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  2. Shared memory - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Shared_memory

    POSIX also provides the mmap API for mapping files into memory; a mapping can be shared, allowing the file's contents to be used as shared memory. Linux distributions based on the 2.6 kernel and later offer /dev/shm as shared memory in the form of a RAM disk , more specifically as a world-writable directory (a directory in which every user of ...

  3. mmap - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Mmap

    The main difference between System V shared memory (shmem) and memory mapped I/O (mmap) is that System V shared memory is persistent: unless explicitly removed by a process, it is kept in memory and remains available until the system is shut down. mmap'd memory is not persistent between application executions (unless it is backed by a file).

  4. C POSIX library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/C_POSIX_library

    The C POSIX library is a specification of a C standard library for POSIX systems. It was developed at the same time as the ANSI C standard. Some effort was made to make POSIX compatible with standard C ; POSIX includes additional functions to those introduced in standard C.

  5. POSIX - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/POSIX

    POSIX Conformance Testing: A test suite for POSIX accompanies the standard: VSX-PCTS or the VSX POSIX Conformance Test Suite. [ 10 ] The development of the POSIX standard takes place in the Austin Group (a joint working group among the IEEE, The Open Group , and the ISO/IEC JTC 1/SC 22 /WG 15).

  6. Inter-process communication - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-process_communication

    All POSIX systems, Windows, AmigaOS 2.0+ Shared memory: Multiple processes are given access to the same block of memory, which creates a shared buffer for the processes to communicate with each other. All POSIX systems, Windows Message passing: Allows multiple programs to communicate using message queues and/or non-OS managed channels.

  7. SHMEM - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SHMEM

    SHMEM (from Cray Research's “shared memory” library [1]) is a family of parallel programming libraries, providing one-sided, RDMA, parallel-processing interfaces for low-latency distributed-memory supercomputers. The SHMEM acronym was subsequently reverse engineered to mean "Symmetric Hierarchical MEMory”. [2]

  8. sbrk - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Sbrk

    The program break is the address of the first location beyond the current end of the data region. The amount of available space increases as the break value increases. The available space is initialized to a value of zero, unless the break is lowered and then increased, as it may reuse the same pages in some unspecified way.

  9. pthreads - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Pthreads

    In computing, POSIX Threads, commonly known as pthreads, is an execution model that exists independently from a programming language, as well as a parallel execution model. It allows a program to control multiple different flows of work that overlap in time.