Microsoft has started developing a version of it Sysinternals for Linux, with a complete application already available for them developers at GitHub.
Microsoft's turn to the Linux world has grown significantly over the last two years, which was unthinkable at the time of Steve Ballmer, who considered the open-source cancer cell software.
The Windows Subsystem for Linux, which allows developers to run Linux distributions from within the Windows 10, is a living proof that the company wants to bring two different ecosystems together.
The next step for this purpose seems to be a version of Sysinternals for Linux.
So the company's developers have already started working on the appcase ProcDump στο Linux. Όσοι από τους προγραμματιστές επιθυμούν να δοκιμάσουν το νέο εγχείρημα, μπορούν να κατεβάσουν το packet directly from GitHub.
ProcDump for Linux redefines the classic ProcDump tool from Windows Sysinternals toolkit. ProcDump provides a convenient way to create core dumps for developers who develop Linux applications.
To run ProcDump on Linux, devs should have the distributions: Ubuntu 14.04 LTS, Mageia 6, Fedora 26, or Red Hat Enterprise Linux / CentOS 7 and the gdb 7.6.1 and zlib packages.
Microsoft reports that it is already testing the porting of the tool on other Linux distributions.
__________________________
- Windows 10 with enhanced search functionality
- Windows 10: Faster systems with an asterisk
- Windows 10 October 2018 Update comes a second time
- UWP Windows allow hackers to empty you hard
- Microsoft: Padlock in the Hotfix service
- GitHub Microsoft approval of the European Commission