After this documentation was released in July 2003, I was approached
by Prentice Hall and asked to write a book on the Linux VM under the Bruce Peren's Open Book Series.
The book is available and called simply "Understanding The Linux Virtual
Memory Manager". There is a lot of additional material in the book that is
not available here, including details on later 2.4 kernels, introductions
to 2.6, a whole new chapter on the shared memory filesystem, coverage of TLB
management, a lot more code commentary, countless other additions and
clarifications and a CD with lots of cool stuff on it. This material (although
now dated and lacking in comparison to the book) will remain available
although I obviously encourge you to buy the book from your favourite book
store :-) . As the book is under the Bruce Perens Open Book Series, it will
be available 90 days after appearing on the book shelves which means it
is not available right now. When it is available, it will be downloadable
from http://www.phptr.com/perens
so check there for more information.
To be fully clear, this webpage is not the actual book.
Next: 1.4 About this Document
Up: 1. Introduction
Previous: 1.2 Thesis Overview
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1.3 Typographic Conventions
The conventions used in this document are very simple. New concepts that are
introduced as well as URLs are in italicised font. Binaries and
package names are are in bold. Structures, field names, compile
time defines, variables are in constant-width font. At times
when talking about a field in a structure, both the structure and field name
will be included like pagelist for example. Filenames
are in constant-width font but include files have angle brackets around them
like linux/mm.h and may be found in the include/
directory of the kernel source.
Mel
2004-02-15