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[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2011 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]]."]]"""]]
<!--
[[!meta date="2011-07-19 23:42 UTC"]]
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A quarter of the Hurd, Q2 of 2011, PS: *GNU Hurd Truths and Rumors*.
[[!if test="included()" then="""[[!toggle id=full_news
text="Details."]][[!toggleable id=full_news text="[[!paste id=full_news]]"]]"""
else="
[[!paste id=full_news]]"]]
[[!cut id="full_news" text="""
After our last *[[Quarter of the Hurd|2011-q2]]* has been picked up by a bunch
of news sites, blogs, and so on, discussions have been running all over the
net. While we are happy to see that there obviously is quite some interest in
the GNU Hurd, we also saw some rumors and outdated information flowing around.
In the following, we try to clear the situation up a bit.
* *Debian wants to replace the Linux kernel with the GNU Hurd*. {X}
**Wrong**. We plan to get into Wheezy as an additional port besides
GNU/Linux and GNU/kFreeBSD -- but we don't know whether we will make it.
It depends on a lot of factors, a lot of work is still to be done. If you
want to help, please see our [[contributing]] page and the *to do* list
maintained on <http://wiki.debian.org/Debian_GNU/Hurd>.
* *GNU Hurd developers want the Linux kernel to die*. {X} **Wrong**. All of
us are happy users of the Linux kernel, every day, and GNU/Linux is the
free operating system of choice, which we're using ourselves (unless
sitting in front of a GNU/Hurd system). We don’t work on the GNU Hurd due
to any hatred against the Linux kernel or even Linus; we work on it because
of the [[additional capabilities and clean design|advantages]] that it
provides.
* *Java support for GNU/Hurd is in the works*. (./) **True**. Jérémie
Koenig is working on making a versatile Java programming environment
available on the GNU/Hurd as part of his [[Google Summer of Code
project|user/jkoenig/java]], focussing on OpenJDK 7. Also, we already do
have support by the GCJ/ECJ platform, but this is not fully functional, and
Jérémie is improving that, too.
* *GNU/Hurd has no support for X.org*. {X} **Wrong**. X.Org *does* work,
and has for a long time. (Anyone remember [1998's
XFree86](http://cvsweb.xfree86.org/cvsweb/xc/programs/Xserver/hw/xfree86/os-support/hurd/hurd_video.c?rev=1.1&content-type=text/vnd.viewcvs-markup),
by chance?) It is correct however that not a lot of advanced drivers work,
due to missing DRM (Direct Rendering Manager) support.
[[tschwinge]] thinks that the following one is a bit questionable...
* *The GNU/Hurd only runs on legacy hardware*. {X} **Wrong**. The GNU/Hurd
is only tested on a few platforms, but it likely runs on modern processors.
If you want to see if it works for you, just test a
[[hurd/running/Live_CD]].
* *Hurd only supports legacy devices:* ½ Partly True: Currently most drivers are from Linux 2.0. For network cards, Linux 2.6+ drivers are available through DDE, though (needs manual setup for now). With a good amount of work, DDE also allows porting other classes of drivers to allow using the drivers from recent Linux releases — and push them into userspace.
* *The Hurd has no SMP:* <u>✔ **True**</u>: Even though the **Hurd servers support SMP** and **GNU Mach has SMP support**. But the latter [[does_not_yet_have_drivers_for_nowadays_chipsets|faq/smp]], so the Hurd currently can’t take advantage of multiple cores.
* *Developing a microkernel must be harder than developing a monolithic kernel, because the Hurd took so long:* ✘ **Wrong**: For the last decade, the Hurd had on average 5 hobby developers. That these developers managed to get the Hurd into a state where it actually gets not too far from the Linux kernel in performance — which has about 1000 developers, many of them full time — shows the efficiency of the Hurd’s design.
* *Installation does not work:* ½ Partly True: Did you read the [[README|http://people.debian.org/~sthibault/hurd-i386/installer/cdimage/YES_REALLY_README.txt]] ([[file|http://xkcd.com/293/]])? Just like any beta piece of software, there are known pitfalls which you could easily avoid (or better, help to fix). You can also simply use the the [[preinstalled image|http://people.debian.org/~sthibault/hurd-i386/debian-hurd.img.tar.gz]].
* *The system is called GNU/GNU Hurd:* ✘ **Wrong**: The GNU userland (glibc, coreutils, …) and the GNU Hurd together form the GNU system. To avoid being mistaken for GNU/Linux, we normally use the name GNU/Hurd or GNU Hurd. The *correct* name is simply GNU.
**Test results**
The results of the test from Phoronix were quite good. We expected that the microkernel design of the Hurd would have a far more severe performance hit.
Some possible explanations:
* The tests were mostly CPU bound.
* IPCs [are no more such a problem on recent hardware][ipc].
And a non-explanation:
* The emulation layer should rather make the context switches worse, so it’s likely not at play.
[ipc]: http://citeseer.ist.psu.edu/viewdoc/summary?doi=10.1.1.51.16
"""]]
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and phoronix did some [performance tests of the Hurd][phorperf],
[phorperf]: http://www.phoronix.com/scan.php?page=article&item=debian_gnu_hurd&num=1
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