C. J. Kenneth Tan wrote: In the KU Real-Time Linux project page, there is a bit of description
about RT systems. However, if you are interested in OSes, the best book both to read and for reference that I have seen is the "Dinosaur book". It's the book "Operating Systems Concepts" by Silberchatz and Galvin, which has dinosaurs on the cover.
Kenneth, Thanks for the feedback. I used the Dinosaur book for my OS class. Don't remember too much about the internals of RTOS's. I will Jump right in there and read it as soon as I am done with Bentson's book, and Ahuja's book in security, and all the Netscape documentation on security, and get my MCSE out of the way, and finish _Mathematica by Example_, and get this stupid News server running with certificate based authentication, and get the page written to create a pseudo DLS, and get this symbolic logic truth table generator written, and figure out why Vincent's problem with perl running under certificate based authentication, and find a good psychiatrist :-) Hey, what's the deal on there being multiple Linux kernels? When I see people talk about the Linux kernel they usually only specify a version. I had the feeling that there was an official Linux kernel that was blessed of by some grand authority. Can it be explained how the Linux kernel is maintained? Steve -- [<A HREF="http://counter.li.org"><A HREF="http://counter.li.org</A">http://counter.li.org</A</A>>] S.u.S.E. Linux, www.suse.com I Think, I think I am, Therefore I am, I think? - Graeme Edge of the Moody Blues - To get out of this list, please send email to majordomo@suse.com with this text in its body: unsubscribe suse-linux-e