The
term IPC (Inter-Process Communication) describes various ways by which
different process running on some operating system communicate between each
other. Various schemes available are as follows:
Pipes:
One-way communication scheme through which different
process can communicate. The problem is that the two processes should have a
common ancestor (parent-child relationship). However this problem was fixed
with the introduction of named-pipes (FIFO).
Message Queues :
Message queues can be used between related and unrelated
processes running on a machine.
Shared Memory:
This is the fastest of all IPC schemes. The memory to be
shared is mapped into the address space of the processes (that are sharing).
The speed achieved is attributed to the fact that there is no kernel
involvement. But this scheme needs synchronization.
Various forms of synchronisation are
mutexes, condition-variables, read-write locks, record-locks, and semaphores.
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