From mboxrd@z Thu Jan 1 00:00:00 1970 From: afiskon@devzen.ru (Aleksander Alekseev) Date: Mon, 15 Aug 2016 11:02:40 +0300 Subject: Are these books outdated? In-Reply-To: <7aa47747-1de6-69e4-5404-2f196c165917@lategoodbye.de> References: <20160714140155.62523307@fujitsu> <156b7e5e8149927ea9f25e2c12d46aac@mail.vivaldi.net> <20160810181754.GA8718@kroah.com> <5fc70c5c-31ce-5281-f3c0-96d11b2a6fdd@lategoodbye.de> <20160814194855.GA6331@nest> <7aa47747-1de6-69e4-5404-2f196c165917@lategoodbye.de> Message-ID: <20160815110240.2c999a93@e733> To: kernelnewbies@lists.kernelnewbies.org List-Id: kernelnewbies.lists.kernelnewbies.org > That's strange. I provided the link because of the 4nd edition of the > book. The online version was about the 3rd edition which handled > Kernel 2.6. > > > > >> [1] - https://ezs.kr.hsnr.de/TreiberBuch/ > > Right, version that was published online is outdated anyway. You can buy the 4th edition in PDF and other formats on oreilly.com: http://shop.oreilly.com/product/9783864902888.do Also I've just remembered that there is a free (!) and up to date book in English "Linux Insides" by Alexander Kuleshov (Twitter - @0xAX): https://0xax.gitbooks.io/linux-insides/content/index.html It doesn't cover everything (debugging for instance) and is still work in progress but it's definitely worth reading. -- Best regards, Aleksander Alekseev