1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
231
232
233
234
235
236
237
238
239
240
241
242
243
244
245
246
247
248
249
250
251
252
253
254
255
256
257
258
259
260
261
262
263
264
265
266
267
268
269
270
271
272
273
274
275
276
277
278
279
280
281
282
283
284
285
286
287
288
289
290
291
292
293
294
295
296
297
298
299
300
301
302
303
304
305
306
307
308
309
310
311
312
313
314
315
316
317
318
319
320
321
322
323
324
325
326
327
328
329
330
331
332
333
334
335
336
337
338
339
340
341
342
343
344
345
346
347
348
349
350
351
352
353
354
355
356
357
358
359
360
361
362
363
364
365
366
367
368
369
370
371
372
373
374
375
376
377
378
379
380
381
382
383
384
385
386
387
388
389
390
391
392
393
394
395
396
397
398
399
400
401
402
403
404
405
406
407
408
409
410
411
412
413
414
415
416
417
418
419
420
421
422
423
424
425
426
427
428
429
430
431
432
433
434
435
436
437
438
439
440
441
442
443
444
445
446
447
448
449
450
451
452
453
454
455
456
457
458
459
460
461
462
463
464
465
466
467
468
469
470
471
472
473
474
475
476
477
478
479
480
481
482
483
484
485
486
487
488
489
490
491
492
493
494
495
496
497
498
499
500
501
502
503
504
505
506
507
508
509
510
511
512
513
514
515
516
517
518
519
520
521
522
523
524
525
526
527
528
529
530
531
532
533
534
535
536
537
538
539
540
541
542
543
544
545
546
547
548
549
550
551
552
553
554
555
556
557
558
559
560
561
562
563
564
565
566
567
568
569
570
571
572
573
574
575
576
577
578
579
580
581
582
583
584
585
586
587
588
589
590
591
592
593
594
595
596
597
598
599
600
601
602
603
604
605
606
607
608
609
610
611
612
613
614
615
616
617
618
619
620
621
622
623
624
625
626
627
628
629
630
631
632
633
634
635
636
637
638
639
640
641
642
643
644
645
646
647
648
649
650
651
|
[[!meta copyright="Copyright © 2010, 2011, 2012, 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_hurd open_issue_gnumach]]
[[General Information|/dde]].
Still waiting for interface finalization and proper integration.
[[!toc]]
See [[user-space_device_drivers]] for generic discussion related to user-space
device drivers.
# Disk Drivers
Not yet supported.
The plan is to use [[libstore_parted]] for accessing partitions.
# Upstream Status
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-08
After the microkernel devroom at [[community/meetings/FOSDEM_2012]]:
<antrik> there was quite some talk about DDE. I learnt that there are newer
versions in Genode and in Minix (as opposed to the DROPS one we are
using)
<antrik> but apparently none of the guys involved is interested in creating
a proper upstream project with central repository and communication
channels :-(
<antrik> the original DDE creator was also there, but said he isn't working
on it anymore
<tschwinge> OK, and the other two projects basically have their own forks.
<tschwinge> Or are they actively cooperating?
<tschwinge> (If you know about it.)
<antrik> well, Genode is also part of the Dresden L4 group; but apart from
that, I'd rather call it a fork...
<antrik> hm... actually, I'm not sure anymore whether the guy I talked to
was from Genode or Nova...
<antrik> (both from the Dresdem L4 group)
### IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-12
<antrik>
http://genode.org/documentation/release-notes/12.05#Re-approaching_the_Linux_device-driver_environment
<antrik> I wonder whether the very detailed explanation was prompted by our
DDE discussions at FOSDEM...
<pinotree> antrik: one could think about approaching them to develop the
common dde libs + dde_linux together
<antrik> pinotree: that's what I did at FOSDEM -- they weren't interested
<pinotree> antrik: this year's one? why weren't they?
<pinotree> maybe at that time dde was not integrated properly yet (netdde
is just few months "old")
<braunr> do you really consider it integrated properly ?
<pinotree> no, but a bit better than last year
<antrik> I don't see what our integration has to do with anything...
<antrik> they just prefer hacking thing ad-hoc than having some central
usptream
<pinotree> the helenos people?
<antrik> err... how did helenos come into the picture?...
<antrik> we are talking about genode
<pinotree> sorry, confused wrong microkernel OS
<antrik> actually, I don't remember exactly who said what; there were
people from genode there and from one or more other DDE projects... but
none of them seemed interested in a common DDE
<antrik> err... one or two other L4 projects
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-19
<youpi> antrik: do we know exactly which DDE version Zheng Da took as a
base ?
