 1: Why Go? FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: Refreshing Concurrency and Parallelism 4. Part 2: Interaction with the OS
5. Chapter 3: Understanding System Calls 6. Chapter 4: File and Directory Operations 7. Chapter 5: Working with System Events 8. Chapter 6: Understanding Pipes in Inter-Process Communication 9. Chapter 7: Unix Sockets 10. Part 3: Performance
11. Chapter 8: Memory Management 12. Chapter 9: Analyzing Performance 13. Part 4: Connected Apps
14. Chapter 10: Networking 15. Chapter 11: Telemetry 16. Chapter 12: Distributing Your Apps 17. Part 5: Going Beyond
18. Chapter 13: Capstone Project – Distributed Cache 19. Chapter 14: Effective Coding Practices 20. Chapter 15: Stay Sharp with System Programming 21. Index 22. Other Books You May Enjoy Appendix : Hardware Automation

Everyday system calls

Several syscalls are happening in our programs every time under our noses. We can trace these calls using the strace tool.

Tracing system calls

The strace tool might not come pre-installed on all Linux distributions, but it’s available in most official repositories. Here’s how to install it on some major distributions.

Debian (using APT): Run the following command:

apt-get install strace -y

Red Hat family (using DNF and YUM)

  • When using yum, run the following command:
    yum install strace
  • When using dnf, run this command:
    dnf install strace

Arch Linux (using Pacman): Run the following command:

pacman -S strace

Basic strace usage

The basic way to use strace is by calling the strace utility followed by the program’s name; for example:

strace ls

This will produce an output showing system calls, their arguments, and return values. For instance, the execve system call (https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2...

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