Flylib.com
Linux Kernel in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (OReilly))
Linux Kernel in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596100795
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2004
Pages: 113
Authors:
Greg Kroah-Hartman
BUY ON AMAZON
Linux Kernel in a Nutshell
Table of Contents
Copyright
Preface
Part I: Building the Kernel
Chapter 1. Introduction
Section 1.1. Using This Book
Chapter 2. Requirements for Building and Using the Kernel
Section 2.1. Tools to Build the Kernel
Section 2.2. Tools to Use the Kernel
Chapter 3. Retrieving the Kernel Source
Section 3.1. What Tree to Use
Section 3.2. Where to Find the Kernel Source
Section 3.3. What to Do with the Source
Chapter 4. Configuring and Building
Section 4.1. Creating a Configuration
Section 4.2. Modifying the Configuration
Section 4.3. Building the Kernel
Section 4.4. Advanced Building Options
Chapter 5. Installing and Booting from a Kernel
Section 5.1. Using a Distribution s Installation Scripts
Section 5.2. Installing by Hand
Section 5.3. Modifying the Bootloader for the New Kernel
Chapter 6. Upgrading a Kernel
Section 6.1. Download the New Source
Section 6.2. Applying the Patch
Section 6.3. Reconfigure the Kernel
Section 6.4. Can t This Be Automated?
Part II: Major Customizations
Chapter 7. Customizing a Kernel
Section 7.1. Using a Distribution Kernel
Section 7.2. Determining the Correct Module from Scratch
Chapter 8. Kernel Configuration Recipes
Section 8.1. Disks
Section 8.2. Devices
Section 8.3. CPU
Section 8.4. Networking
Section 8.5. Filesystems
Section 8.6. Security
Section 8.7. Kernel Debugging
Part III: Kernel Reference
Chapter 9. Kernel Boot Command-Line Parameter Reference
Section 9.1. Module-Specific Options
Section 9.2. Console Options
Section 9.3. Interrupt Options
Section 9.4. Memory Options
Section 9.5. Suspend Options
Section 9.6. CPU Options
Section 9.7. Scheduler Options
Section 9.8. Ramdisk Options
Section 9.9. Root Disk Options
Section 9.10. Init Options
Section 9.11. kexec Options
Section 9.12. RCU Options
Section 9.13. ACPI Options
Section 9.14. SCSI Options
Section 9.15. PCI Options
Section 9.16. Plug and Play BIOS Options
Section 9.17. SELinux Options
Section 9.18. Network Options
Section 9.19. Network File System Options
Section 9.20. Hardware-Specific Options
Section 9.21. Timer-Specific Options
Section 9.22. Miscellaneous Options
Chapter 10. Kernel Build Command-Line Reference
Section 10.1. Informational Targets
Section 10.2. Cleaning Targets
Section 10.3. Configuration Targets
Section 10.4. Build Targets
Section 10.5. Packaging Targets
Section 10.6. Documentation Targets
Section 10.7. Architecture-Specific Targets
Section 10.8. Analysis Targets
Chapter 11. Kernel Configuration Option Reference
Part IV: Additional Information
Appendix A. Helpful Utilities
Section A.1. patch and diff
Section A.2. Managing Your Patches with quilt
Section A.3. git
Section A.4. ketchup
Appendix B. Bibliography
Section B.1. Books
Section B.2. Tool Locations
About the Author
Colophon
Index
SYMBOL
A
B
C
D
E
F
G
H
I
J
K
L
M
N
O
P
Q
R
S
T
U
V
W
X
Y
Linux Kernel in a Nutshell (In a Nutshell (OReilly))
ISBN: 0596100795
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2004
Pages: 113
Authors:
Greg Kroah-Hartman
BUY ON AMAZON
Interprocess Communications in Linux: The Nooks and Crannies
Parent Process ID
The fork System Call Revisited
Shared Memory Operations
Peeking at Data
Scheduling Threads
Information Dashboard Design: The Effective Visual Communication of Data
Even Dashboards Have a History
Dispelling the Confusion
Key Goals in the Visual Design Process
Designing Dashboards for Usability
A Final Word
InDesign Type: Professional Typography with Adobe InDesign CS2
Viewing Your Page
Up Next
How InDesign Justifies Type
Balancing Ragged Lines
Gradient Type
Junos Cookbook (Cookbooks (OReilly))
Sending Log Messages to Your Screen
Checking NTP Status
Enabling RIP Authentication
Tracing IS-IS Protocol Traffic
Viewing Information and LDP-Signaled LSPs in the Routing Tables
Java All-In-One Desk Reference For Dummies
Welcome to Java
Going Around in Circles (Or, Using Loops)
Pulling a Switcheroo
Creating Generic Collection Classes
Using Layout Managers
Understanding Digital Signal Processing (2nd Edition)
SIGNAL PROCESSING OPERATIONAL SYMBOLS
HINTS ON USING FFTS IN PRACTICE
REDUCING A/D CONVERTER QUANTIZATION NOISE
DUAL-MODE AVERAGING
Section G.5. REAL FSF TRANSFER FUNCTION
flylib.com © 2008-2017.
If you may any questions please contact us: flylib@qtcs.net
Privacy policy
This website uses cookies. Click
here
to find out more.
Accept cookies