TCP/UDP
From: Manish Katiyar <hidden>
Date: 2014-08-18 17:26:13
On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 10:21 AM, Nick Krause [off-list ref] wrote:
On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 1:13 PM, Nick Krause [off-list ref] wrote:quoted
On Mon, Aug 18, 2014 at 12:57 PM, [off-list ref] wrote:quoted
On Mon, 18 Aug 2014 12:25:53 -0400, Nick Krause said:quoted
Hey Guys, After Searching the kernel Docs there is very little information on this for new developers. I want to know more about how the kernel code is written to handle TCP/UDP as even with Google and kernel programming books it's not good enough to learn how to write code for this particular subsystem at a high level.Do we need to stick a "CAUTION: NO USER SERVICEABLE PARTS INSIDE"stickerquoted
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on there before you get the hint? Let me quote a mail of yours from less than 24 hours ago:quoted
Further more I learn really fast in my areas of interest, after myfirst yearquoted
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of programming I was already have build my own distro of Linux fromScratch,quoted
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and after my second year was learning how to program embeddedbootloaders andquoted
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the like. I am not lying this is no jokeIf this is the truth, you should be having *zero* difficulty with the Linux network stack. Anyhow, I'm not feeling like digging up any good references for you, because I have zero guarantee it's worth my time. Beagleboadsapparentlyquoted
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lasted all of 36 hours - why should I dig up references fo somethingthatquoted
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you probably won't be interested in by the time I finish typing themail?quoted
Valdis, I was interested in both at the same time, just asked aboutBeagle-boards first.quoted
I aren't having any difficulty with it , I just wanted to known moreabout thisquoted
area as the docs out there are terrible and not worth reading on thispart ofquoted
the networking stack.Valdis, In addition I generally learn 5 or 6 areas of a topic or program at the same time so I am just asking at different times. Just to make you and the other developers have an easier time I will paste my kernel interests below in a list. Regards Nick 1. Networking 2. Usb, PCI , Networking and CPU Freq Drivers 3. Embedded Boards 4. Kernel Booting with UEFI(curiosity mostly) 5. Btrfs , F2FS ,NFS filesysems 6. VFS 7. Process and Virtual Memory Subsystems 8. Memory Management
This is amusing :-). So when you wrote linux from scratch, did you implement it in the following order too ? Thanks - Manish
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