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author | https://me.yahoo.com/a/g3Ccalpj0NhN566pHbUl6i9QF0QEkrhlfPM-#b1c14 <diana@web> | 2015-02-16 20:08:03 +0100 |
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committer | GNU Hurd web pages engine <web-hurd@gnu.org> | 2015-02-16 20:08:03 +0100 |
commit | 95878586ec7611791f4001a4ee17abf943fae3c1 (patch) | |
tree | 847cf658ab3c3208a296202194b16a6550b243cf /open_issues/mach_migrating_threads.mdwn | |
parent | 8063426bf7848411b0ef3626d57be8cb4826715e (diff) | |
download | web-95878586ec7611791f4001a4ee17abf943fae3c1.tar.gz web-95878586ec7611791f4001a4ee17abf943fae3c1.tar.bz2 web-95878586ec7611791f4001a4ee17abf943fae3c1.zip |
rename open_issues.mdwn to service_solahart_jakarta_selatan__082122541663.mdwn
Diffstat (limited to 'open_issues/mach_migrating_threads.mdwn')
-rw-r--r-- | open_issues/mach_migrating_threads.mdwn | 118 |
1 files changed, 0 insertions, 118 deletions
diff --git a/open_issues/mach_migrating_threads.mdwn b/open_issues/mach_migrating_threads.mdwn deleted file mode 100644 index 16547838..00000000 --- a/open_issues/mach_migrating_threads.mdwn +++ /dev/null @@ -1,118 +0,0 @@ -[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2011, 2013, 2014 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_gnumach]] - -<http://www.brynosaurus.com/pub/os/thread-migrate.pdf> - - * [[microkernel/mach/memory_object/discussion]] - - * [[resource_management_problems]] - - -# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-08-13 - -In context of [[resource_management_problems]]. - - <braunr> and thread migration itself is something very confusing - <braunr> it's better to think of it as scheduling context inheritance - <teythoon> braunr: I read the paper I mentioned and then I wanted to find - the sources they modified - <teythoon> I failed - <teythoon> I hate scientific paper about software that fail to provide the - source code - <teythoon> that's not science imho b/c it's not reproducible - <braunr> i have some osf source code here - <braunr> i'll send it if you want - <teythoon> ah interesting - <braunr> but really, when you dive into it, thread migration is merely - scheduling context inheritance with kernel upcalls - <braunr> it's good - <teythoon> I searched for osf mach but google didn't turned up anything - <braunr> but it has nothing to do with resource accounting - <braunr> (well, it may hepl better account for cpu time actually) - <braunr> help* - <braunr> but that's all - <teythoon> why is that all? wouldn't that be transitive and could also be - used for i/o accounting? - <teythoon> also I tried to find alternative mach implementations - <teythoon> I wasn't terribly successful, and some sites are gone or - unmaintained for years :/ - <braunr> we don't need that for io accountin - <braunr> g - <braunr> thread migration is a kernel property - <braunr> on mach with userspace drivers, io isn't - <braunr> mach should only control cpu and memory - <braunr> and you though you can account physical memory, you can't transfer - virtual memory accounting from one task to another - <teythoon> yes, but once all of those resources can be accounted to the - thread initiating whatever it needs doing, shouldn't that be much easier? - <braunr> teythoon: it's not required for that - <braunr> teythoon: keep in mind userspace sees activations - <braunr> in a thread migration enabled kernel, activations are what we - usually call threads, and threads are scheduling contexts - <teythoon> braunr: ok, so TM is not required for accounting, but surely - it's a good thing to have, no? - <braunr> teythoon: it's required for cpu accounting only - <braunr> which is very important :) - <braunr> if you look carefully, you'll see hurd servers are what use most - cpu - <braunr> there is now easy way to know which application actually uses the - server - <braunr> i personally tend to think more and more that servers *should* - impersonate clients - <braunr> TM (or rather, scheduling context inheritance) is one step - <braunr> it's not enough exactly because it doesn't help with resource - accounting - <braunr> teythoon: - ftp://ftp.mklinux.org/pub/mklinux-pre-R1/SRPMS/sources/osfmk.tar.gz - - -# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-02 - -[[!taglink open_issue_documentation]]: move information to -[[microkernel/mach/history]]. - - <teythoon> braunr: btw, I just noticed lot's of #ifdef MIGRATING_THREADS in - gnumach, so there was some work being done in that direction? - <braunr> gnumach is a fork of mach4 - <braunr> at a stage whre migration was being worked on, yes - <teythoon> from what I've gathered, gnumach is the only surviving mach4 - fork, right? - <braunr> yes - <braunr> well - <braunr> the macos x version is probably one too - <braunr> i don't know - <teythoon> oh? I read that it was based on mach3 - <braunr> it is - <braunr> i can't tell how much of mach3 versus mach4 it has, and if it's - relevant at all - <teythoon> and the osfmach, was that also based on mach4? - <braunr> yes - <teythoon> ok, fair enough - <braunr> that's why i think macos x is based on it too - <braunr> i initially downloaded osfmach sources to see an example of how - thread migration was used from userspace - <braunr> and they do have a special threading library for that - - -# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-18 - - <teythoon> has anyone here ever tried to enable the thread migration bits - in gnumach to see where things break and how far that effort has been - taken ? - <braunr> without proper userspace support, i don't see how this could work - <teythoon> but is the kernel part finished or close to being finished ? - <braunr> no idea - <braunr> i don't think it is - <braunr> i didn't see much code related to that feature, and practically - none that looked like what the paper described - <braunr> some structures, but not used |