Comments:
*******************************************************************************<br />
UNIX in a Nutshell<br />
*******************************************************************************<br />
<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
General Information<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
Type.................: Ebook<br />
Part Size............: 1,423,512 bytes<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
Post Information<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
Posted by............: ~tqw~<br />
<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
Release Notes<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
As an open operating system, Unix can be improved on by anyone and everyone: <br />
individuals, companies, universities, and more. As a result, the very nature of <br />
Unix has been altered over the years by numerous extensions formulated in an <br />
assortment of versions. Today, Unix encompasses everything from Sun's Solaris to <br />
Apple's Mac OS X and more varieties of Linux than you can easily name.<br />
<br />
The latest edition of this bestselling reference brings Unix into the 21st <br />
century. It's been reworked to keep current with the broader state of Unix in <br />
today's world and highlight the strengths of this operating system in all its <br />
various flavors.<br />
<br />
Detailing all Unix commands and options, the informative guide provides generous <br />
descriptions and examples that put those commands in context. Here are some of <br />
the new features you'll find in Unix in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition:<br />
<br />
* Solaris 10, the latest version of the SVR4-based operating system, <br />
GNU/Linux, and Mac OS X<br />
* Bash shell (along with the 1988 and 1993 versions of ksh)<br />
* tsch shell (instead of the original Berkeley csh)<br />
* Package management programs, used for program installation on popular <br />
GNU/Linux systems, Solaris and Mac OS X<br />
* GNU Emacs Version 21<br />
* Introduction to source code management systems<br />
* Concurrent versions system<br />
* Subversion version control system<br />
* GDB debugger<br />
<br />
As Unix has progressed, certain commands that were once critical have fallen <br />
into disuse. To that end, the book has also dropped material that is no longer <br />
relevant, keeping it taut and current.<br />
<br />
If you're a Unix user or programmer, you'll recognize the value of this <br />
complete, up-to-date Unix reference. With chapter overviews, specific examples, <br />
and detailed commands.<br />
<br />
Ever UNIX user and programmer needs a rock-solid day-to-day reference. For <br />
years, thousands of UNIX users have relied on UNIX in a Nutshell. Now this book <br />
has been massively updated for today’s new generation of “UNIX-es,” from <br />
GNU/Linux to Mac OS X and Solaris 10. The new Fourth Edition is an outstanding <br />
single source for all you need to know now about UNIX commands, shells, editing <br />
tools, software development utilities, and a whole lot more.<br />
<br />
Users will wear out Arnold Robbins’s huge commands section, which has been <br />
systematically revised and reorganized. Commands common to most versions of UNIX <br />
and Linux are covered first: meat-and-potatoes stuff like autoconf, cat, chmod, <br />
cp, find, finger, ftp, make, mount, ssh, tar, and so forth. All version-specific <br />
options for each command are listed with their own subheads, for fast and <br />
convenient access. Once every significant common command has been reviewed, <br />
dozens of commands unique to individual platforms are covered. For instance: <br />
cdrecord and strace for Linux; ditto and nano for OS X; encrypt and filesync for <br />
Solaris.<br />
<br />
Robbins’s extensive coverage of UNIX shells has been reworked to cover bash, the <br />
1993 (and 1988) versions of ksh, and tcsh instead of the original Berkeley csh. <br />
There’s an entire new chapter on package management. Robbins has thoroughly <br />
revised his coverage of editors, adding key vim commands and updating the GNU <br />
Emacs discussion through Version 21. Perhaps the most significant addition: <br />
extensive new coverage of source code management, including chapters on CVS and <br />
the newer Subversion Version Control System (SVCS). Robbins’s goal: to present <br />
“UNIX for the 21st century.” Users and programmers will agree that he’s <br />
succeeded. <br />
<br />
Table of Contents<br />
Pt. I Commands and shells <br />
1 Introduction 3<br />
2 Unix commands 13<br />
3 The Unix shell : an overview 341<br />
4 The bash and korn shells 347<br />
5 tcsh : an extended C shell 417<br />
6 Package management 467<br />
Pt. II Text editing and processing <br />
7 Pattern matching 535<br />
8 The emacs editor 543<br />
9 The vi, ex, and vim editors 561<br />
10 The sed editor 595<br />
11 The awk programming language 611<br />
Pt. III Software development <br />
12 Source code management : an overview 637<br />
13 The revision control system 643<br />
14 The concurrent versions system 659<br />
15 The subversion version control system 697<br />
16 The GNU make utility 745<br />
17 The GDB debugger 765<br />
18 Writing manual pages 813<br />
Pt. IV References <br />
ISO 8859-1 (Latin-1) character set 829<br />
<br />
Product Details<br />
<br />
* ISBN: 0596100299<br />
* ISBN-13: 9780596100292<br />
* Format: Paperback, 724pp<br />
* Publisher: O'Reilly Media, Incorporated<br />
* Pub. Date: October 2005<br />
<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
Install Notes<br />
-------------------------------------------------------------------------------<br />
CHM File
Add comment