Updated to cover version 2.4.x of the Linux kernel, the second edition
of Linux Device Drivers remains the best general-purpose, paper-bound
guide for programmers wishing to make hardware devices work under the
world's most popular open-source operating system. The authors take care
to show how to write drivers that are portable--that is, that compile
and run under all popular Linux platforms. That, along with the fact
that they're careful to explain and illustrate concepts, makes this book
very well suited to any programmer familiar with C but not with the
hardware-software interface. It's worth noting that the emphasis in the
title is on "device drivers" as much as "Linux." This book will make
sense to you if you've never written a driver for any platform before.
It helps if you have some Linux or Unix background, but even that is
secondary as a prerequisite to C skill. For a programming text--and one
concerned with low-level instructions and data structures, at that--this
book is remarkably rich in prose. You'll typically want to read this
book straight through, more or less skipping the code samples, before
sketching out your plan for the driver you need to write. Then, go back
and pay closer attention to the sections on specific details you need to
implement, like custom task queues. For coding-time details about
specific system calls and programming techniques, count on the index to
point you to the right passages. --David Wall Topics covered: Techniques
for writing hardware device drivers that run under Linux kernels 2.0.x
through 2.2.x. Sections show how to manage memory, time, interrupts,
ports, and other details of the hardware-software interface.
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