PCI Hot-Plug Specification Revision 1.0
The primary objective of this specification is to enable higher availability of file and application servers by standardizing key aspects of the process of removing and installing PCI adapter cards while the system is running. Although these same principles can be applied to desktop and portable systems using PCI buses, the operations described here target server platforms.
By Tom Christiansen and Nathan Torkington
ISBN 1-56592-243-3
First Edition, published August 1998.
(See the catalog page for this book.)
Search the text of Perl Cookbook.
Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Foreword
Preface
Chapter 1: Strings
Chapter 2: Numbers
Chapter 3: Dates and Times
Chapter 4: Arrays
Chapter 5: Hashes
Chapter 6: Pattern Matching
Chapter 7: File Access
Chapter 8: File Contents
Chapter 9: Directories
Chapter 10: Subroutines
Chapter 11: References and Records
Chapter 12: Packages, Libraries, and Modules
Chapter 13: Classes, Objects, and Ties
Chapter 14: Database Access
Chapter 15: User Interfaces
Chapter 16: process Management and Communication
Chapter 17: Sockets
Chapter 18: Internet Services
Chapter 19: CGI Programming
Chapter 20: Web Automation
Index
Colophon
by Randal L. Schwartz and Tom Phoenix
ISBN 0-596-00132-0
Third Edition, published July 2001.
(See the catalog page for this book.)
the text of Learning Perl, 3rd Edition.
Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Scalar Data
Chapter 3: Lists and Arrays
Chapter 4: Subroutines
Chapter 5: Hashes
Chapter 6: I/O Basics
Chapter 7: Concepts of Regular Expressions
Chapter 8: More About Regular Expressions
Chapter 9: Using Regular Expressions
Chapter 10: More Control Structures
Chapter 11: Filehandles and File Tests
Chapter 12: Directory Operations
Chapter 13: Manipulating Files and Directories
Chapter 14: process Management
Chapter 15: Strings and Sorting
Chapter 16: Simple Databases
Chapter 17: Some Advanced Perl Techniques
Appendix A: Exercise Answers
Appendix B: Beyond the Llama
Index
Colophon
by Randal L. Schwartz and Tom Phoenix
ISBN 0-596-00132-0
Third Edition, published July 2001.
(See the catalog page for this book.)
Learning Perl, 3rd Edition.
Table of Contents
Copyright Page
Preface
Chapter 1: Introduction
Chapter 2: Scalar Data
Chapter 3: Lists and Arrays
Chapter 4: Subroutines
Chapter 5: Hashes
Chapter 6: I/O Basics
Chapter 7: Concepts of Regular Expressions
Chapter 8: More About Regular Expressions
Chapter 9: Using Regular Expressions
Chapter 10: More Control Structures
Chapter 11: Filehandles and File Tests
Chapter 12: Directory Operations
Chapter 13: Manipulating Files and Directories
Chapter 14: process Management
Chapter 15: Strings and Sorting
Chapter 16: Simple Databases
Chapter 17: Some Advanced Perl Techniques
Appendix A: Exercise Answers
Appendix B: Beyond the Llama
Index
Colophon
This paper deals with the problem of speech enhancement when a
corrupted speech signal with an additive colored noise is the only
information available for processing. Kalman filtering is known as
an effective speech enhancement technique, in which speech signal
is usually modeled as autoregressive (AR) process and represented
in the state-space domain.
This lab exercise will introduce you to AccelDSP’s floating- to fixed-point conversion features. AccelDSP will automatically generate a fixed-point representation of a floating-point design. This process is controllable by using quantize directives.
We often get questions about how the deflate() and inflate() functions should be used. Users wonder when they should provide more input, when they should use more output, what to do with a Z_BUF_ERROR, how to make sure the process terminates properly, and so on. So for those who have read zlib.h (a few times), and would like further edification, below is an annotated example in C of simple routines to compress and decompress from an input file to an output file using deflate() and inflate() respectively. The annotations are interspersed between lines of the code. So please read between the lines. We hope this helps explain some of the intricacies of zlib.