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Extreme C

You're reading from  Extreme C

Product type Book
Published in Oct 2019
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781789343625
Pages 822 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Author (1):
Kamran Amini Kamran Amini
Profile icon Kamran Amini
Toc

Table of Contents (23) Chapters close

1. Essential Features 2. From Source to Binary 3. Object Files 4. Process Memory Structure 5. Stack and Heap 6. OOP and Encapsulation 7. Composition and Aggregation 8. Inheritance and Polymorphism 9. Abstraction and OOP in C++ 10. Unix – History and Architecture 11. System Calls and Kernels 12. The Most Recent C 13. Concurrency 14. Synchronization 15. Thread Execution 16. Thread Synchronization 17. Process Execution 18. Process Synchronization 19. Single-Host IPC and Sockets 20. Socket Programming 21. Integration with Other Languages 22. Unit Testing and Debugging 23. Build Systems

Processes and threads

Throughout this book, we are mainly interested in task scheduling within computer systems. In an operating system, tasks are either processes or threads. We'll explain them and their differences in the upcoming chapters, but for now, you should know that most operating systems treat both in basically the same way: as some tasks that need to be executed concurrently.

An operating system needs to use a task scheduler to share the CPU cores among the many tasks, be they processes or threads, that are willing to use the CPU for their execution. When a new process or a new thread is created, it enters the scheduler queue as a new task, and it waits to obtain a CPU core before it starts running.

In cases in which a time-sharing or preemptive scheduler is in place, if the task cannot finish its logic in a certain amount of time, then the CPU core will be taken back forcefully by the task scheduler and the task enters the queue again, just like in...

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