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authorArne Babenhauserheide <arne_bab@web.de>2011-05-15 19:57:07 +0200
committerArne Babenhauserheide <arne_bab@web.de>2011-05-15 19:57:07 +0200
commit95f023476ebef492561da1eaa51feb9c7d0b0a20 (patch)
tree23e78ed3ee87db6b981760869c166fbc1b3902fb /community
parentfc2c058b7fce23d3beddd7388ff08d8a21f8f92b (diff)
tech. adv.: standalone translators → easier sharing.
Diffstat (limited to 'community')
-rw-r--r--community/weblogs/ArneBab/technical-advantages-of-the-hurd.mdwn2
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diff --git a/community/weblogs/ArneBab/technical-advantages-of-the-hurd.mdwn b/community/weblogs/ArneBab/technical-advantages-of-the-hurd.mdwn
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--- a/community/weblogs/ArneBab/technical-advantages-of-the-hurd.mdwn
+++ b/community/weblogs/ArneBab/technical-advantages-of-the-hurd.mdwn
@@ -31,6 +31,8 @@ Also it adds POSIX compatibility to Mach (while still providing access to the ca
And then there are subhurds (essentially lightweight virtualization which allows cutting off processes from other processes without the overhead of creating a virtual machine for each process). But that’s an entire post of its own…
+And the fact that a translator is just a simple standalone program means that these can be shared and tested much more easily, opening up completely new options for lowlevel hacking, because it massively lowers the barrier of entry.
+
And then there is the possibility of subdividing memory management and using different microkernels (by porting the Hurd layer, as partly done in the NetBSD port), but that is purely academic right now (search for Viengoos to see what its about).