Inside Microsoft Windows 2000, 3/e
David A. Solomon, Mark E. Russinovich, Mark Russinovich
- 出版商: MicroSoft
- 出版日期: 2000-09-16
- 售價: $2,010
- 貴賓價: 9.5 折 $1,910
- 語言: 英文
- 頁數: 600
- 裝訂: Hardcover
- ISBN: 0735610215
- ISBN-13: 9780735610217
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Description:
The comprehensive developer's guide to the Windows 2000 kernel
Master the inner workings of Microsoft’s premier operating system with this newly updated guide to the Microsoft® Windows® 2000 core architecture and internals. Written in partnership with the product development team and with full access to the Windows 2000 source code, INSIDE MICROSOFT WINDOWS 2000, THIRD EDITION, provides a detailed look beneath the surface of Windows 2000. It’s packed with the latest concepts and terms, kernel and source code specifics, undocumented interfaces, component and tool descriptions, and architectural perspectives that reveal the inner workings of Windows 2000. In short, it delivers all the minute details that developers need to debug code and to make better design decisions. Administrators also will find this book invaluable for understanding system performance and troubleshooting problems. Taking you deep inside Windows 2000, this book gives you:
• Valuable details on topics such as multiprocessor support, thread scheduling, interrupt handling, memory management, security, I/O processing, file system drivers, and file caching.
• New information about subjects such as the boot and shutdown processes, blue screen crashes, registry internals, Microsoft Win32® service internals, Windows Management Instrumentation (WMI), Address Windowing Extensions (AWE), Plug and Play, power management, the Windows Driver Model (WDM), storage architecture, NTFS enhancements, and networking.
• Hands-on experiments that demonstrate how to use the latest utilities to see the internal behavior of Windows 2000.
• Abundant insights that you can quickly apply for better design, debugging, performance, and troubleshooting
• Tools and documentation on CD-ROM, including LiveKd, a unique tool that allows you to use standard Microsoft kernel debuggers to examine internal information on a live system (that is, without a host computer or a null modem cable); tools and technical articles from Sysinternals (www.sysinternals.com); and a fully searchable electronic version of the book
Table of Contents:
Historical Perspective | xv |
Foreword | xvii |
Acknowledgments | xix |
Introduction | xxv |
CHAPTER ONE Concepts and Tools | 1 |
Foundation Concepts and Terms | 1 |
Win32 API | 2 |
Services, Functions, and Routines | 3 |
Processes, Threads, and Jobs | 4 |
Virtual Memory | 7 |
Kernel Mode vs. User Mode | 9 |
Objects and Handles | 14 |
Security | 15 |
Registry | 16 |
Unicode | 17 |
Digging into Windows 2000 Internals | 17 |
Tools on the Companion CD | 19 |
Performance Tool | 20 |
Windows 2000 Support Tools | 20 |
Windows 2000 Resource Kits | 21 |
Kernel Debugging Tools | 21 |
Platform Software Development Kit (SDK) | 24 |
Device Driver Kit (DDK) | 24 |
Systems Internals Tools | 25 |
CHAPTER TWO System Architecture | 27 |
Requirements and Design Goals | 27 |
Operating System Model | 30 |
Portability | 32 |
Symmetric Multiprocessing | 33 |
Scalability | 35 |
Architecture Overview | 35 |
Windows 2000 Product Packaging | 38 |
Checked Build | 41 |
Multiprocessor-Specific System Files | 42 |
Key System Components | 46 |
Environment Subsystems and Subsystem DLLs | 47 |
Ntdll.dll | 60 |
Executive | 60 |
Kernel | 63 |
Hardware Abstraction Layer | 66 |
Device Drivers | 67 |
Peering into Undocumented Interfaces | 71 |
