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  1. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Dnotifydnotify - Wikipedia

    dnotify is a file system event monitor for the Linux kernel, one of the subfeatures of the fcntl call. It was introduced in the 2.4 kernel series. [1] It has been obsoleted by inotify, but will be retained for compatibility reasons.

  2. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Inotifyinotify - Wikipedia

    inotify (inode notify) is a Linux kernel subsystem created by John McCutchan, which monitors changes to the filesystem, and reports those changes to applications. It can be used to automatically update directory views, reload configuration files, log changes, backup, synchronize, and upload.

  3. 其他人也問了

    • Notification Layout
    • Special:Notifications Page
    • Messages on Your Talk Page
    • Mentions
    • Reverted Edits
    • Email Received
    • User Rights Changes
    • Failed Login Attempts
    • Welcome

    The most common notification types are all designed with the same pattern: 1. An icon floated on the left (on the right for right-to-left languages) 2. A circle floated on the right: 2.1. filled with blue if the notification is unread 2.2. white and circled of grey when read 3. Primary information: Notification title, in bold 4. Secondary informati...

    To find all your recent notifications, click on "All notifications" in the fly-out to go to the notifications page. On that page, all notifications are displayed by date. Your most recent notifications are listed first on this archive page. On Wikimedia wikis, that page also regroups cross-wiki notifications. All types of notifications below can be...

    Alerts—Received when a message is left on your user talk page. 1. Primary information: Message title. 2. Secondary information: 2.1. in case of a new message: who left the message, and on which page. Links directly to the message. 2.2. in case of multiple new messages or multiples replies, messages may be grouped ("six new messages on [that page]")...

    Alerts—Received when someone mentions you on a talk page. 1. Primary information: Who mentioned you, where, and about what. Linked to the page you are mentioned in. 2. Details: link to the user who mentioned you and the diff where you are mentioned. To mention another editor and trigger this notification for them, you need to: 1. Create a new comme...

    Alerts—Received when your edits are undone or rolled back. 1. Primary information: Who reverted you, and where. Links to the diff. 2. Details: link to the user who reverted you.

    Alerts—Received when someone emailed you through the wiki. 1. Primary information: Who emailed you. No link given for this information. 2. Details: link to the user who sent you this email. People can send you emails only if you have allowed this on your preferences.

    Alerts—Received when your user rights change. Doesn't include if it's automatic, like when you become autoconfirmed or extended confirmed. 1. Primary information: what has been changed, and by who. Links to Special:UserGroupRightspage. 2. Details: link to the user who changed your rights.

    Alerts—Received when someone attempted and failed to log in to your account. Multiple alerts are bundled into one for attempt from a new device/IP, but for a known device/IP, you get one alert for every 5 attempts. See the login notification documentationfor more information.

    Notices—Received when you have just created your account. 1. Primary information: Welcome! 2. Details: link to a welcome page as defined on the wiki configuration (MediaWiki:Notification-welcome-link).

  4. The device mapper is a framework provided by the Linux kernel for mapping physical block devices onto higher-level virtual block devices. It forms the foundation of the logical volume manager (LVM), software RAIDs and dm-crypt disk encryption, and offers additional features such as file system snapshots. [1]

  5. In computer science, read-copy-update (RCU) is a synchronization mechanism that avoids the use of lock primitives while multiple threads concurrently read and update elements that are linked through pointers and that belong to shared data structures (e.g., linked lists, trees, hash tables). [1]

  6. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › SystemTapSystemTap - Wikipedia

    In computing, SystemTap (stap) is a scripting language and tool for dynamically instrumenting running production Linux -based operating systems. System administrators can use SystemTap to extract, filter and summarize data in order to enable diagnosis of complex performance or functional problems.

  7. en.wikipedia.org › wiki › Talk:InotifyTalk:Inotify - Wikipedia

    About Wikipedia Contact us Donate Contribute Help Learn to edit Community portal Recent changes Upload file Search Search Appearance Create account Log in Personal tools Create account Log in Pages for logged out editors learn more Contributions Talk 3 ...