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In the world of Linux system programming, a signal is an event that’s delivered to a process by the kernel. A signal says to the process “something has happened that you might want to respond to”. A few signals are generated as a result of something that the program itself is doing (usually something bad), but most of them originate from sources external to the program itself. Why do you need to k
Perl 6 has been 15 years in the making, and is now due to be released at the end of this year. We speak to its creator to find out what’s going on. Larry Wall is a fascinating man. He’s the creator of Perl, a programming language that’s widely regarded as the glue holding the internet together, and mocked by some as being a “write-only” language due to its density and liberal use of non-alphanumer
Ever wanted to start hacking the kernel? Don’t have a clue how to begin? Let us show you how it’s done… K ernel programming is often seen as a black magic. In Arthur C Clarke’s sense, it probably is. The Linux kernel is quite different from its user space: many abstractions are waived, and you have to take extra care, as a bug in you code affects the whole system. There is no easy way to do floati
Munich city council has migrated 15,000 workers from Windows to Linux. It’s a great success story for Free Software, and it upset Microsoft enormously. We visited the city and talked to Peter Hofmann, the man behind the migration – so read on for all the juicy details about what went right, what went wrong, and what made Steve Ballmer sweat… Note! This article originally appeared in issue 2 of Lin
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