Operating System Concepts And Basic Linux Commands
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Operating System Concepts and Basic Linux Commands
This book contains the introductory information about the operating system and the basics of Linux commands for graduation level studies. This book provides the concepts of operating system. It contains the fundamental concepts which are applicable to various operating systems. Unit-I explains what is operating system and how the concepts of operating system has developed, contains resource management, structure of operating system, services provided by operating system, types of operating systemit contains the common features of the operating system. Unit- II and III deals with the internal algorithm and structure of operating system, it contains Process concept, Process State, Threads, Concurrent process, CPU scheduling, Scheduling Algorithms. They provide a firm practical understanding of the algorithm used. Unit-IV contains File Concept, Operations on Files, Types of files, Access Methods, Allocation methods, Directory structure, Structure of Linux Operating System.Unit- V contains Shell related operations and basic Linux commands like Changing the running shell, Changing the shell prompt, Creating user account, Creating alias for long command, Input/output Redirection, Redirecting Standard Output/Input, Pipe lines, Filters, ls, cat,wc,, Manipulating files and directories using cp, mv, rm, pwd, cd, mkdir, rmdir commands, vi Editor, Compressing files (gzip, gunzip commands), Archiving Files( tar), Managing disk space: df, du, Changing Your Password, File access permissions, Granting access to files: (chmod command), Creating group account, Communication commands like who, who I am, mesg, write, talk, wall.
Linux with Operating System Concepts
A True Textbook for an Introductory Course, System Administration Course, or a Combination Course Linux with Operating System Concepts, Second Edition merges conceptual operating system (OS) and Unix/Linux topics into one cohesive textbook for undergraduate students. The book can be used for a one- or two-semester course on Linux or Unix. It is complete with review sections, problems, definitions, concepts and relevant introductory material, such as binary and Boolean logic, OS kernels and the role of the CPU and memory hierarchy. Details for Introductory and Advanced Users The book covers Linux from both the user and system administrator positions. From a user perspective, it emphasizes command-line interaction. From a system administrator perspective, the text reinforces shell scripting with examples of administration scripts that support the automation of administrator tasks. Thorough Coverage of Concepts and Linux Commands The author incorporates OS concepts not found in most Linux/Unix textbooks, including kernels, file systems, storage devices, virtual memory and process management. He also introduces computer science topics, such as computer networks and TCP/IP, interpreters versus compilers, file compression, file system integrity through backups, RAID and encryption technologies, booting and the GNUs C compiler. New in this Edition The book has been updated to systemd Linux and the newer services like Cockpit, NetworkManager, firewalld and journald. This edition explores Linux beyond CentOS/Red Hat by adding detail on Debian distributions. Content across most topics has been updated and improved.
Operating System Concepts
This new seventh edition of the book has been brought up to date to include recent developments in operating systems such as Windows XP and the new small footprint operating systems that work in hand held devices such as the Palm and in cell phones. Most of the book is on general purpose operating systems such as Linux and those from Microsoft. But at the end of the book there are chapters on other types of operating such as Real Time Operating Systems and MultiMedia OS's. Finally there are some chapters which the authors call case studies. In these, one chapter goes into a detailed discussion of Linux, another chapter covers Windows XP. Chapter 23 covers several early operating systems that helped to define the features that make up modern os's. These include: Atlas, XDX-940, THE, RC 4000, CTSS, MULTICS, OS/360, and MACH, along with brief mentions of several others. Note that this not a book on how to use operating systems, this is a book on how operating systems are designed. It is intended for upper level undergraduate students or first year graduate students.