| Updated: October 28, 2024 | 
This guide will help you create a resource manager, a process that registers a name in the filesystem name space, which other processes then use to communicate with the resource manager.
The following table may help you find information quickly:
| For information about: | Go to: | 
|---|---|
| What a resource manager is, and when you would—and wouldn't—use one | What Is a Resource Manager? | 
| The overall structure of a resource manager | The Bones of a Resource Manager | 
| Adding some meat to the basic structure | Fleshing Out the Skeleton | 
| Data structures that the POSIX-layer routines use, and how to add your own data to them | POSIX-Layer Data Structures | 
| Reading and writing data | Handling Read and Write Messages | 
| Atomic operations | Combine Messages | 
| Handling other types of messages | Handling Other Messages | 
| Unblocking clients because of signals, timeouts, and closed file descriptors, and handling interrupts | Unblocking Clients and Handling Interrupts | 
| Handling more than one message at once | Multithreaded Resource Managers | 
| Taking over a directory | Filesystem Resource Managers | 
| Terms used in QNX Neutrino docs | Glossary | 
For another perspective on resource managers, see the Resource Managers chapter of Getting Started with QNX Neutrino. In particular, this chapter includes a summary of the handlers for the connect and I/O messages that a resource manager will receive; see Alphabetical listing of connect and I/O functions in it.
For information about programming in the QNX Neutrino RTOS, see Getting Started with QNX Neutrino and the QNX Neutrino Programmer's Guide.