From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: abhi.c.pawar@gmail.com (Abhijit Pawar) Date: Thu, 06 Dec 2012 17:44:30 +0530 Subject: Best and fastest way to understand kernel subsystem ? In-Reply-To: <962931354795372@web11e.yandex.ru> References: <1354787651.22307.3.camel@oc2826874472.ibm.com> <50C085A6.6010106@gmail.com> <962931354795372@web11e.yandex.ru> Message-ID: <50C08C26.300@gmail.com> To: kernelnewbies@lists.kernelnewbies.org List-Id: kernelnewbies.lists.kernelnewbies.org On 12/06/2012 05:32 PM, rush wrote: > Hi, > Most of O'Reilly books are pretty old. Afair the latest O'Reilly book is from > Robert Love about 2.6.34. Does it make sense? Yes. Its a good book. > Or even book 2005 are still usefull? Even if the books are older they can give you the general idea about the thoughts put into the particular subsystem. > -- rush > 06.12.2012, 15:49, "Abhijit Pawar" : >> >> On 12/06/2012 03:24 PM, Shraddha Kamat wrote: >> >> What is the best (and the fastest ) way to understand a kernel >> subsystem ( for e.g., filesystem , Networking .. etc.) >> >> Reading the kernel code is the best way. For reference you can use LDD3 >> and books from OReilly. >> >> -- Shraddha >> >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Kernelnewbies mailing list >> Kernelnewbies at kernelnewbies.org >> http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies >> >> -- >> - >> Abhijit >> >> _______________________________________________ >> Kernelnewbies mailing list >> Kernelnewbies at kernelnewbies.org >> http://lists.kernelnewbies.org/mailman/listinfo/kernelnewbies >> > -- - Abhijit