Search results
Results from the WOW.Com Content Network
Unix Network Programming is a book written by W. Richard Stevens. [1] It was published in 1990 by Prentice Hall and covers many topics regarding UNIX networking and Computer network programming . The book focuses on the design and development of network software under UNIX.
2003 – UNIX Network Programming Volume 1, Third Edition: The Sockets Networking API – ISBN 0-13-141155-1 (with Bill Fenner, and Andrew M. Rudoff) 2005 – Advanced Programming in the UNIX Environment, Second Edition – ISBN 0-321-52594-9 (with Stephen A. Rago)
Stevens adds three chapters giving more concrete examples of Unix programming: he implements a database library, communicates with a PostScript printer, and with a modem. The book does not cover network programming: this is the subject of Stevens's 1990 book UNIX Network Programming and his subsequent three-volume TCP/IP Illustrated.
TCP/IP Illustrated is the name of a series of 3 books written by W. Richard Stevens.Unlike traditional books which explain the RFC specifications, Stevens goes into great detail [2] using actual network traces to describe the protocol, hence its 'Illustrated' title.
W. Richard Stevens: UNIX Network Programming, Volume 1, Second Edition: Networking APIs: Sockets and XTI, Prentice Hall, 1998, ISBN 0-13-490012-X ^ "Chapter 12 - Network Programming". COMP1406 (PDF) . 2017.
In computer networking, STREAMS is the native framework in Unix System V for implementing character device drivers, network protocols, and inter-process communication.In this framework, a stream is a chain of coroutines that pass messages between a program and a device driver (or between a pair of programs).
Lorinda Cherry, computer scientist and member of the original Unix Lab at Bell Labs Mark Crispin , B.S. 1977, Inventor of IMAP Frank J. Effenberger , B.E. 1988, PON technology development and standardization; fellow of IEEE, OSA and Huawei
While working at UW, Mark was one of the creators of the simple and portable Unix email program Pine, launched in March 1992. [7] In 2005, he wrote RFC 4042, his second April Fools' Day RFC describing UTF-9 and UTF-18, encodings of Unicode optimized for the PDP-10. In August 2008, Crispin joined Messaging Architects [8] as a Senior Software ...