What is the technical difference between a process and a thread?
I get the feeling a word like \'process\' is overused and there are also hardware and software threa
Process:
Process is basically a program in execution. It is an active entity. Some operating systems use the term ‘task‘ to refer to a program that is being executed. A process is always stored in the main memory also termed as the primary memory or random access memory. Therefore, a process is termed as an active entity. It disappears if the machine is rebooted. Several process may be associated with a same program. On a multiprocessor system, multiple processes can be executed in parallel. On a uni-processor system, though true parallelism is not achieved, a process scheduling algorithm is applied and the processor is scheduled to execute each process one at a time yielding an illusion of concurrency. Example: Executing multiple instances of the ‘Calculator’ program. Each of the instances are termed as a process.
Thread:
A thread is a subset of the process. It is termed as a ‘lightweight process’, since it is similar to a real process but executes within the context of a process and shares the same resources allotted to the process by the kernel. Usually, a process has only one thread of control – one set of machine instructions executing at a time. A process may also be made up of multiple threads of execution that execute instructions concurrently. Multiple threads of control can exploit the true parallelism possible on multiprocessor systems. On a uni-processor system, a thread scheduling algorithm is applied and the processor is scheduled to run each thread one at a time. All the threads running within a process share the same address space, file descriptors, stack and other process related attributes. Since the threads of a process share the same memory, synchronizing the access to the shared data withing the process gains unprecedented importance.
ref-https://practice.geeksforgeeks.org/problems/difference-between-process-and-thread