<youpi> (so as to be able to merge new changes easily)
<antrik> youpi: not sure... but from what I gathered at FOSDEM, the version
he based on (from DROPS) is not really actively developed right now; if
we want to go for newer versions, we probably have to look at other
projects (like Genode or Nova or Minix)
<youpi> there's no central project for dde ?
<youpi> that sucks
<antrik> no... and nobody seemed interested in having one :-(
<youpi> pff
<antrik> which makes me seriously question the original decision to build
on DDE...
<braunr> ..
<antrik> if we have to basically maintain it ourselfs anyways, we could
just as well have gone with custom glue
<youpi> well, the advantage of DDE is that it already exists now
<antrik> on the positive side, one of the projcets (not sure which)
apparently have both USB and SATA working with some variant of DDE
### IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-11-03
<mcsim> DrChaos: there is DDEUSB framework for L4. You could port it, if
you want. It uses Linux 2.6.26 usb subsystem.
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-02-15
After the microkernel devroom at [[community/meetings/FOSDEM_2013]].
<pinotree> youpi: speaking of dde, was there any will among other
microkernel os developers to eventually develop one single dde (with
every team handling the custom glue of the own kernel)?
<youpi> well, there is still upstream dde actually
<youpi> in dresden
<youpi> nothing was really decided or anything (it was a round table, not a
workgroup)
<youpi> but conversation converged into sharing the DDE maintenance, yes
<youpi> and dresden would be the logical central place
<youpi> pb is that they don't have the habit of being very open
<youpi> http://svn.tudos.org/repos/oc/tudos/trunk/l4/pkg/dde has a recent
enough version
<youpi> which macsim confirmed having all the latest commits from the
internal repository
<pinotree> i see
<youpi> so it seems a viable solution on the medium term
<youpi> the long term might need a real visible open source project
<youpi> but we should probably still keep basing on dresden work
<youpi> (better take work being done anywhere)
<pinotree> well, if the upstream is not really open, microkernel teams
could just fork it and all work on it
<youpi> that's what I mean
<pinotree> should still be a win than everybody maintaining their own dde
<youpi> sure
<pinotree> ah yes, i was writing and i'm slow at it :)
<youpi> but at least we can try to work with dresden
<youpi> see how open they could become by just asking :)
<pinotree> right
# IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2012-02-15
<pinotree> i have no idea how the dde system works
<youpi> gnumach patch to provide access to physical memory and interrupts
<youpi> then userland accesses i/o ports by hand to drive things
<youpi> but that assumes that no kernel driver is interfering
<youpi> so one has to disable kernel drivers
<pinotree> how are dde drivers used? can they be loaded on their own
automatically, or you have to settrans yourself to setup a device?
<youpi> there's no autoloader for now
<youpi> we'd need a bus arbitrer that'd do autoprobing
[[PCI_arbiter]].
<pinotree> i see
<pinotree> (you see i'm not really that low level, so pardon the flood of
posssibly-noobish questions ;) )
<youpi> I haven't set it up yet, but IIRC you need to specify which driver
to be used
<youpi> well, I mostly have the same questions actually :)
<youpi> I just have some guesswork here :)
<pinotree> i wonder whether the following could be feasible:
<youpi> I'm wondering how we'll manage to make it work in d-i
<pinotree> a) you create a package which would b-d on linux-source, build a
selection of (network only for now) drivers and install them in
/hurd/dde/
<youpi> probably through a choice at the boot menu
<youpi> I wouldn't dare depending on linux-source
<youpi> dde is usually not up-to-date
<pinotree> b) add a small utility over the actual fsys_settrans() which
would pick the driver from /hurd/dde/
<pinotree> ... so you could do `set-dde-driver b43 <device>` (or something
like that)
<youpi> we can provide something like b) yes
<youpi> although documenting the settrans should be fine enough ;)
<pinotree> the a) would help/ease with the fact that you need to compile on
your own the drivers
<pinotree> otherwise we would need to create a new linux-dde-sources-X.Y.Z
only with the sources of the drivers we want from linux X.Y.Z
<pinotree> (or hurd-dde-linux-X.Y.Z)
<CIA-4> samuel.thibault * raccdec3 gnumach/debian/ (changelog
patches/70_dde.patch patches/series):
<CIA-4> Add DDE experimental support
<CIA-4> * debian/patches/70_dde.patch: Add experimental support for irq
passing and
<CIA-4> physical memory allocation for DDE. Also adds nonetdev boot
parameter to
<CIA-4> disable network device drivers.
