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Mastering Linux Kernel Development

You're reading from   Mastering Linux Kernel Development A kernel developer's reference manual

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Product type Paperback
Published in Oct 2017
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781785883057
Length 354 pages
Edition 1st Edition
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Author (1):
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CH Raghav Maruthi CH Raghav Maruthi
Author Profile Icon CH Raghav Maruthi
CH Raghav Maruthi
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Toc

Table of Contents (12) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Comprehending Processes, Address Space, and Threads FREE CHAPTER 2. Deciphering the Process Scheduler 3. Signal Management 4. Memory Management and Allocators 5. Filesystems and File I/O 6. Interprocess Communication 7. Virtual Memory Management 8. Kernel Synchronization and Locking 9. Interrupts and Deferred Work 10. Clock and Time Management 11. Module Management

Common filesystem interface


Presence of diverse filesystems and storage partitions results in each filesystem maintaining its tree of files and data structures that are distinct from others. Upon mount, each filesystem will require to manage its in-memory file trees in isolation from others, resulting in an inconsistent view of the file tree for system users and applications. This complicates kernel support for various file operations such as open, read, write, copy, and move. As a solution, the Linux kernel (like many other Unix systems) engages an abstraction layer called virtual file system (VFS) that hides all filesystem implementations with a common interface.

The VFS layer builds a common file tree called rootfs, under which all filesystems can enumerate their directories and files. This enables all filesystem-specific subtrees with distinct on-disk representations to be unified and presented as a single filesystem. System users and applications have a consistent, homogeneous view of...

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