systems-programming-cheat-sheet

所属分类:嵌入式/单片机/硬件编程
开发工具:TeX
文件大小:0KB
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上传日期:2021-07-02 18:21:52
上 传 者sh-1993
说明:  x86-64 Unix系统编程的备忘单,
(Cheat sheet for x86 -64 Unix systems programming,)

文件列表:
Cheat Sheet.pdf (167545, 2021-07-02)
Cheat Sheet.tex (22028, 2021-07-02)
LICENSE (1069, 2021-07-02)
Makefile (211, 2021-07-02)

# Systems Programming Cheat Sheet [Click here to view the cheat sheet PDF](https://github.com/jstrieb/systems-programming-cheat-sheet/raw/master/Cheat%20Sheet.pdf). Discussed on [Hacker News](https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=27693612) and [r/programming](https://old.reddit.com/r/programming/comments/ob78tp/i_open_sourced_my_systems_programming_cheat_sheet/). # Introduction & Background This cheat sheet was originally written while I was taking [Introduction to Computer Systems (15-213/18-213)](https://www.cs.cmu.edu/~213/) at Carnegie Mellon University in the Spring 2019 semester. As such, it is based heavily on the textbook *[Computer Systems: A Programmer's Perspective, Third Edition](http://csapp.cs.cmu.edu/)* by Randal E. Bryant and David R. O'Hallaron, as well as other course notes. The cheat sheet therefore contains some information that is specifically tailored to x86-64 Unix systems. For example, the material may include undefined behaviors particular to such systems. It may also assume implementation details such as the System V calling convention and AT&T assembly language syntax. In general, any quirks included are those that 213 students are expected to know. The four-page PDF is intended to be printed on two sheets of double-sided 8.5" x 11" letter paper (sorry non-Americans). The course allowed students to bring one double-sided piece of letter paper with notes for each exam, so I tried to cram as much as possible into the limited space. These are my cheat sheets from the midterm and final combined into one PDF. If you've opened the PDF and don't know what any of it means, I encourage you to access the [lecture slides from when I took the course](http://www.cs.cmu.edu/afs/cs/academic/class/15213-s19/www/schedule.html). These and the textbook should be enough to supplement the cheat sheet so that the material (or at least the acronyms) make some sense. # Project Status & Contributing This project is basically done. I created it while I was a student, and will happily make any corrections necessary. But I do not plan to expand the cheat sheet to include new material. Feel free to open an issue and ask about adding material, though. For any corrections or discussions, please [open an issue](https://github.com/jstrieb/systems-programming-cheat-sheet/issues/new). Pull requests without prior discussion will be ignored. # Support the Project There are a few things you can do to support the project: - Star the repository (and follow me on GitHub for more) - Share and upvote on sites like Twitter, Reddit, and Hacker News - Look carefully for errors and report any that you find These things motivate me to to keep sharing what I build, and they provide validation that my work is appreciated! Thanks in advance! # Modifying & Compiling Clone the repository. ``` bash git clone https://github.com/jstrieb/systems-programming-cheat-sheet.git && cd systems-programming-cheat-sheet ``` Make any modifications to [`Cheat Sheet.tex`](https://github.com/jstrieb/systems-programming-cheat-sheet/blob/master/Cheat%20Sheet.tex). Recompile with `make`. # Acknowledgments - The entire (Spring 2019) 15-213 course staff - Randy Bryant and David O'Hallaron for their excellent textbook - [Kirubel Aklilu](https://github.com/kirubelaklilu1), Matt Henderson, and [Hrishikesh Bodas](https://github.com/hbodas) for studying with me when we all took 213 - Anyone who has taken the time to read the cheat sheet and report errors

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