The Design of the Unix Operating System (Prentice-Hall software series)

The Design of the Unix Operating System (Prentice-Hall software series) by Maurice J. Bach

The Design of the Unix Operating System (Prentice-Hall software series)

Binding:
Paperback
Number of Pages:
486
ISBN:
8120305167
Product Group:
book
Publisher:
Prentice Hall
Publication Date:
June 1, 1986
BooksForGeeks.com ID:
1796

Reviews for The Design of the Unix Operating System (Prentice-Hall software series)

  1. Revisiting a classic

    Rated 4 out of 5 stars, June 12th, 2008

    I'm re-reading this classic UNIX text for the first time in 10 years. Not an easy read by any means, and let down slightly by the lack of solutions to the exercises at the end of each chapter.

    Nevertheless, if you need to know the how and why of System V UNIX, this is the place to start. It provides an excellent intoduction to the UNIX kernel and paves the way to exploring the Linux kernel in more recent texts such as "Understanding the Linux Kernel" from O'Reilly.
  2. UNIX

    Rated 3 out of 5 stars, May 12th, 2004

    The author has used really very complex language...the book is good for postgraduaion courses only as here we r learning it in our B.E (B.S. of US UK) in India..its hard to grasp the things..hav to read at least thrice to understand the meaning properly...authour could have made the book little easier to understand by usin a better format with big font printing...in our second year most of the students hav to study the book of operating system by tanenbaum first to understand maurice j bach...so its like we r using this book only for exam purpose .... stilll i ll giv 3 stars to this book as after reading it thrice and not for exam oriented purpose ur knowlege really gets doubled about operating system...
  3. Design of Unix OS - Informative Textbook

    Rated 4 out of 5 stars, April 12th, 2003

    This is the only book I need to understand the basics of a kernel and its purpose. The book covers everything that a hobbyists needs to know in relation to the Unix operating system. This book was printed in 1986, luckily I managed to purchase it in a library for £1.40, however it's price is 30* that in this day. It's a valuable reference to all things Unix and will remain on anyones bookshelve who managed to bag a copy.
  4. "The" book on the internals of Unix

    Rated 5 out of 5 stars, January 12th, 2001

    Ever wanted to know just how UNIX works and what its doing when you use it? Ever wanted to know a bit more about the people and the evolution of UNIX? If so, this is the book for you. Although somewhat aged now, it still contains enough factual and apropriate material for any undergraduate or postgraduate Degree study of UNIX. In fact I would rate this book as the most important in my Computer Science degree - and it certainly didnt let me down! The book starts with a look at the more basic aspects of the OS, its history and how it appears to traditional users. Then the book moves deeply into the internal fundamentals of how it works by examining the file system structure, memory addressing, scheduling algorithms (it even lists snippets of the source code!), security etc. It then winds up with some basics on distrubuited systems. Although it lacks information on things such as nfs, nis, PAM etc it is arguable that these are services added onto a core UNIX environment and consequently not really apropriate for this book. Modern changes to kernels such as modular UNIX however are not covered as a result of its age. Any decent system administration book would cover off these extra topics and maybe one day we can persuade Maurice to update his excellent work.

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