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Next: Important parts of the Up: Overview of a Linux Previous: Overview of a Linux
Various parts of an operating system
A UNIX operating system consists of a kernel and some
system programs. There are also some application
programs for doing work. The kernel is the heart of the operating
system The system programs use the tools provided by the kernel to implement the various services required from an operating system. System programs, and all other programs, run `on top of the kernel', in what is called the user mode. The difference between system and application programs is one of intent: applications are intended for getting useful things done (or for playing, if it happens to be a game), whereas system programs are needed to get the system working. A word processor is an application; telnet is a system program. The difference is often somewhat blurry, however, and is important only to compulsive categorizers. An operating system can also contain compilers and their corresponding libraries (GCC and the C library in particular under Linux), although not all programming languages need be part of the operating system. Documentation, and sometimes even games, can also be part of it. Traditionally, the operating system has been defined by the contents of the installation tape or disks; with Linux it is not as clear since it is spread all over the FTP sites of the world.
Next Up Previous Contents Index Next: Important parts of the Up: Overview of a Linux Previous: Overview of a Linux Lars Wirzenius Sat Nov 15 02:32:11 EET 1997 |
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