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Previous page
Table of content
Preface
Table 0.1: Document Conventions
Chapter 2: Windows and UNIX Compared
Table 2.1: Windows and UNIX Processes and Threads
Table 2.2: File System Characteristics
Table 2.3: Summary of File Systems Differences
Chapter 4: Assessment and Analysis
Table 4.1: Big-Endian and Little-Endian Byte Ordering Example
Table 4.2: Hardware API Calls
Table 4.3: Archived/Compressed File Suffixes
Table 4.4: Application Category
Table 4.5: Standards Supported in Windows Services for UNIX and Interix
Table 4.6: Xlib and Win32 Event Handling Equivalencies
Chapter 5: Planning the Migration
Table 5.1: Business Risks
Table 5.2: Example Issues
Table 5.3. Example Migration Schedule
Chapter 6: UNIX and Windows Interoperability
Table 6.1: Security Model Differences
Chapter 7: Creating the Development Environment
Table 7.1: Perfmtr Keyboard Commands
Table 7.2: UNIX-like Development Tools Included with Interix
Table 7.3: Application Decision Matrix
Table 7.4: UNIX and Windows File Creation Comparison
Table 7.5: Makefile Macro Examples
Table 7.6: Makefile Dependency Rules
Table 7.7: Options for Generating Debug Information
Table 7.8: Debug Commands
Table 7.9: gdb Commands
Table 7.10: Compile Settings
Table 7.11: Debug Output
Chapter 8: Preparing for Migration
Table 8.1: Out-of-date Interix 3.0 Ports of Compilers and Tools
Table 8.2: Macros that Define Systems Limits
Table 8.3: APIs for File Locking
Table 8.4: New Functions that Replace Terminal I/O ioctl Calls
Chapter 9: Win32 Code Conversion
Table 9.1: Common Limit Names and Definitions
Table 9.2: Job Objects
Table 9.3: Windows Signals
Table 9.4: UNIX Signals and Replacement Mechanisms
Table 9.5: UNIX Thread Attributes
Table 9.6: Thread-specific Access Rights
Table 9.7: Process and Thread Priority
Table 9.8: PriorityClass Values
Table 9.9: UNIX User and Group Functions Security
Table 9.10: Win32 User and Group Functions Security
Table 9.11: Win32 Local Group Functions
Table 9.12: Win32 Network Management (Global Group) Functions
Table 9.13: Windows Access-Control Model Components
Table 9.14: UNIX Standard File Descriptors
Table 9.15: ioctlsocket Parameters and Semantics
Table 9.16: File Control Commands and Semantics
Table 9.17: UNIX Logging System Messages
Table 9.18: Windows Event Logging Messages
Chapter 10: Interix Code Conversion
Table 10.1: Interix Header Files in /usr/include, with Linux and Solaris Variants
Table 10.2: Interix Header Files in /usr/include/sys, with Linux and Solaris Variants
Table 10.3: BSD-style Calls and Interix Equivalents
Table 10.4: Process Resource Limit Names
Table 10.5: Process Resource Limit Names Not Available in Interix
Table 10.6: Process Group Functions Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.7: POSIX-supported Signals
Table 10.8: Platform-Specific Signal Functions Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.9: Platform-Specific Memory Management Functions
Table 10.10: Domain and User Names in Interix
Table 10.11: User and Group Calls Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.12: User Account Database Functions Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.13: File I/O APIs Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.14: Directory Operations Routines Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.15: Working Directory Routines Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.16: File System Information Functions Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.17: Differences Between UNIX statfs and Interix statvfs
Table 10.18: Host Name Translation Routines Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.19: Socket Calls Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.20: Interix Replacements for Re-entrant Routines
Table 10.21: Transport-level Interface Calls Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.22: IEEE Floating-Point Environment Control Routines Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.23: Conversion Routines Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.24: Regular Expression Function Calls Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.25: Functions to Implement the Command-Line and Shell APIs in Interix
Table 10.26: String Handling Functions Not Supported by Interix
Table 10.27: String Interfaces Found in the Strings.h File
Table 10.28: System/C Library Functions Not Supported by Interix
Chapter 11: Migrating the User Interface
Table 11.1: References for X/Motif and Microsoft Windows
Table 11.2: Common Dialog Box Functions
Table 11.3: Mouse Event Definitions
Table 11.4: Functions for Getting Current Focus
Table 11.5: Functions for Setting Current Focus
Table 11.6: Fixed Font References
Table 11.7: Windows Character Types
Table 11.8: Functions that Replace Terminal I/O ioctl()
Table 11.9: X Windows GC and Win32 DC Comparable Functions
Chapter 12: Testing the Migration
Table 12.1: Test Pass and Fail Criteria
Table 12.2: Test Roles and Responsibilities
Table 12.3: Risks and Possible Contingencies
Table 12.4: Testers Responsibility for Test Criteria
Table 12.5: Bug Severity Guidelines
Table 12.6: DTC Scenario 1: Left Mouse Button Is Clicked
Chapter 14: Migrating Fortran Code
Table 14.1: Fortran, C/C++, and Win32 Calling and Naming Conventions
Previous page
Table of content
Unix Application Migration Guide (Patterns & Practices)
ISBN: 0735618380
EAN: 2147483647
Year: 2003
Pages: 134
Authors:
Microsoft Corporation
BUY ON AMAZON
Lotus Notes and Domino 6 Development (2nd Edition)
Major Features of Lotus Notes
Understanding Pages
Real-World Example 2: Dialog Boxes and window. opener on the Web
Understanding the Basics of HTML
Using Triggers to Send Email
Secure Programming Cookbook for C and C++: Recipes for Cryptography, Authentication, Input Validation & More
Reducing #includes with Forward Class Declarations
Performing Date and Time Arithmetic
Classes
Making Member Functions Exception-Safe
Ensuring That a Member Function Doesnt Modify Its Object
The New Solution Selling: The Revolutionary Sales Process That Is Changing the Way People Sell [NEW SOLUTION SELLING 2/E]
Chapter Six Defining Pain or Critical Business Issue
Chapter Nine Selling When You re Not First
Chapter Eleven Gaining Access to People with Power
Chapter Twelve Controlling the Buying Process
Chapter Fourteen Getting Started with the Process
Ruby Cookbook (Cookbooks (OReilly))
Doing Math with Roman Numbers
Using Symbols as Hash Keys
Pretending a String Is a File
Using Object Relational Mapping with ActiveRecord
Setting and Retrieving Cookies
InDesign Type: Professional Typography with Adobe InDesign CS2
See Also
OpenType: The New Frontier in Font Technology
Up Next
Up Next
Vertical (Stacked) Alignment
Microsoft Office Visio 2007 Step by Step (Step By Step (Microsoft))
Getting Visio and Diagram Help
Adding Decorative Elements to Diagrams
Changing the Layout of Connected Shapes
Tracking Project Details with Gantt Charts
Connecting Shapes in Network Diagrams
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