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diff --git a/docs/tutorials/019/page01.html b/docs/tutorials/019/page01.html deleted file mode 100644 index 2d74f78c874..00000000000 --- a/docs/tutorials/019/page01.html +++ /dev/null @@ -1,39 +0,0 @@ -<HTML> -<HEAD> - <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1"> - <META NAME="Author" CONTENT="James CE Johnson"> - <TITLE>ACE Tutorial 019</TITLE> -</HEAD> -<BODY TEXT="#000000" BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" LINK="#000FFF" VLINK="#FF0F0F"> - -<CENTER><B><FONT SIZE=+2>ACE Tutorial 019</FONT></B></CENTER> - -<CENTER><B><FONT SIZE=+2>Sharing your Memories</FONT></B></CENTER> - -<P> -<HR WIDTH="100%"> - Did you ever wish you could read someone's mind? Or that they could - read yours? - <p> - Well, we won't be doing that here but we'll try to get close by - letting your code do something similar: Shared Memory. - <p> - What we're going to do is ask the operating system to set - aside a part of RAM that we can share with another process. By - doing this, we can allow our applications to swap data very - efficiently. - <p> - Along the way, we'll have to come up with some sort of - coordintation betweent the processes. That is the most - difficult part of a shared memory system. In the tutorial we're - just going to take a simplistic approach (eg -- busy loop) but - real-world applications will need to take a serious look at - process-level synch mechanisms such as ACE_*_Semaphore. - <P> - Caveat: I've barely begun to use shared memory - myself. This tutorial and the next are very simple-minded and - primitive. Anyone who wants to provide more realistic - replacements is encouraged to drop me a note - (<A HREF="mailto:jcej@lads.com">jcej@lads.com</A>). -<P><HR WIDTH="100%"> -<CENTER>[<A HREF="../online-tutorials.html">Tutorial Index</A>] [<A HREF="page02.html">Continue This Tutorial</A>]</CENTER> |