System Processes | 74 |
CHAPTER THREE System Mechanisms | 89 |
Trap Dispatching | 89 |
Interrupt Dispatching | 91 |
Exception Dispatching | 113 |
System Service Dispatching | 121 |
Object Manager | 125 |
Executive Objects | 128 |
Object Structure | 130 |
Synchronization | 153 |
Kernel Synchronization | 154 |
Executive Synchronization | 158 |
System Worker Threads | 165 |
Windows 2000 Global Flags | 168 |
Local Procedure Calls (LPCs) | 171 |
CHAPTER FOUR Startup and Shutdown | 177 |
Boot Process | 177 |
Preboot | 177 |
The Boot Sector and Ntldr | 180 |
Initializing the Kernel and Executive Subsystems | 190 |
Smss, Csrss, and Winlogon | 194 |
Safe Mode | 196 |
Driver Loading in Safe Mode | 197 |
Safe-Mode-Aware User Programs | 199 |
Boot Logging in Safe Mode | 200 |
Recovery Console | 201 |
Shutdown | 204 |
System Crashes | 206 |
Why Does Windows 2000 Crash? | 206 |
The Blue Screen | 207 |
Crash Dump Files | 210 |
CHAPTER FIVE Management Mechanisms | 215 |
The Registry | 215 |
Registry Data Types | 216 |
Registry Logical Structure | 217 |
Registry Internals | 224 |
Services | 236 |
Service Applications | 237 |
Service Accounts | 244 |
The Service Control Manager | 247 |
Service Startup | 251 |
Startup Errors | 255 |
Accepting the Boot and Last Known Good | 256 |
Service Failures | 258 |
Service Shutdown | 259 |
Shared Service Processes | 260 |
Service Control Programs | 264 |
Windows Management Instrumentation | 265 |
WMI Architecture | 266 |
Providers | 268 |
The Common Information Model and the Managed Object Format Language | 269 |
The WMI Namespace | 272 |
Class Association | 273 |
WMI Implementation | 275 |
WMI Security | 275 |
CHAPTER SIX Processes, Threads, and Jobs | 277 |
Process Internals | 277 |
Data Structures | 277 |
Kernel Variables | 293 |
Performance Counters | 293 |
Relevant Functions | 294 |
Relevant Tools | 295 |
Flow of CreateProcess | 304 |
Stage 1: Opening the Image to Be Executed | 306 |
Stage 2: Creating the Windows 2000 Executive Process Object | 309 |
Stage 3: Creating the Initial Thread and Its Stack and Context | 314 |
Stage 4: Notifying the Win32 Subsystem About the New Process | 314 |
Stage 5: Starting Execution of the Initial Thread | 316 |
Stage 6: Performing Process Initialization in the Context of the New Process | 316 |
Thread Internals | 317 |
Data Structures | 317 |
Kernel Variables | 329 |
Performance Counters | 329 |
Relevant Functions | 330 |
Relevant Tools | 331 |
Flow of CreateThread | 333 |
Thread Scheduling | 337 |
Overview of Windows 2000 Scheduling | 337 |
Priority Levels | 341 |
Win32 Scheduling APIs | 343 |
Relevant Tools | 344 |
Real-Time Priorities | 346 |
Interrupt Levels vs. Priority Levels | 347 |
Thread States | 348 |
Quantum | 349 |
Scheduling Data Structures | 353 |
Scheduling Scenarios | 355 |
Context Switching | 359 |
Idle Thread | 359 |
Priority Boosts | 360 |
Job Objects | 374 |
CHAPTER SEVEN Memory Management | 379 |
Memory Manager Components | 380 |
Configuring the Memory Manager | 382 |
Examining Memory Usage | 385 |
Services the Memory Manager Provides | 389 |
Reserving and Committing Pages | 390 |
Locking Memory | 392 |
Allocation Granularity | 392 |
Shared Memory and Mapped Files | 393 |
Protecting Memory | 395 |
Copy-on-Write | 398 |
Heap Functions | 400 |
Address Windowing Extensions | 401 |
System Memory Pools | 403 |
Look-Aside Lists | 411 |
Driver Verifier | 413 |
Address Space Layout | 417 |
User Address Space Layout | 420 |
System Address Space Layout | 424 |
Address Translation | 429 |
Translating a Virtual Address | 431 |
Page Directories | 433 |
Process and System Page Tables | 435 |
