[[!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 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 ArneBab: as you are writing a kernel in user space, you can still do kernel improvements there 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 ArneBab: that is what the L4 people did with the DDE ([[DDE]]) 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. ArneBab: one of the big questions then becomes: at which point can the advantages offered by the Hurd be realized? ArneBab: and that's not entirely clear to me when I worked on this with Neal, we pushed further and further into need-to-change-everything land while the current efforts on the Hurd seem to be more equivalent to the could-run-it-in-userspace-on-top-of-Linux camp 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? and when that is stable, just switch over? ArneBab: I don't know. I suspect these people will know before us: http://lxc.sourceforge.net/ something like implementing flip points: flip Linux with Hurd to Hund with Linux. Flip Mach with L4 to L4 with Mach. lxc sounds interesting. note that these efforts address security concerns more than other concerns so they will get isolation long before sharing is even considered but some of the issues are the same once you allow malware to do what it wants, it's a small step to also allow the user to what he wants :) it kinda looks like hacking it where it doesn’t really fit again… there I ask myself when the point comes that doing a cleaner design offsets the popularity they are pushing more and more stuff into userspace which is a good thing (to me) 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. FUSE is cool, but if I use it, I am at a disadvantage compared to a non-fuse user while in the Hurd, these additional options are on eqal footing. ArneBab: are they pushing more and more into user space? I don't think so. I see more of the reverse, actually or maybe both FUSE, lxd and scheduling in userspace move to userspace well, KMS moved to the kernel to avoid flickering when switching between X and the console? marcusb: Do you experience FUSE lxc and such being secondclass in Linux, too, or is that just a strange feeling of me? 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. That’s one more advantage of the Hurd: eqal footing for all (except the Mach hackers, but they have a very limited terrain) ArneBab: but UML kernel module is minimal, and Linus didn't have a principled objection to it (but just wanted a more general solution) 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 --- IRC, #hurd, 2010-12-28 but is monolithic so bad? yep no it's not proof: it works very well for most people [...] the real problem is extensibility and interfaces :/ whats the huge advantage of micro-k extensibility over? you can add a whole lot of new services for new purposes with new interfaces without changing the kernel oright it basically boils down to the original Unix idea: everything does one thing well [...] well, I would say extensibility and fault-tolerance are the two key advantages taht's a side effect there are fault taulerant monolithic kernels [...] tolerant* and the hurd is for now a non fault-tolerant microkernel based OS :/ [...] braunr: not really; you can't ensure fault tolerance for code running in kernel space, code running in kernel space can do everything, including reboot, crash, ... [...] kilobug: right, a monolithick kernel is less folt-tolerant than a well designed/implemented microkernel based os braunr: well, the Hurd is buggy nowadays, but things like an ext2fs translator doing a segfault and being restarted is a fault-tolerance that would be almost impossible to have in Linux braunr: sure, you can have fault-tolerance with FUSE, but FUSE is applying micro-kernel paradigm to Linux [...] the reason i don't care that much about fault tolerance is that Linux obviously shows a monolithic kernel can run almost flawlessly if well written but extensibility is really another matter