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Hardcover Windows NT Device Driver Development Book

ISBN: 1578700582

ISBN13: 9781578700585

Windows NT Device Driver Development

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Format: Hardcover

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Book Overview

The awesome figure of Otto von Bismarck, the 'Iron Chancellor', dominated Europe in the late 19th century. His legendary political genius and ruthless will engineered Prussia's stunning defeat of the... This description may be from another edition of this product.

Customer Reviews

5 ratings

Excellent

This book is VERY well written and VERY readable. I needed other sources to get an actual driver written (see Chris Cant's book) but only because this book gives a much more complete picture and I needed something more specific. That's my point...if you want a good, solid understanding of the system and an excellent reference, get this book. It's not often one finds technical-minded people with such writing skill.

The best NT driver book I have got

Before this book, I have written several NT drivers based on DDK samples and another book from Art Baker. Although I could make my drivers work, there are many mysteries to me. It is a little frustrating experience, coz NT driver is much different from those old VxDs in Win95. This book is surprisingly clear. Chapter after Chapter, It is such a joy for me to get answers to some questions which perplexted me for a long time. :)Strongly recommended!David

The ultimate guide to NT device driver architechture.

I'm a Windows 95 device driver engineer making my way into the NT world. After much frustration trying to learn the NT device driver architecture in any quick manner on my own, I decided it was time to buy a book. The authors' explanations of the NT architecture are amazingly clear. Gradually each chapter builds on the previous unfolding the mysteries of NT. After each portion of information is presented to you, a real world example is shown, making confusion virtually impossible for the reader. I literally found myself asking a question then turning the page to see the answer presented to me as if on a platter. With precious time saving tips sprinkled throughout the book and a very clear layout, I highly recommend this to any beginner NT device driver author. I believe experts will find optimizations and tips very helpful as well as a great reference guide to keep by their side.

Before this book, you were out in the Zoo

Windows NT Device Driver Development (W3D) does an incredible job at explaining what is going on. Chapter by chapter (there are 24 chapters) a story unfolds explaining what events lead device drivers in Windows NT to run part of their code. Much detail covers what environment device drivers will find their code running in and how they should deliver things when handing over the next player. I found the core chapters of this book to be the most interesting. For the first time I was reading about NT, and getting a good feel for the flow of control. While much detail is being presented, care was taken to keep the discussion moving. Cleverly topics that could distract the readers the train of thought are postponed a page or two and then given full attention. Source code is mostly discussed after the principles have been covered, and the code is all well commented, but also clear enough to be read without comments. This book is an absolute must for anyone doing NT kernel programming or having a detailed interest in it. It is focussed on NT only and perhaps it is a pity that this wonderful discussion does not draw analogies with other operating systems, which often share similar principles. The clarity of the discussion is marvelous and enticing. Through the eyes of the masters, Windows NT appears to be a very interesting system.

A must have on any NT kernel developer's bookshelf

I began developing NT drivers during the NT 3.1 beta days and saw an immediate need for a book like this. I have been begging people to write this book for over 3 years. In those days the only place to get help was on Compuserve and guess who always responded to questions and provided valuable information for people delving into this new operating system. (The two authors) I am thrilled that the two best NT kernel developers I know found time and dedicated themselves to the task of writing this great book.This book is probably more important than any other technical programming book written to date. The reason is drivers can crash the computer and poorly written drivers do it on a regular basis. With Windows NT becoming the worldwide server operating system of choice it is very important that drivers work and work well. This book not only discusses all phases of driver development, but teaches the audience correct methods of developing robust drivers. In a matter of weeks you will learn techniques and kernel programming practices that normally take years to develop.The granularity of the book is well thought out and will serve the kernel programmer well. If you have been given the task of developing a bus master DMA driver simply turn to chapter 17 and you will learn more than you ever wanted to know about DMA with examples! If you just want to learn about how NT manages memory turn to Chapter 3.This book will become the de-facto standard for NT device driver development and must have on any serious developer's bookshelf. Technical Reviewer Mike Barry Sr. Vice President-Development/Engineering T/R Systems<br
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