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-<!-- $Id$ -->
-<HTML>
-<HEAD>
- <META HTTP-EQUIV="Content-Type" CONTENT="text/html; charset=iso-8859-1">
- <META NAME="Author" CONTENT="James CE Johnson">
- <TITLE>ACE Tutorial 020</TITLE>
-</HEAD>
-<BODY TEXT="#000000" BGCOLOR="#FFFFFF" LINK="#000FFF" VLINK="#FF0F0F">
-
-<CENTER><B><FONT SIZE=+2>ACE Tutorial 020</FONT></B></CENTER>
-
-<CENTER><B><FONT SIZE=+2>Sharing your Memories with persistence</FONT></B></CENTER>
-
-<P>
-<HR WIDTH="100%">
- This tutorial mirrors the previous. Instead of using shared memory,
- this time we'll be using a memory-mapped file.
- <p>
- The cool thing about doing it this way is that we gain
- persistence of memory even across reboots. I wonder if you
- could memory map a file that's mounted via NFS?
- <p>
- Like the shared memory tutorial, this one is also very basic and
- primitive. I'm assuming you've read that one, so I'll just hit
- the high points this time through..
-<P>
-Kirthika's abstract:
-<UL>
-Here, the ACE_Shared_Memory_MM class has been used to provide
-persistence of the contents of the shared memory resource used by
-the server and client. A memory_map which is really a file mapped onto
-memory appears like an array which can be
-easily manipulated while actually the data is stored in a file thus
-making the contents permanent. In the previous tutorial, this wasnt
-possible as we were dealing with shared memory allocated from the RAM.
-<P>
-Again, here too, the example consists of a server and a client sharing
-memory
-(the mem_map) and the server writing a a-z string to it which will
-be successfully converted to uppercase by the client.
-<P>
-Notice that, similarities in usage abound between the previous and the
-current tutorial which will prove to be a force for templatisation.
-For that we need to go ahead -- to the next tutorial!
-
-</UL>
-<P><HR WIDTH="100%">
-<CENTER>[<A HREF="../online-tutorials.html">Tutorial Index</A>] [<A HREF="page02.html">Continue This Tutorial</A>]</CENTER>
-