<youpi> ok, boots fine with the additional nonetdev option
<youpi> now I need to try that dde hurd branch :)
<CIA-4> samuel.thibault * rf8b9426 gnumach/debian/patches/70_dde.patch: Add
experimental.defs to gnuamch-dev
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-19
* youpi got dde almost working
<youpi> it's able to send packets, but apparently not receive them
<youpi> (e1000)
<youpi> ok, rtl8139 works
<youpi> antrik: the wiki instructions are correct
<youpi> with e1000 I haven't investigated
<antrik> (Archhurd guys also reported problems with e1000 IIRC... the one I
built a while back works fine though on my T40p with real e1000 NIC)
<antrik> maybe I should try with current versions... something might got
broken by later changes :-(
<youpi> at least testing could tell the changeset which breaks it
<youpi> Mmm, it's very odd
<youpi> with the debian package, pfinet's call to device_set_filter returns
D_INVALID_OPERATION
<youpi> and indeed devnode.c returns that
<youpi> ah but it's libmachdev which is supposed to answer here
<antrik> youpi: so, regarding the failing device_set_filter... I guess you
are using some wrong combination of gnumach and pfinet
<youpi> no it's actually that my pfinet was not using bpf
<youpi> I've now fixed it
<antrik> the DDE drivers rely on zhengda's modified pfinet, which uses
devnode, but also switched to using proper BPF filters. so you also need
his BPF additions/fixes in gnumach
<antrik> OK
<youpi> that's the latter
<youpi> I had already fixed the devnode part
<youpi> but hadn't seen that the filter was different
<antrik> err... did I say gnumach? that of course doesn't come into play
here
<antrik> so yes, you just need a pfinet using BPF
<youpi> libmachdev does ;)
<antrik> I'm just using pfinet from zhengda's DDE branch... I think devnode
and BPF are the only modifications
<youpi> there's also a libpcap modification in the incubator
<youpi> probably for tcpdump etc.
<antrik> libpcap is used by the modified pfinet to compile the filter rule
<youpi> why does pfinet need to compile the rule ?
<youpi> it's libbpf which is used in the dde driver
<antrik> it doesn't strictly need to... but I guess zhengda considered it
more elegant to put the source rule in pfinet on compile it live, rather
than the compiled blob
<antrik> I probably discussed this with him myself a few years back... but
my memory on this is rather hazy ;-)
<antrik> err... and compile it live
<youpi> ah, right, it's only used when asking pfinet to change its filter
<youpi> but it does not need it for the default filter
<youpi> which is hardcoded
<antrik> I see
<antrik> when would pfinet change its filter?
* youpi now completely converting his hurd box to debian packages with dde
support
<youpi> on SIOCSIFADDR apparently
<youpi> to set "arp or (ip host %s)",
<antrik> well, that sounds like the default filter...
<youpi> the default filter does not choose an IP
<antrik> oh, right... pfinet has to readjust the filter when setting the IP
<youpi> arg we lack support for kernel options for gnumach in update-grub
<antrik> again, I have a vague recollection of discussing this
* youpi crosses fingers
<youpi> yay, works
<antrik> so we *do* need libpcap in pfinet to set proper rules... though I
guess it can also work with a static catchall rule (like it did before
zhengda's changes), only less efficient
<youpi> well in the past we were already catching everything anyway, so at
least it's not a regression :)
<antrik> right
# [[PCI_Arbiter]]
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-21
<youpi> since all drivers need is interrupts, io ports and iomem
<youpi> the latter was already available through /dev/mem
<youpi> io ports through the i386 rpcs
<youpi> the changes provide both interrupts, and physical-contiguous
allocation
<youpi> it should be way enough
<braunr> youpi: ok
<braunr> youpi: thanks for the details :)
<antrik> braunr: this was mentioned in the context of the interrupt
forwarding interface... the original one implemented by zhengda isn't
suitable for a PCI server; but the ones proposed by youpi and tschwinge
would work
<antrik> same for the physical memory interface: the current implementation
doesn't allow delegation; but I already said that it's wrong
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-20
<youpi> I was a bit wary of including the ton of dde headers in hurd-dev
<youpi> maybe adding another package for that
<youpi> but that would have delayed introducing the dde binaries
<youpi> probably we can do that for next upload
<pinotree> i can try to work on it, if is feasible (ie if the dde drivers
can currently be built from outside the hurd source tree)
<youpi> it should be, it's a matter of pointing its makefile to a place
where the make scripts and include headers are
<youpi> (and the libraries)
<pinotree> ok
<antrik> youpi: you mean DDEKit headers?
