As an open operating system, Unix can be improved on by anyone and everyone: individuals, companies, universities, and more. As a result, the very nature of Unix has been altered over the years by numerous extensions formulated in an assortment of versions. Today, Unix encompasses everything from Sun's Solaris to Apple's Mac OS X and more varieties of Linux than you can easily name.
The latest edition of this bestselling reference brings Unix into the 21st century. It's been reworked to keep current with the broader state of Unix in today's world and highlight the strengths of this operating system in all its various flavors.
Detailing all Unix commands and options, the informative guide provides generous descriptions and examples that put those commands in context. Here are some of the new features you'll find in Unix in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition:
As Unix has progressed, certain commands that were once critical have fallen into disuse. To that end, the book has also dropped material that is no longer relevant, keeping it taut and current.
If you're a Unix user or programmer, you'll recognize the value of this complete, up-to-date Unix reference. With chapter overviews, specific examples, and detailed command.
Here are some of the new features you'll find in Unix in a Nutshell, Fourth Edition: Solaris 10, the latest version of the SVR4-based operating system, GNU/Linux, and Mac OS X Bash shell (along with the 1988 and 1993 versions of ksh) tsch ...
A guide to the operating system's commands and options covers new commands, shell syntax, regular expressions, and obsolete terminology
r28 | sally | 2003-01-07 21:48:33 -0600 (Tue, 07 Jan 2003) | 3 lines ... If you run svn log on a specific path and provide a specific revision and get no output at all: $ svn log -r 20 http://svn.red-bean.com/untouched.txt ...
With this book, programmers will learn: How to install bash as your login shell The basics of interactive shell use, including UNIX file and directory structures, standard I/O, and background jobs Command line editing, history substitution, ...
The desktop reference to SCO UNIX and Open Desktop, this version of UNIX in a Nutshell shows you what's under the hood of your SCO system.
UNIX in a nutshell: a desktop quick reference
For intermediate to experienced C programmers who want to become UNIX system programmers. Explains system calls and special library routines available on the system. Annotation copyrighted by Book News, Inc., Portland, OR
UNIX in a Nutshell: System V Edition : a Desktop Quick Reference
As an open operating system, Unix can be improved on by anyone and everyone: individuals, companies, universities, and more.
Presents an overview of kernel configuration and building for version 2.6 of the Linux kernel.