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Modern Operating Systems by Herbert Bos and Andrew S. Tanenb...
Modern_Operating_Systems_by_Herbert_Bos_and_Andrew_S._Tanenbaum_4th_Ed.pdf
Showing 1133-1137 out of 1137
Modern Operating Systems by Herbert Bos and Andrew...
Modern_Operating_Systems_by_Herbert_Bos_and_Andrew_S._Tanenbaum_4th_Ed.pdf-M ODERN O PERATING S YSTEMS
Modern Operating Systems by Herbert...
Modern_Operating_Systems_by_Herbert_Bos_and_Andrew_S._Tanenbaum_4th_Ed.pdf-M ODERN O PERATING S YSTEMS
Page 1133
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Page 1134
Also by Andrew S. Tanenbaum and Albert S. Woodhull
Operating Systems: Design and Implementation, 3rd ed.
All other textbooks on operating systems are long on theory and short on practice. This one is
different. In addition to the usual material on processes, memory management, file systems, I/O, and
so on, it contains a CD-ROM with the source code (in C) of a small, but complete, POSIX-confor-
mant operating system called MINIX 3 (see
www.minix3.org
). All the principles are illustrated by
showing how they apply to MINIX 3. The reader can also compile, test, and experiment with MINIX
3, leading to in-depth knowledge of how an operating system really works.
Page 1135
Also by Andrew S. Tanenbaum and David J. Wetherall
Computer Networks, 5th ed.
This widely read classic, with a fifth edition co-authored with David Wetherall, provides the
ideal introduction to today’s and tomorrow’s networks. It explains in detail how modern networks are
structured. Starting with the physical layer and working up to the application layer, the book covers a
vast number of important topics, including wireless communication, fiber optics, data link protocols,
Ethernet, routing algorithms, network performance, security, DNS, electronic mail, the World Wide
Web, and multimedia.
The book has especially thorough coverage of TCP/IP and the Internet.
Page 1136
Also by Andrew S. Tanenbaum and Todd Austin
Structured Computer Organization, 6th ed.
Computers are getting more complicated every year but this best-selling book makes computer
architecture and organization easy to understand. It starts at the very beginning explaining how a tran-
sistor works and from there explains the basic circuits from which computers are built. Then it moves
up the design stack to cover the microarchitecture, and the assembly language level. The final chapter
is about parallel computer architectures.
No hardware background is needed to understand any part
of this book.
Page 1137
Also by Andrew S. Tanenbaum and Maarten van Steen
Distributed Systems: Principles and Paradigms, 2nd ed.
Distributed systems are becoming ever-more important in the world and this book explains their
principles and illustrates them with numerous examples. Among the topics covered are architectures,
processes, communication, naming, synchronization, consistency, fault tolerance, and security. Exam-
ples are taken from distributed object-based, file, Web-based, and coordination-based systems.
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