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Practical System Programming for Rust Developers

You're reading from   Practical System Programming for Rust Developers Build fast and secure software for Linux/Unix systems with the help of practical examples

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Product type Paperback
Published in Dec 2020
Publisher Packt
ISBN-13 9781800560963
Length 388 pages
Edition 1st Edition
Languages
Tools
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Author (1):
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Prabhu Eshwarla Prabhu Eshwarla
Author Profile Icon Prabhu Eshwarla
Prabhu Eshwarla
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Table of Contents (17) Chapters Close

Preface 1. Section 1: Getting Started with System Programming in Rust
2. Chapter 1: Tools of the Trade – Rust Toolchains and Project Structures FREE CHAPTER 3. Chapter 2: A Tour of the Rust Programming Language 4. Chapter 3: Introduction to the Rust Standard Library 5. Chapter 4: Managing Environment, Command Line, and Time 6. Section 2: Managing and Controlling System Resources in Rust
7. Chapter 5: Memory Management in Rust 8. Chapter 6: Working with Files and Directories in Rust 9. Chapter 7: Implementing Terminal I/O in Rust 10. Chapter 8: Working with Processes and Signals 11. Chapter 9: Managing Concurrency 12. Section 3: Advanced Topics
13. Chapter 10: Working with Device I/O 14. Chapter 11: Learning Network Programming 15. Chapter 12: Writing Unsafe Rust and FFI 16. Other Books You May Enjoy

Spawning and configuring threads

In the previous section, we reviewed the fundamentals of multi-threading that apply broadly to all user processes in the Unix environment. There is, however, another aspect of threading that is dependent on the programming language for implementation – this is the threading model.

Rust implements a 1:1 model of threading where each operating system thread maps to one user-level thread created by the Rust Standard Library. The alternative model is M:N (also known as green threads) where there are M green threads (user-level threads managed by a runtime) that map to N kernel-level threads.

In this section, we'll cover the fundamentals of creating 1:1 operating system threads using the Rust Standard Library. The Rust Standard Library module for thread-related functions is std::thread.

There are two ways to create a new thread using the Rust Standard Library. The first method uses the thread::spawn function, and the second method uses...

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