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[[meta copyright="Copyright © 2001, 2002, 2003, 2004, 2005, 2007, 2008, 2009
Free Software Foundation, Inc."]]
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[[meta title="Porting the Hurd to L4: Hurd/L4"]]
There was an effort to port the Hurd from [[microkernel/Mach]] to the
[[L4_microkernel_family|microkernel/L4]].
The idea of using L4 as a [[microkernel]] for a [[Hurd_system|hurd]] was
initially voiced in the [[Hurd_community|community]] by Okuji Yoshinori, who,
for discussing this purpose, created the [[mailing_lists/l4-hurd]] mailing list
in November 2000.
The project itself then was mostly lead by Marcus Brinkmann and Neal Walfield.
Even though there was progress -- see, for example, the
[[QEMU_image_for_L4|running/qemu/image_for_l4]] -- this port never reached a
releasable state. Eventually, a straight-forward port of the original Hurd's
design wasn't deemed feasible anymore by the developers, partly due to them not
cosidering L4 suitable for implementing a general-purpose operating system on
top of it, and because of deficiencies in the original Hurd's design, which
they discovered along their way. Read the [[critique]] and a
[[ng/position_paper]].
By now, the development of Hurd/L4 has stopped. However, Neal Walfield moved
on to working on a newly designed kernel called [[microkernel/viengoos]].
Over the years, a lot of discussion have been held on the
[[mailing_lists/l4-hurd]] mailing list, which today is still the right place
for [[next-generation_Hurd|ng]] discussions.
Development of Hurd/L4 was done in the `hurd-l4` module of the Hurd CVS
repository. The `doc` directory contains a design document that is worth
reading for anyone who wishes to learn more about Hurd/L4.
One goal of porting the Hurd to L4 was to make the Hurd independend of Mach
interfaces, to make it somewhat microkernel-agnostic.
Mach wasn't maintained by its original authors anymore, so switching to a
well-maintained current [[microkernel]] was expected to yield a more solid
foundation for a Hurd system than the decaying Mach design and implementation
was able to.
L4 being a second-generation [[microkernel]] was deemed to provide for a faster
system kernel implementation, especially in the time-critical [[IPC]] paths.
Also, as L4 was already implemented for a bunch of different architectures
(IA32, Alpha, MIPS; SMP), and the Hurd itself being rather archtecture-unaware,
it was expected to be able to easily support more platforms than with the
existing system.
A design upon the lean L4 kernel would finally have moved devices drivers out
of the kernel's [[TCB]].
One idea was to first introduce a Mach-on-L4 emulation layer, to easily get a
usable (though slow) Hurd-using-Mach-interfaces-on-L4 system, and then
gradually move the Hurd servers to use L4 intefaces rather than Mach ones.
Neal Walfield started the original Hurd/L4 port while at Karlsruhe in 2002. He
explains:
> My intention was to adapt the Hurd to exploit L4's concepts and intended
> [[design_pattern]]s; it was not to simply provide a Mach
> [[compatibility_layer]] on top of L4. When I left Karlsruhe, I no longer had
> access to [[microkernel/l4/Pistachio]] as I was unwilling to sign an NDA.
> Although the specification was available, the Karlsruhe group only [released
> their code in May
> 2003](https://lists.ira.uni-karlsruhe.de/pipermail/l4ka/2003-May/000345.html).
> Around this time, Marcus began hacking on Pistachio. He created a relatively
> complete run-time. I didn't really become involved again until the second
> half of 2004, after I complete by Bachelors degree.
> Before Marcus and I considered [[microkernel/Coyotos]], we had already
> rejected some parts of the Hurd's design. The
> [[microkernel/mach/gnumach/open_issues/resource_management_problems]] were
> what prompted me to look at L4. Also, some of the problems with
> [[translator]]s were already well-known to us. (For a more detailed
> description of the problems we have identified, see our [[critique]] in the
> 2007 July's SIGOPS OSR. We have also written a forward-looking
> [[ng/position_paper]].)
> We visited Jonathan Shapiro at Hopkins in January 2006. This resulted in a
> number of discussions, some quite influential, and not always in a way which
> aligned our position with that of Jonathan's. This was particularly true of
> a number of security issues.
A lange number of discussion threads can be found in the archives of the
[[mailing_lists/l4-hurd]] mailing list.
> Hurd-NG, as we originally called it, was an attempt to articulate the system
> that we had come to envision in terms of interfaces and description of the
> system's structure. The new name was selected, if I recall correctly, as it
> clearly wasn't the Hurd nor the Hurd based on L4.
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