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  2. NDISwrapper - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/NDISwrapper

    NDISwrapper is a free software driver wrapper that enables the use of Windows XP network device drivers (for devices such as PCI cards, USB modems, and routers) on Linux operating systems. NDISwrapper works by implementing the Windows kernel and NDIS APIs and dynamically linking Windows network drivers to this implementation.

  3. User-Mode Driver Framework - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/User-Mode_Driver_Framework

    Badly written device drivers can cause severe damage to a system (e.g., BSoD or data corruption) since all standard drivers have high privileges when accessing the kernel directly. The User-Mode Driver Framework insulates the kernel from the problems of direct driver access, instead providing a new class of driver with a dedicated application ...

  4. Device file - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_file

    In Unix-like operating systems, a device file, device node, or special file is an interface to a device driver that appears in a file system as if it were an ordinary file. There are also special files in DOS , OS/2 , and Windows .

  5. Device driver - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Device_driver

    Common levels of abstraction for device drivers include: For hardware: Interfacing directly; Writing to or reading from a device control register; Using some higher-level interface (e.g. Video BIOS) Using another lower-level device driver (e.g. file system drivers using disk drivers)

  6. Arch Linux - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Arch_Linux

    The user can mount their newly formatted drive partition, and use pacstrap (or Pacman with the appropriate command-line switch) to install base and additional packages with the mountpoint of the destination device as the root for its operations. This method is useful when installing Arch Linux onto USB flash drives, or onto a temporarily ...

  7. Startup Disk Creator - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Startup_Disk_Creator

    Startup Disk Creator (USB-creator) is an official tool to create Live USBs of Ubuntu from the Live CD or from an ISO image. The tool is included by default in all releases after Ubuntu 8.04, and can be installed on Ubuntu 8.04. A KDE frontend was released for Ubuntu 8.10, and is currently included by default in Kubuntu installations. The KDE ...

  8. Plan 9 from Bell Labs - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Plan_9_from_Bell_Labs

    Instead, Plan 9 device drivers implement their control interface as a file system, so that the hardware can be accessed by the ordinary file input/output operations read and write. Consequently, sharing the device across the network can be accomplished by mounting the corresponding directory tree to the target machine.

  9. systemd - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Systemd

    The project did not create new systemd-like functionality, and was only meant to act as a wrapper over the native OpenBSD system. The developer aimed for systembsd to be installable as part of the ports collection, not as part of a base system, stating that "systemd and *BSD differ fundamentally in terms of philosophy and development practices."