(A book that I might eventually write!)
Gary Bernhardt
I imagine each of these chapters being about 2,000 words, making the whole book about the size of a small novel. For comparison, articles in large papers like the New York Times average about 1,200 words. Each topic gets whatever level of detail I can fit into that space. For simple topics, that's a lot of space: I can probably walk through a very basic, but working, implementation of the IP protocol. More subtle topics will get less detail: for RSA, maybe I'd (1) give a rough sketch of the number theory, (2) show that we can treat arbitrarily large byte arrays as numbers, and (3) say "combine them in the obvious way".
- Computing by changing: Turing machines
- Computing by constructing: lambda calculus
- Turing equivalence and the Church-Turing thesis
- Limits of computation: the halting problem and computability
- Languages for computers: the chomsky hierarchy
- Computers are made of rocks: transistors, logic gates, and adders
- Processors: registers, fetch-decode-execute, pipelines
- Memory: memory hierachy and the MMU
- Spinning rust: HDDs and SSDs
- Isolating computations: processes
- Ordering computations: CPU scheduling
- Kernel space vs. user space: system calls; memory allocation
- Interfacing to the world: drivers and HALs
- Addressing computers: IP
- Fire-and-forget: UDP
- Reliable delivery: TCP
- Wiring computers together: Ethernet
- Email: SMTP
- The web: HTTP
- Domain names: DNS
- The workhorses of modern cryptography: hash functions
- One key: symmetric cryptography
- Two keys: public key cryptography
- Centralized data integrity: the relational model and normalization
- Integrity with clusters of perfect computers: two-phase commit
- Decentralized integrity with unreliable computers: eventual consistency and CRDTs
- The first decentralized network: Gnutella
- The highest-volume application protocol: BitTorrent
- Distributed, high-performance, resilient data storage: Kademlia
- Consensus between untrusted parties: Block chains
- Attempts at omni-protocols: CORBA, COM, WS-*
- Attempts at omni-virtual-machines: Parrot, JVM, ASM
- The three great programming languages: Lisp, ML, C
I wrote this index out in full in about an hour, along with a couple more sections not shown here. When I finished and read through it, I realized that most of it corresponds directly to the standard computer science curriculum. In order, the chapters correspond to these standard courses:
- Automata and computability (sometimes called "theoretical computer science")
- Computer architecture
- Operating systems
- Networks
- Networks again, sort of
- Cryptography
- Databases
- (No equivalent)
- (No equivalent)
Would love to read a book on this