<antrik> pinotree: actually it doesn't matter where the dde-ified Linux
drivers are built -- libdde_linux26 and the actual drivers use a
completetly different build system anyways
<antrik> in fact we concluded at some point that they should live in a
separate repository -- but that change never happened
<antrik> only the base stuff (ddekit, libmachdev etc.) belong in the Hurd
source tree
<youpi> antrik: yes
<youpi> antrik: err, not really completely different
<youpi> the actual drivers' Makefile include the libdde_linux26 mk files
<youpi> the build itself is separate, though
<antrik> youpi: yes, I mean both libdde_linux26 and the drivers use a build
system that is completely distinct from the Hurd one
<youpi> ah, yes
<youpi> libdde_linux26 should however be shipped in the system
<antrik> ideally libdde_linux26 and all the drivers should be built in one
go I'd say...
<youpi> it should be easily feasible to also have a separate driver too
<youpi> e.g. to quickly try a 2.6 driver
<antrik> youpi: I'm not sure about that. it's not even dynamically linked
IIRC?...
<youpi> with scripts to build it
<youpi> it's not
<youpi> but that doesn't mean it can't be separate
<youpi> .a files are usually shipped in -dev packages
<antrik> youpi: ideally we should try to come with a build system that
reuses the original Linux makefile snippets to build all the drivers
automatically without any manual per-driver work
<youpi> there's usually no modification of the drivers themselves?
<youpi> but yeah
<youpi> "ideally", when somebody takes the time to do it
<antrik> unfortunately, it's necessary to include one particular
Hurd/DDE-specific header file in each driver :-(
<youpi> can't it be done through gcc's -include option?
<antrik> zhengda didn't find a way to avoid this... though I still hope
that it must be possible somehow
<antrik> I think the problem is that it has to be included *after* the
other Linux headers. don't remember the details though
<youpi> uh
<youpi> well, a good script can add a line after the last occurrence of
#include
<antrik> yeah... rather hacky, but might work
<youpi> even with a bit of grep, tail, cut, and sed it should work :)
<antrik> note that this is Hurd-specific; the L4 guys didn't need that
<youpi> what is it?
<antrik> don't remember off-hand
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-22
<youpi> antrik: AIUI, it should be possible to include all network drivers
in just one binary?
<youpi> that'd permit to use it in d-i
<youpi> and completely replace the mach drivers
<youpi> we just need to make sure to include at least what the mach drivers
cover
<youpi> (all DDE network drivers, I mean)
<youpi> of course that doesn't hinder from people to carefully separate
drivers in several binaries if they wish
<youpi> antrik: it does link at least, I'll give a try later
<youpi> yes it works!
<youpi> that looks like a plan
<youpi> throw all network drivers in a /hurd/dde_net
<youpi> settrans it on /dev/dde_net, and settrans devnode on /dev/eth[0-9]
<youpi> I'm also uploading a version of hurd which includes headers &
libraries, so you just need a make in dde_{e100,e1000,etc,net}
<youpi> (uploading it with the dde driver itself :) )
<youpi> btw, a nice thing is that we don't really care that all drivers are
stuffed into a single binary, since it's a normal process only the useful
pages are mapped and actually take memory :)
<Tekk_> is that really a nice thing though? compared to other systems I
mean
<Tekk_> I know on linux it only loads the modules I need, for example. It's
definitely a step up for hurd though :D
<youpi> that's actually precisely what I mean
<youpi> you don't need to load only the modules you need
<youpi> you just load them all
<youpi> and paging eliminates automatically what's not useful
<youpi> even parts of the driver that your device will not need
<Tekk_> ooh
<Tekk_> awesome
<youpi> (actually, it's not even loaded, but the pci tables of the drivers
are loaded, then paged out)
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-24
<youpi> antrik_: about the #include <ddekit/timer.h>, I see the issue, it's
about jiffies
<youpi> it wouldn't be a very good thing to have a jiffies variable which
we'd have to update 100times per second
<youpi> so ZhengDa preferred to make jiffies a macro which calls a function
which reads the mapped time
[[Mapped-time_interface|microkernel/mach/gnumach/interface/device/time]].
<youpi> however, that break any use of the work "jiffies", e.g. structure
members & such
<youpi> actually it's not only after headers that the #include has to be
done, but after any code what uses the word "jiffies" for something else
than the variable
<youpi> pb is: it has to be done *before* any code that uses the word
"jiffies" for the variable, e.g. inline functions in headers
<youpi> in l4dde, there's already the jiffies variable so it's not a
problem
# IRC, OFTC, #debian-hurd, 2012-02-27
<tschwinge> I plan to do some light performance testing w.r.t. DDE
Ethernet. That is DDE vs. Mach, etc.
