Syscall: Difference between revisions
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(Created page with "<!-- A syscall refers to when a program asks not a library it's running, or another process, but asks the system itself. This usually refers to * services that only really the OS/kernel should be providing (new processes, scheduling processes). * ...or to ones that aren't ''only'' its domain, but that it still ''does'' provide, like a lot of disk and filesystem related stuff. In theory, there isn't a lot that you couldn't do yourself, without the kernel, but it...") |
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A syscall refers to when a program asks not a library it's running, or another process, but asks the system itself. | A syscall refers to when a program asks not a library it's running, or another process, but asks the system itself. | ||
kernel space | |||
Latest revision as of 23:33, 21 April 2024