Sebastopol, CA--If you're one of the many Unix developers drawn to Mac
OS X for its BSD core, you'll find yourself in surprisingly unfamiliar
territory. Even if you're an experienced Mac user, Mac OS X is unlike
earlier Macs, and it's radically different from the Unix you've used
before, too.
Enter Mac OS X for Unix Geeks (O'Reilly, US $24.95) by Brian Jepson
and Ernest E. Rothman, two Unix geeks who found themselves in the same
place as many others. Their new book is the guide to figuring out the
BSD Unix system and Mac-specific components that can make life
difficult for newcomers and help them into the Unix inside Mac OS X.
This concise book includes such topics as:
- A quick overview of the Terminal application
- Understanding Open Directory (LDAP) and NetInfo
- Issues related to using the GNU C Compiler 9GCC
- Library linking and porting Unix software
- An overview of Mac OS X's filesystem and startup processes
- Creating and installing packages using Fink
- Building the Darwin kernel
- Running X Windows on top of Mac OS X
The book wraps up with a quick manpage-style reference to the "Missing
Manual Pages"--commands that come with Mac OS X although there are no
manpages.
Unix users who find themselves disoriented by the new Mac environment
will discover that "Mac OS X for Unix Geeks" acclimates them quickly to
the familiar, yet foreign, Unix landscape.
Additional resources:
Mac OS X for Unix Geeks
Brian Jepson & Ernest E. Rothman
ISBN 0-596-00356-0, 198 pages, $24.95 (US), $38.95 (CAN)
order@oreilly.com
1-800-998-9938; 1-707-827-7000
About O'Reilly
O'Reilly & Associates is the premier information source for
leading-edge computer technologies. The company's books, conferences,
and web sites bring to light the knowledge of technology innovators.
O'Reilly books, known for the animals on their covers, occupy a
treasured place on the shelves of the developers building the next
generation of software. O'Reilly conferences and summits bring alpha
geeks and forward-thinking business leaders together to shape the
revolutionary ideas that spark new industries. From the Internet to
XML, open source, .NET, Java, and web services, O'Reilly puts
technologies on the map.