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author | Thomas Schwinge <thomas@schwinge.name> | 2010-11-25 11:55:21 +0100 |
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committer | Thomas Schwinge <thomas@schwinge.name> | 2010-11-25 11:55:21 +0100 |
commit | 1e67a761cbfa94a69cec2f5709d23d7983cd0fc1 (patch) | |
tree | 0ae6ccf8bc14c0d171cff97c94de6a28c8b417d0 /open_issues/benefits_of_a_native_hurd_implementation.mdwn | |
parent | 31a442c4b59c41eb6aa15b6a66af93955b302c62 (diff) | |
download | web-1e67a761cbfa94a69cec2f5709d23d7983cd0fc1.tar.gz web-1e67a761cbfa94a69cec2f5709d23d7983cd0fc1.tar.bz2 web-1e67a761cbfa94a69cec2f5709d23d7983cd0fc1.zip |
Talk about advantages, challenges, how many developers, why so few developers.
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diff --git a/open_issues/benefits_of_a_native_hurd_implementation.mdwn b/open_issues/benefits_of_a_native_hurd_implementation.mdwn new file mode 100644 index 00000000..34e49e86 --- /dev/null +++ b/open_issues/benefits_of_a_native_hurd_implementation.mdwn @@ -0,0 +1,87 @@ +[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2010 Free Software Foundation, Inc."]] + +[[!meta license="""[[!toggle id="license" text="GFDL 1.2+"]][[!toggleable +id="license" text="Permission is granted to copy, distribute and/or modify this +document under the terms of the GNU Free Documentation License, Version 1.2 or +any later version published by the Free Software Foundation; with no Invariant +Sections, no Front-Cover Texts, and no Back-Cover Texts. A copy of the license +is included in the section entitled [[GNU Free Documentation +License|/fdl]]."]]"""]] + +[[!tag open_issue_documentation]] + +What are the benefits of a native GNU/Hurd system, now that Linux et al. can do +so much? Think [[hurd/translator]]s: FUSE, [[hurd/subhurd]]s: User-Mode-Linux +and other virtualization techiques, and so on. + +It is possible to begin [[implementing_Hurd_on_top_of_another_system]], but... + +IRC, #hurd, August / September 2010 + + <marcusb> ArneBab: but Neal and I were not happy with that alone. We were + looking for deeper improvements to the system, for, I think, sound + reasons. That is what brought us to the L4/Coyotos technologies + <marcusb> ArneBab: as you are writing a kernel in user space, you can still + do kernel improvements there + <marcusb> ArneBab: if you take it very far, you end up with a kernel that + runs Linux in user space (just flip the two) for the drivers + <marcusb> ArneBab: that is what the L4 people did with the DDE + +([[DDE]]) + + <marcusb> ArneBab: so, with these different cuts, there are different + opportunities. on the one end, you can run Linux as normal and get some + of the Hurd features such as translators in some programs. At the other + end, you can do whatever you want and run some linux code for the drivers + or none at all. + <marcusb> ArneBab: one of the big questions then becomes: at which point + can the advantages offered by the Hurd be realized? + <marcusb> ArneBab: and that's not entirely clear to me + <marcusb> when I worked on this with Neal, we pushed further and further + into need-to-change-everything land + <marcusb> while the current efforts on the Hurd seem to be more equivalent + to the could-run-it-in-userspace-on-top-of-Linux camp + <ArneBab> marcusb: for that I think we need a way to move towards them step + by step. Would it be possible to get the advantages of better resource + allocation with a Viengoos in userspace, too? + <ArneBab> and when that is stable, just switch over? + <marcusb> ArneBab: I don't know. I suspect these people will know before + us: http://lxc.sourceforge.net/ + <ArneBab> something like implementing flip points: flip Linux with Hurd to + Hund with Linux. Flip Mach with L4 to L4 with Mach. + <ArneBab> lxc sounds interesting. + <marcusb> note that these efforts address security concerns more than other + concerns + <marcusb> so they will get isolation long before sharing is even considered + <marcusb> but some of the issues are the same + <marcusb> once you allow malware to do what it wants, it's a small step to + also allow the user to what he wants :) + <ArneBab> it kinda looks like hacking it where it doesn’t really fit again… + <ArneBab> there I ask myself when the point comes that doing a cleaner + design offsets the popularity + <ArneBab> they are pushing more and more stuff into userspace + <ArneBab> which is a good thing (to me) + <ArneBab> it’s hard to clearly describe how, but even though I like having + more stuff in userspace, the way it is bolted onto Linux doesn’t feel + good for me. + <ArneBab> FUSE is cool, but if I use it, I am at a disadvantage compared to + a non-fuse user + <ArneBab> while in the Hurd, these additional options are on eqal footing. + <marcusb> ArneBab: are they pushing more and more into user space? I don't + think so. I see more of the reverse, actually + <marcusb> or maybe both + <ArneBab> FUSE, lxd and scheduling in userspace move to userspace + <ArneBab> well, KMS moved to the kernel + <ArneBab> to avoid flickering when switching between X and the console? + <ArneBab> marcusb: Do you experience FUSE lxc and such being secondclass in + Linux, too, or is that just a strange feeling of me? + <ArneBab> marcusb: and that splits the users into those who can get stuff + into the kernel and those who can only work in userspace – which I don’t + really like. + <ArneBab> That’s one more advantage of the Hurd: eqal footing for all + (except the Mach hackers, but they have a very limited terrain) + <marcusb> ArneBab: but UML kernel module is minimal, and Linus didn't have + a principled objection to it (but just wanted a more general solution) + <marcusb> ArneBab: as a side note, although people keep complaining, the + linux kernel seems to be growing steadily, so getting stuff into the + kernel doesn't seem too hard. 8-O |