os01
coding-interview-university
os01 | coding-interview-university | |
---|---|---|
10 | 137 | |
11,493 | 290,868 | |
- | - | |
0.0 | 8.4 | |
about 1 month ago | 3 days ago | |
TeX | ||
- | Creative Commons Attribution Share Alike 4.0 |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
os01
-
The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves ππ
Write an OS from scratch
-
Write your own OS - starting from the bootloader
(Here is the link - didn't quite get the image/link combo right in the original post!). I'm writing a series of posts about coding your own operating system. After reading Operating Systems: From 0 to 1 I found that some of the code does not work, so this first post walks you through writing a bootloader similar to that of chapter 7. It also adds some context that I would have found useful when I originally read the book, such as how 16-bit real mode works and some assembly programming information. I'm hoping to take a different approach to posts in the series by borrowing pieces of other operating systems and discussing how they are implemented in an effort to keep things simple and focus on fundamentals (even Linus started out with a detailed reading of MINIX).
Starting a series about writing your own operating system. After reading Operating Systems: From 0 to 1 I found that some of the code does not work, so this first post walks you through writing a bootloader similar to that of chapter 7. I'm hoping to take a different approach to posts in the series by borrowing pieces of other operating systems (even Linus started out with a detailed reading of MINIX).
-
Kernel (OS Kernel Book)
Very quickly skimming through the various chapters, it appears that this is gentle introduction as attention has been made on clear and verbose explanations, supplemented with diagrams. Comparable other "courses" could be osdev101 [1] and "Writing an operating system from scratch" [2].
[1] https://github.com/tuhdo/os01/blob/master/Operating_Systems_...
[2] https://www.cs.bham.ac.uk/~exr/lectures/opsys/10_11/lectures...
- Practice-Oriented Books on OS Development?
- How to learn C intensively?
-
Making projects or reading source code for learning,
You need to be aware of how it works on a hardware level but probably not an expert, for a better explanation see: https://github.com/tuhdo/os01
- Resources to learn OS programming in C
- Operating Systems: From 0 to 1: Write an operating system from scratch
-
The Road to My Ultimate Training System
Operating Systems from 0 to 1
coding-interview-university
- A-Z computer science study plan to become a software engineer
-
10 GitHub repositories that every developer must follow
β jwasham/coding-interview-university : https://github.com/jwasham/coding-interview-university
- 18 Must-Bookmark GitHub Repositories Every Developer Should Know
-
Top 10 GitHub Repositories Every Developer Should Bookmark in 2024
4) Coding Interview University: Conquer the dreaded coding interview with this battle-tested arsenal of algorithms, data structures, and interview prep strategies. Sharpen your problem-solving skills, optimize your coding efficiency, and ace those technical assessments with this invaluable resource. (https://github.com/jwasham/coding-interview-university)
-
The Top 10 GitHub Repositories Making Waves ππ
View on GitHub
- Need a clear roadmap.
-
I need some high quality advice from you
I stumbled upon a github post called coding interview university and with the shiny object syndrome I have, I kinda want to ditch the roadmaps and start something new like this one in github, or the random dude I found in YouTube, telling his audience that he passed the FAANG interviews. The annoying part of me is that whenever I hear stuff like βI passed the FAANGβ, I will immediately try to follow their path because their method works for them or to some other people
- Ask HN: Which school produces the best programmers or software engineers?
- Anyone Know resources like (The Odin Project or FullStack open ) but for DSA.
- Why is it so hard to find a tech job in Vancouver?
What are some alternatives?
os-tutorial - How to create an OS from scratch
free-programming-books - :books: Freely available programming books
book-pr - Pull Requests and Code Review: Best Practices for Developers, from Junior to Team Lead.
computer-science - :mortar_board: Path to a free self-taught education in Computer Science!
esProc - esProc SPL is a scripting language for data processing, with well-designed rich library functions and powerful syntax, which can be executed in a Java program through JDBC interface and computing independently.
awesome-cheatsheets - π©βπ»π¨βπ» Awesome cheatsheets for popular programming languages, frameworks and development tools. They include everything you should know in one single file.
wtfjs - π€ͺ A list of funny and tricky JavaScript examples
tech-interview-handbook - π― Curated coding interview preparation materials for busy software engineers
traducao_como_jogar_go - Tradução do livro "How to Play Go: A Concise Introduction", por Richard Bozulich e James Davies, da editora Kiseido
awesome-interview-questions - :octocat: A curated awesome list of lists of interview questions. Feel free to contribute! :mortar_board:
sample-os - A sample OS as demonstrated in the book Operating System: From 0 to 1
mega-interview-guide - The MEGA interview guide, JavaSciript, Front End, Comp Sci