Group - EXEC 2


  •  
     Related Videos

     Related Stages/ Members

Twitter Facebook In MS Digg Stumble Share Mail


Report Abuse    Group Type: wiki group   Moderator:

Status:  public   Videos: ( 0 )   Documents: ( 0 )  Comments: ( 0 )


Group-Members ( 0 )    




     Group description

EXEC 2 is an interpreted, command procedure control, computer programming language used by the EXEC 2 Processor supplied with the IBM Virtual Machine/Conversational Monitor System (VM/CMS) operating system. 



     Group Videos

No videos have been added jet. You may join this group and add yours now.


     Group Documents


No documents have been added jet. You may join this group and add yours now.


     Post a new comment

     Ongoing discussion


     Related Groups
EXEC 2
  • EXEC 2

  • EXEC 2 is an interpreted, command procedure control, computer programming language used by the EXEC 2 Processor supplied with the IBM Virtual Machine/Conversational Monitor System (VM/CMS) operating system.

Exec
CMS EXEC
  • CMS EXEC

  • CMS EXEC, or EXEC, is an interpreted, command procedure control, computer programming language used by the CMS EXEC Processor supplied with the IBM Virtual Machine/Conversational Monitor System (VM/CMS) operating system.

Exec (Amiga)
  • Exec (Amiga)

  • Exec is the object-oriented multi-tasking kernel of AmigaOS. It enabled true pre-emptive multitasking in as little as 256 kByte of free memory (as supplied with the first Amiga 1000s).

Backup Exec
  • Backup Exec

  • Backup Exec is proprietary backup software currently developed by Symantec. Backup Exec has a long history of being sold from one company to another.

Fork-exec
  • Fork-exec

  • Fork-exec is a commonly used technique in Unix whereby an executing process spawns a new program. fork() is the name of the system call that the parent process uses to "divide" itself ("fork") into two identical processes.

UNIVAC EXEC 8
  • UNIVAC EXEC 8

  • EXEC 8 (sometimes referred to as EXEC VIII) was UNIVAC's operating system developed for the UNIVAC 1108 in 1964. It combined the best features of the earlier operating systems: EXEC I and EXEC II (used on the UNIVAC 1107).

UNIVAC EXEC II
  • UNIVAC EXEC II

  • EXEC II was an operating system developed for the UNIVAC 1107 by Computer Sciences Corporation (CSC) while under contract to UNIVAC to develop the machine's COBOL compiler. They developed EXEC II because Univac's EXEC I operating system development was late.

UNIVAC EXEC I
  • UNIVAC EXEC I

  • EXEC I was UNIVAC's original operating system developed for the UNIVAC 1107.

Exec Shield
  • Exec Shield

  • Exec Shield is a project started at Red Hat, Inc in late 2002 with the aim of reducing the risk of worm or other automated remote attacks on Linux systems. The first result of the project was a security patch for the Linux kernel that emulates an NX bit on x86 CPUs that lack a native NX implementation in hardware.


     Related Documents
  • Interleaving Temporal Planning and Execution I XTE T- EXEC

  • Abstract: Execution control of plans is a very active domain of research, but remains a major challenge when performed on board real autonomous systems such as robots or satellites. In such a context, where execution concurrency, resources contention and environment dynamic characterize the domain, the use of a temporal planner and a temporal execution control system is desirable. This paper presents IXTE T- EXEC, a recent extension of the temporal planner IXTE T which allows execution control, plan repair, and replanning when necessary. This paper is a short version of [Lemai & Ingrand 2003].

  • EXEC: An Evolvable and eXtensible Environment for Collaboration

  • Abstract: Abstract This paper presents an evolvable and extensible environment for collaboration (EXEC), which aims to address the long-identified flexibility and reusability issues in collaborative systems. Due to the clean separation between data and control, both user interface components (data) and coordination service components (control) can be reused for developing collaborative applications and be flexibly bound at run time to address the evolutionary needs of collaboration tasks. Additionally, new collaboration tools can be easily prototyped to extend the functionality of the environment





























 

Powered free by PHPmotion