Race condition

Race condition

A race condition is a bug in an electronics, software, or other system where the behavior of the system depends on the sequence or timing of uncontrollable events. It was first used in 1954 and can occur in logic circuits, multithreaded, or distributed software programs.

3 courses cover this concept

CS 110: Principles of Computer Systems

Stanford University

Winter 2022

CS 110 delves into advanced computer systems and program construction, focusing on designing large systems, software that spans multiple machines, and parallel computing. This course builds upon CS107 and requires good knowledge of C, C++, Unix, GDB, Valgrind, and Make. It covers Linux filesystems, multiprocessing, threading, networking, and more.

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CS 131: Fundamentals of Computer Systems

Brown University

Spring 2020

This course delves deep into the foundational principles behind computer systems, ranging from hardware intricacies to the vast global internet. Students gain insights into systems programming, the architecture of computer systems, concurrency, and the dynamics of distributed systems. Notably, the curriculum includes projects that offer hands-on experience, like building library functions, creating a toy OS, and designing a scalable key-value storage service. It's a stepping stone to advanced courses like Distributed Systems, Databases, and Computer Systems Security.

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CSCI 0300: Fundamentals of Computer Systems

Brown University

Spring 2023

Introductory course covering computer system fundamentals including machine organization, systems programming in C/C++, operating systems concepts, isolation, security, virtualization, concurrency, and distributed systems. Projects involve implementing core OS functionality.

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