Linux General Concepts

From NovaOrdis Knowledge Base
Jump to navigation Jump to search

Internal

Processes

A process is an operating system level construct that holds all the resources an application maintains and uses at runtime. These resources include, but are not limited to a memory address space, file handles, devices and threads. teach process contains at least one thread, and the initial thread for the process is called the main thread. When the main thread terminates, the application terminates.

Signals

Linux Signals

Sockets

Unix domain sockets are bidirectional communication mechanisms that allow processes running within the same host operation system to exchange data. IP (network) sockets are bidirectional communication mechanisms allowing processes running on different hosts to exchange data over the network. Because of simplifying assumptions, UNIX sockets are faster and lighter, so they should be preferred over network sockets when we are sure the process are collocated. UNIX and network sockets share the API. They are subject to filesystem permissions. More details: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Unix_domain_socket, https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Network_socket.

The /sys Filesystem

Threads

The operating system schedules the threads to run against physical (or virtual) processors.

Pseudo tty

With the first terminals, there was always a piece of hardware (display or serial port) attached to the device. With XWindows, telnet and ssh, there came a need for software pseudo devices to do the job of standing in for display hardware. These are the pseudo terminals, software that emulates terminal hardware, handling input and output in the same way a physical device would do.

cgroups

Linux cgroups

Namespaces

Linux Namespaces