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* ISR: interrupt service routine * scheduler: the part of the kernel that chooses which assigns processes to cpus |
* Classifier: also called filter, classifies a network packet by inspecting it, used by QDiscs. * Copy-on-Write: (also: COW) reuse and share existing objects and copy them not until a modification is required. * Current: a kernel variable which points to the task_struct structure of the process currently running on this CPU. * Device Mapper: A technology for presenting arbitrary groupings of underlying sectors on physical devices in a consistent logical fashion usable by higher level algorithms. Heavily used by kernel technologies such as LVM. * ISR: interrupt service routine, the function in each device driver that gets called when an interrupt happens. * Jiffies: An incrementing counter representing system "uptime" in ticks - or the number of timer interrupts since boot. Ultimately the entire original concept of a jiffy will likely vanish as systems use timer events only when necessary and become "jiffyless". * Linux Device Drivers, 2nd Edition: http://www.xml.com/ldd/chapter/book/ * LKM: Linux Kernel Module. A (often dyanmically loadable at system runtime) kernel extension ("driver") to support, for example, some kind of new hardware device or generic software abstraction. * LKML: Linux Kernel Mailing List. The primary virtual watering hole (meeting ground) for kernel developers to share ideas and bounce opinions off oneanother during the course of the kernel development process. * LVM: Logical volume management. A technology for providing an arbitrary logical view of underlying data storage in a fashion supporting resizing and restructuring of storage on the fly. Currently in version 2, originally written by Sistina (now Redhat). * mem_map: A contiguous virtual array of struct pages representing the entirity of physical memory pages available within a system. * MMU: memory management unit, part of the CPU that is needed for virtual memory. * QDisc: [http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.qdisc.html Queueing Discipline], queues packets before they are sent out to the network device, enforces QoS requirements, provides traffic shaping and priorititizing capabilities. * QoS: Quality of Service, method to define the importance/priority of network services * Scheduler: the part of the kernel that chooses a suitable process to run on the cpu, see the [http://lxr.linux.no/ident?i=schedule schedule()] function. * Shared/Paged Socket Buffer: (also: pskb) Socket Buffer with uncontinuous data buffer, used for zero copy, TSO and Scatter/Gather capable network cards. * Socket Buffer: (also: skb) data structure used to hold the data and attributes of a network packet. * System call: (also: syscall) the way a program transitions from userspace into kernel space, to call a kernel space function. * Page table: data structure used by the MMU to translate virtual memory addresses to physical memory addresses. * Process descriptor: kernel data structure that describes/accounts proces data related to a single process. * Virtual memory: every process in the system gets its own memory address space, independant of the other processes. * Zero-Copy: A special networking code path where userspace memory is directly used instead of copying it and thus improves performance. |
A glossary of various terms and acronyms related to the Linux kernel. If you know something, please create yourself an account (UserPreferences) and add a term in alphabetical order. If everybody who reads this page adds a term each week, this glossary should be complete within a few months...
- Classifier: also called filter, classifies a network packet by inspecting it, used by QDiscs.
- Copy-on-Write: (also: COW) reuse and share existing objects and copy them not until a modification is required.
- Current: a kernel variable which points to the task_struct structure of the process currently running on this CPU.
- Device Mapper: A technology for presenting arbitrary groupings of underlying sectors on physical devices in a consistent logical fashion usable by higher level algorithms. Heavily used by kernel technologies such as LVM.
- ISR: interrupt service routine, the function in each device driver that gets called when an interrupt happens.
- Jiffies: An incrementing counter representing system "uptime" in ticks - or the number of timer interrupts since boot. Ultimately the entire original concept of a jiffy will likely vanish as systems use timer events only when necessary and become "jiffyless".
Linux Device Drivers, 2nd Edition: http://www.xml.com/ldd/chapter/book/
- LKM: Linux Kernel Module. A (often dyanmically loadable at system runtime) kernel extension ("driver") to support, for example, some kind of new hardware device or generic software abstraction.
- LKML: Linux Kernel Mailing List. The primary virtual watering hole (meeting ground) for kernel developers to share ideas and bounce opinions off oneanother during the course of the kernel development process.
- LVM: Logical volume management. A technology for providing an arbitrary logical view of underlying data storage in a fashion supporting resizing and restructuring of storage on the fly. Currently in version 2, originally written by Sistina (now Redhat).
- mem_map: A contiguous virtual array of struct pages representing the entirity of physical memory pages available within a system.
- MMU: memory management unit, part of the CPU that is needed for virtual memory.
QDisc: [http://lartc.org/howto/lartc.qdisc.html Queueing Discipline], queues packets before they are sent out to the network device, enforces QoS requirements, provides traffic shaping and priorititizing capabilities.
- QoS: Quality of Service, method to define the importance/priority of network services
Scheduler: the part of the kernel that chooses a suitable process to run on the cpu, see the [http://lxr.linux.no/ident?i=schedule schedule()] function.
- Shared/Paged Socket Buffer: (also: pskb) Socket Buffer with uncontinuous data buffer, used for zero copy, TSO and Scatter/Gather capable network cards.
- Socket Buffer: (also: skb) data structure used to hold the data and attributes of a network packet.
- System call: (also: syscall) the way a program transitions from userspace into kernel space, to call a kernel space function.
- Page table: data structure used by the MMU to translate virtual memory addresses to physical memory addresses.
- Process descriptor: kernel data structure that describes/accounts proces data related to a single process.
- Virtual memory: every process in the system gets its own memory address space, independant of the other processes.
- Zero-Copy: A special networking code path where userspace memory is directly used instead of copying it and thus improves performance.