Page Table Entries | 436 |
Byte Within Page | 438 |
Translation Look-Aside Buffer | 439 |
Physical Address Extension | 442 |
Page Fault Handling | 443 |
Invalid PTEs | 445 |
Prototype PTEs | 446 |
In-Paging I/O | 448 |
Collided Page Faults | 449 |
Page Files | 450 |
Virtual Address Descriptors | 452 |
Working Sets | 455 |
Paging Policies | 455 |
Working Set Management | 457 |
Balance Set Manager and Swapper | 462 |
System Working Set | 463 |
Page Frame Number Database | 465 |
Page List Dynamics | 469 |
Modified Page Writer | 472 |
PFN Data Structures | 474 |
Section Objects | 478 |
CHAPTER EIGHT Security | 487 |
Security Ratings | 487 |
Security System Components | 490 |
Protecting Objects | 494 |
Access Checks | 494 |
Security Identifiers | 497 |
Tokens | 499 |
Impersonation | 504 |
Restricted Tokens | 506 |
Security Descriptors and Access Control | 507 |
Security Auditing | 515 |
Logon | 521 |
Winlogon Initialization | 522 |
User Logon Steps | 523 |
CHAPTER NINE I/O System | 527 |
Design Goals | 527 |
I/O System Components | 528 |
The I/O Manager | 531 |
Device Drivers | 532 |
The Plug and Play (PnP) Manager | 541 |
The Power Manager | 546 |
I/O Data Structures | 553 |
File Objects | 554 |
Driver Objects and Device Objects | 556 |
I/O Request Packets | 562 |
I/O Completion Ports | 570 |
Driver Loading, Initialization, and Installation | 573 |
The Start Value | 574 |
Device Enumeration | 575 |
Devnodes | 579 |
Devnode Driver Loading | 581 |
Driver Installation | 583 |
I/O Processing | 586 |
Types of I/O | 587 |
I/O Request to a Single-Layered Driver | 590 |
I/O Requests to Layered Drivers | 597 |
I/O Completion Port Operation | 602 |
Synchronization | 604 |
CHAPTER TEN Storage Management | 607 |
The Evolution of Windows 2000 Storage | 607 |
Partitioning | 609 |
Basic Partitioning | 610 |
Dynamic Partitioning | 611 |
Storage Drivers | 617 |
Disk Drivers | 618 |
Device Naming | 619 |
Basic Disk Management | 620 |
Dynamic Disk Management | 621 |
Disk Performance Monitoring | 624 |
Multipartition Volume Management | 624 |
Spanned Volumes | 625 |
Striped Volumes | 626 |
Mirrored Volumes | 627 |
RAID-5 Volumes | 630 |
Volume I/O Operations | 632 |
The Volume Namespace | 634 |
The Mount Manager | 634 |
Mount Points | 636 |
Volume Mounting | 639 |
CHAPTER ELEVEN Cache Manager | 645 |
Key Features of the Windows 2000 Cache Manager | 645 |
Single, Centralized System Cache | 646 |
The Memory Manager | 646 |
Cache Coherency | 647 |
Virtual Block Caching | 649 |
Stream-Based Caching | 650 |
Recoverable File System Support | 650 |
Cache Structure | 651 |
Cache Size | 654 |
Cache Virtual Size | 654 |
Cache Physical Size | 655 |
Cache Data Structures | 659 |
Systemwide Cache Data Structures | 660 |
Per-File Cache Data Structures | 661 |
Cache Operation | 665 |
Write-Back Caching and Lazy Writing | 665 |
Intelligent Read-Ahead | 669 |
System Threads | 671 |
Fast I/O | 672 |
Cache Support Routines | 675 |
Copying to and from the Cache | 675 |
Caching with the Mapping and Pinning Interfaces | 677 |
Caching with the Direct Memory Access Interfaces | 679 |
Write Throttling | 680 |
CHAPTER TWELVE File Systems | 683 |
Windows 2000 File System Formats | 684 |
CDFS | 685 |
UDF | 685 |
FAT12, FAT16, and FAT32 | 685 |
NTFS | 689 |
File System Driver Architecture | 690 |
Local FSDs | 690 |
Remote FSDs | 692 |
File System Operation | 694 |
NTFS Design Goals and Features | 700 |
High-End File System Requirements | 700 |
Advanced Features of NTFS | 702 |
NTFS File System Driver | 713 |
NTFS On-Disk Structure |
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