What about uCOSII book search on any technical book site and you will find
the book describing uCOSII.  The book and OS was written by a chap called
Jean Laprose ( sorry for the misspelling of his name I am doing this from
memory).

Regards,
Rod Boyce

-----Original Message-----
From:   [EMAIL PROTECTED]
[mailto:[EMAIL PROTECTED]] On Behalf Of Tracy Camp (Hurrah)
Sent:   Wednesday, 8 September 1999 03:29
To:     Matthew Kirkwood
Cc:     [EMAIL PROTECTED]; [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Subject:        Re: OS development

Also a facinating book called the "developement of the BSD 4.4 operating
system"  not much around that talks about non-unix OSes though.

On Tue, 7
Sep 1999, Matthew Kirkwood wrote:

> On Tue, 7 Sep 1999 [EMAIL PROTECTED] wrote:
>
> > Does anybody on the list know where some docs, HOWTO's, books,
> > etc are(preferably on the net) on the theories behind OS/kernel
> > development and maybe how to implement them?  I'm hoping there's
> > something out there not necassarily on linux but on OS/kernel
> > development in general.
>
> The Minix book[0] is probably as good a place to start as any.
>
> It's quite heavily microkernel-oriented, but that's probably an
> advantage - otherwise it's very easy to forget that all the world
> isn't monolithic Unix.
>
> After that, you might get some more information from looking at
> the LDP's "The Linux Kernel"[1] which wil show you how a lot of
> the stuff in the Minix book is anchored to Linux, and introduce
> some of the more modern bits which the Minix book omits.
>
> Matthew.
>
> [0] "Operating Systems: Design and Implementation" by A S Tanenbaum
> [1] http://www.linuxdoc.org/LDP/tlk/tlk.html
>
>


Tracy Camp
503.380.3218
Hurrah Internet Services
[EMAIL PROTECTED]
Consultants to the Networked World
http://www.hurrah.com/

Reply via email to