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  2. System Contention Scope - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/System_Contention_Scope

    In computer science, The System Contention Scope [1] is one of two thread-scheduling schemes used in operating systems.This scheme is used by the kernel to decide which kernel-level thread to schedule onto a CPU, wherein all threads (as opposed to only user-level threads, as in the Process Contention Scope scheme) in the system compete for the CPU. [2]

  3. Processor affinity - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Processor_affinity

    On Linux, the CPU affinity of a process can be altered with the taskset(1) program [3] and the sched_setaffinity(2) system call. The affinity of a thread can be altered with one of the library functions: pthread_setaffinity_np(3) or pthread_attr_setaffinity_np(3). On SGI systems, dplace binds a process to a set of CPUs. [4]

  4. Native POSIX Thread Library - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Native_POSIX_Thread_Library

    Threads created by the library (via pthread_create) correspond one-to-one with schedulable entities in the kernel (processes, in the Linux case). [4]: 226 This is the simplest of the three threading models (1:1, N:1, and M:N). [4]: 215–216 New threads are created with the clone() system call called through the

  5. Multithreading (computer architecture) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Multithreading_(computer...

    If a thread gets a lot of cache misses, the other threads can continue taking advantage of the unused computing resources, which may lead to faster overall execution, as these resources would have been idle if only a single thread were executed. Also, if a thread cannot use all the computing resources of the CPU (because instructions depend on ...

  6. File:NEW CRACK.pdf - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/File:NEW_CRACK.pdf

    Short title: NEW CRACK; Software used: Adobe Illustrator CS6 (Macintosh) Date and time of digitizing: 11:37, 13 July 2016: File change date and time: 11:37, 13 July 2016

  7. authbind - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Authbind

    authbind is an open-source system utility written by Ian Jackson and is distributed under the GNU General Public License. [1] The authbind software allows a program that would normally require superuser privileges to access privileged network services to run as a non-privileged user. authbind allows the system administrator to permit specific users and groups access to bind to TCP and UDP ...

  8. Thread control block - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Thread_control_block

    Thread Control Block (TCB) is a data structure in an operating system kernel that contains thread-specific information needed to manage the thread. [1] The TCB is "the manifestation of a thread in an operating system." Each thread has a thread control block. An operating system keeps track of the thread control blocks in kernel memory. [2]

  9. Process management (computing) - Wikipedia

    en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Process_management_(computing)

    For the portion of the time required for CPU cycles, the process is being executed and is occupying the CPU. During the time required for I/O cycles, the process is not using the processor. Instead, it is either waiting to perform Input/Output, or is actually performing Input/Output. An example of this is reading from or writing to a file on disk.