Professional XEN Virtualization
- W. Hagen
- Computer Science
- 29 January 2008
This book presents you with a complete foundation on the Xen technology and shows you how Xen virtualization offers faster response times for new server and service requests, a simplified system…
Real-time and performance improvements for the 2.6 Linux kernel
- W. Hagen
- Computer Science
- 1 June 2005
The Linux multimedia experience is smoother these days, thanks to advances in coding and benchmarking, and the latest kernels and operating systems are helping to improve this.
The Definitive Guide to GCC
This chapter discusses building and using C Cross-Compilers, Optimizing Code with GCC, and Analyzing Code Produced with GCC Compilers.
Linux Filesystems
- W. Hagen
- Computer Science
- 15 January 2002
This book provides a thorough explanation of the underlying concepts behind these types of filesystems and gives complete, hands-on instructions for building, installing, using, and administering journaling and distributed filesystems on computers running Linux.
Ubuntu Linux Bible: Featuring Ubuntu 10.04 LTS
- W. Hagen
- Computer Science
- 8 June 2010
The best resource on the very latest on Ubuntu 10.04, with pages of step-by-step instruction, helpful tips, and expert techniques.
SUSE Linux 10 Bible
- Justin Davies, R. Whittaker, W. Hagen
- Computer Science
- 28 January 2005
By describing the best ways of working with SUSE in a wide variety of situations, and making full use of the SUSE configuration tools, this authoritative text will help you run your SUSE Linux…
Building Linux Distributions: Customizing Linux for PCs, Embedded Systems, and Server Appliances
- W. Hagen
- Computer Science
- 1 November 2007
Additional GCC Resources
As the most widely used compiler on computer systems today, GCC has a tremendous number of users. It is therefore not surprising that there are a similarly large number of online resources where you…
Advanced GCC Usage
GCC’s default behavior is usually what you want. Rather, GCC usually does The Right Thing and, at least in our experience, rarely violates the Principle of Least Surprise. As you have no doubt begun…
...
...