00816nam0-22002891i-450-99000591175040332119980601000591175FED01000591175(Aleph)000591175FED0100059117519980601d1886----km-y0itay50------ba--------00-yyLehrbuch des deutschen StrafrechtesAlbert Friedrich Berner14. fortgebildete AuflageLeipzigB. Tauchnitz1886XXIV_654XXIV_654 p.20 cm345Berner,Albert Friedrich224615ITUNINARICAUNIMARCBK990005911750403321XII B 2314383FGBCFGBCLehrbuch des deutschen Strafrechtes562771UNINAGIU0101049nam0 22002653i 450 VAN0010669120240806100732.3820161024d1967 |0itac50 baitaIT|||| |||||Potere ed azione nell'antico diritto romanoRaimondo SantoroPalermoTip. S. Montaina1967566 p.24 cmEstratto da: Annali del Sem. giuridico di Palermo, v. 30Biblioteca LauriaIT-IT-CE0105 CONSBL.900M.813/SLPPalermoVANL000013SantoroRaimondoVANV080609268076MontainaVANV112148650ITSOL20240906RICABIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZAIT-CE0105VAN00VAN00106691BIBLIOTECA DEL DIPARTIMENTO DI GIURISPRUDENZA00CONS BL.900M.813 00BL 4863 SLP 20161024 Biblioteca LauriaPotere ed azione nell'antico diritto romano807990UNICAMPANIA05836nam 2200805Ia 450 991082020780332120200520144314.097866122583439781282258341128225834697800809594290080959423(CKB)1000000000798781(EBL)534968(OCoLC)635293076(SSID)ssj0000386353(PQKBManifestationID)11321554(PQKBTitleCode)TC0000386353(PQKBWorkID)10389601(PQKB)10045030(Au-PeEL)EBL534968(CaPaEBR)ebr10378862(CaONFJC)MIL225834(CaSebORM)9780123749574(MiAaPQ)EBC534968(PPN)178028789(OCoLC)801817391(OCoLC)ocn801817391 (ScCtBLL)8637498c-bc39-46f9-90f6-073c004b9f66(OCoLC)1000324764(EXLCZ)99100000000079878120090803d2009 uy 0engur|n|---|||||txtccrPrinciples of computer system design an introduction /Jerome H. Saltzer, M. Frans Kaashoek1st editionAmsterdam ;London Elsevier/Morgan Kaufmannc20091 online resource (561 p.)Description based upon print version of record.9780123749574 0123749573 Includes bibliographical references and index.Front Cover; Half Title Page; Title Page; Copyright Page; Dedication Page; Table of Contents; List of Sidebars; Preface; Where to find Part II and other On-line Materials; Acknowledgments; Chapter 1. Systems; Overview; 1.1 Systems and Complexity; 1.1.1 Common Problems of Systems in Many Fields; 1.1.2 Systems, Components, Interfaces, and Environments; 1.1.3 Complexity; 1.2 Sources of Complexity; 1.2.1 Cascading and Interacting Requirements; 1.2.2 Maintaining High Utilization; 1.3 Coping with Complexity I; 1.3.1 Modularity; 1.3.2 Abstraction; 1.3.3 Layering; 1.3.4 Hierarchy1.3.5 Putting it Back Together: Names make Connections1.4 Computer Systems are the Same but Different; 1.4.1 Computer Systems have no Nearby Bounds on Composition; 1.4.2 d(technology)/dt is Unprecedented; 1.5 Coping with Complexity II; 1.5.1 Why Modularity, Abstraction, Layering, and Hierarchy aren't Enough; 1.5.2 Iteration; 1.5.3 Keep it Simple; What the Rest of this Book is About; Exercises; Chapter 2. Elements of Computer System Organization; Overview; 2.1 The Three Fundamental Abstractions; 2.1.1 Memory; 2.1.2 Interpreters; 2.1.3 Communication Links; 2.2 Naming in Computer Systems2.2.1 The Naming Model2.2.2 Default and Explicit Context References; 2.2.3 Path Names, Naming Networks, and Recursive Name Resolution; 2.2.4 Multiple Lookup: Searching through Layered Contexts; 2.2.5 Comparing Names; 2.2.6 Name Discovery; 2.3 Organizing Computer Systems with Names and Layers; 2.3.1 A Hardware Layer: The Bus; 2.3.2 A Software Layer: The File Abstraction; 2.4 Looking Back and Ahead; 2.5 Case Study: UNIX® File System Layering and Naming; 2.5.1 Application Programming Interface for the UNIX File System; 2.5.2 The Block Layer; 2.5.3 The File Layer; 2.5.4 The Inode Number Layer2.5.5 The File Name Layer2.5.6 The Path Name Layer; 2.5.7 Links; 2.5.8 Renaming; 2.5.9 The Absolute Path Name Layer; 2.5.10 The Symbolic Link Layer; 2.5.11 Implementing the File System API; 2.5.12 The Shell and Implied Contexts, Search Paths, and Name Discovery; 2.5.13 Suggestions for Further Reading; Exercises; Chapter 3. The Design of Naming Schemes; Overview; 3.1 Considerations in the Design of Naming Schemes; 3.1.1 Modular Sharing; 3.1.2 Metadata and Name Overloading; 3.1.3 Addresses: Names that Locate Objects; 3.1.4 Generating Unique Names; 3.1.5 Intended Audience and User-Friendly Names3.1.6 Relative Lifetimes of Names, Values, and Bindings3.1.7 Looking Back and Ahead: Names are a Basic System Component; 3.2 Case Study: The Uniform Resource Locator (URL); 3.2.1 Surfing as a Referential Experience; Name Discovery; 3.2.2 Interpretation of the URL; 3.2.3 URL Case Sensitivity; 3.2.4 Wrong Context References for a Partial URL; 3.2.5 Overloading of Names in URLs; 3.3 War Stories: Pathologies in the Use of Names; 3.3.1 A Name Collision Eliminates Smiling Faces; 3.3.2 Fragile Names from Overloading, and a Market Solution3.3.3 More Fragile Names from Overloading, with Market DisruptionThis text identifies, examines, and illustrates fundamental concepts in computer system design that are common across operating systems, networks, database systems, distributed systems, programming languages, software engineering, security, fault tolerance, and architecture. Through carefully analyzed case studies from each of these disciplines, it demonstrates how to apply these concepts to tackle practical system design problems. To support the focus on design, the text identifies and explains abstractions that have proven successful in practice such as, remote procedure call, clientComputersDesignComputer architectureComputer organizationSoftware engineeringComputersDesign.Computer architecture.Computer organization.Software engineering.005.1Saltzer J. H.1939-1603823Kaashoek Frans1965-1603824MiAaPQMiAaPQMiAaPQBOOK9910820207803321Principles of computer system design3928382UNINA