John B Pace wrote:
Welcome home! We got a lot of dirty looks just by being in during Vietnam, so I go out of my way to welcome vets home...so once again, Welcome Home"
Thanks. I think this whole thing is turning out to be rather therapeutic for the Vietnam vets -- those involved with the VA and veterans' service organizations are finally getting appreciation for what they endured, in the course of giving advice to us.
On Thu, 2008-01-17 at 15:29 -0500, Aaron Kulkis wrote:
Kain, Becki (B.) wrote:
Where do you work? I recently returned from a year in Baghdad with E Company, 1-125th Infantry Battalion, so not anywhere at the moment. The rest of the Bn just got mobilized for about 9 months in Kuwait.
-----Original Message----- From: Aaron Kulkis [mailto:akulkis00@hotpop.com] Sent: Thursday, January 17, 2008 12:46 AM To: Kain, Becki (B.) Subject: Re: [opensuse] Top/lsof
Or it means that the first process never says "i'm finished, you can swap me out". There's no mechanism for that, other than the sleep(2) system call. The other ways that the process gives up
Kain, Becki (B.) wrote: the CPU are 1: waiting for resources (such as opening or reading a file, executing a wait(2) to collect the exit codes of child processes, etc). 2: The time-slice timer runs out, and the process is forcibly interrupted, and execution is given to the process schedulre.
What you're thinking of is the cooperative multi-tasking model (pre OS X Macs would be a good example).
I suggest you get "The Design of the Unix Operating System". I believe the author's name is Maurice J. Bach.
Yes, here we go: <http://www.amazon.com/Design-Unix-Operating-System-Hardcover/dp/B000M85 BS6/ref=pd_bbs_sr_2?ie=UTF8&s=books&qid=1200475812&sr=8-2>
$15.00 is an excellant price. My copy of the previous edition cost by around $85.00
While this is the Unix operating system, not Linux, the general principles of the process scheduler still appply, because the Unix process scheduler is the definition of the expected behavior -- therefore, Linux imitates it almost exactly (except that Linux can have real-time processes, and circa 1990 Unix did not).
It's not a desktop, it's just a web server. Where are you, that
you're
30 miles from deaborn? Just curious I'm in Royal Oak.
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