<youpi> that'd be good, indeed
<youpi> I'm getting 4MiB/s with dde
<youpi> I don't remember with mach
<tschwinge> Yes. It just shouldn't regress too much.
<tschwinge> Aha, OK.
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-02-27
<youpi> tschwinge: nttcp tells me ~80Mbps for mach-rtl8139, ~72Mbps for
dde-rtl8139, ~72Mbps for dde-e1000
<youpi> civodul: ↑ btw
<ArneBab> youpi: so the dde network device is not much slower than the
kernel-one?
<civodul> youpi: yes, looks good
<ArneBab> rather almost the same speed
<youpi> apparently
<ArneBab> that’s quite a deal.
<ArneBab> what speed should it have as maximum?
<ArneBab> (means: does the mach version get out all that’s possible?)
<ArneBab> differently put: What speed would GNU/Linux get?
<youpi> I'm checking that right now
<ArneBab> cool!
<ArneBab> we need those numbers for the moth after the next
<youpi> Mmm, I'm not sure you really want the linux number :)
<youpi> 1.6Gbps :)
<ArneBab> oh…
<youpi> let me check with udp rather than tcp
<ArneBab> so the Hurd is a “tiny bit” worse at using the network…
<youpi> it might simply be an issue with tcp tuning in pfinet
<ArneBab> hm, yes
<ArneBab> tcp is not that cheap
<ArneBab> and has some pretty advanced stuff for getting to high speeds
<youpi> well, I'm not thinking about being cheap
<youpi> but using more recent tuning
<youpi> that does not believe only 1Mbps network cards exist :)
<ArneBab> like adaptive windows and such?
<ArneBab> :)
<youpi> yes
* ArneBab remembers that TCP was invented when the connections went over
phone lines - by audio :)
<youpi> yep
<ArneBab> what’s the system load while doing the test?
<youpi> yes, udp seems not so bad
<ArneBab> ah, cool!
<youpi> it's very variable (300-3000Mbps), but like on linux
<ArneBab> that pushing it into user space has so low cost is pretty nice.
* ArneBab thinks that that’s a point where Hurd pays off
<youpi> that's actually what AST said to fosdem
<youpi> he doesn't care about putting an RPC for each and every port i/o
<youpi> because hardware is slow anyway
<ArneBab> jupp
<ArneBab> but it is important to see that in real life
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-04-01
<youpi> antrik: I wonder whether you could actually not route the IRQs to a
non-zero ring, AIUI you can in the x86 IDT table
<antrik> youpi: you mean having a userspace server for each (non-timer)
interrupt?
<antrik> youpi: how would a userspace IRQ handler interact with the
scheduler?
<youpi> antrik: it doesn't necessarily have to
<youpi> provided that it's trusted
<antrik> youpi: how would you do CPU time accounting if there is no
interaction with the scheduler?...
<youpi> antrik: you don't necessarily want to care about it
<antrik> youpi: well, that would mean that all drivers handling interrupts
would have to be trusted to not use more than a very small part of CPU
time...
<youpi> yes
<youpi> which is usually needed for interrupt handlers anyway
<antrik> youpi: nah, the bottom handler only has to do very basic stuff;
afterwards, we can pass off to "normal" driver processes, scheduled just
like other processes... but that requires some interaction between the
IRQ handler and the scheduler I think
<youpi> the IRQ handler can wake up a thread, yes
<youpi> no need for anything special there
<antrik> so the userspace IRQ server would just decide what process to wake
up, and then call the scheduler to do a normal task switch? I guess
that's possible; but I'm not sure it would buy much...
<youpi> it would permit userland to quickly react to the IRQ
<youpi> such as acknowledge it to the hardware etc.
<antrik> yeah, but my point is that I don't see much benefit in having this
part of the code isolated in a userspace process... it has to be trusted
anyways, and it's pretty trivial too
<youpi> I never said it was a good idea
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-04-06
<braunr> oh i forgot about my work on pcap
<braunr> is devnode (or devopen or whatever) in the upstream repository now
?
<antrik> can't say for sure, but I'd be surprised... don't remember seeing
any movement in that regard :-(
<braunr> wasn't it needed for dde ?
<antrik> hm... good point
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-09-20
<braunr> i should take some time to integrate my pcap changes into the
libpcap debian package at least
<pinotree> braunr: if upstream is active, i'd say to go there directly
<braunr> the problem with that approach is that netdde is still not part of
our upstream code
<pinotree> don't understand the relation
<braunr> i don't want to send the pcap guys code for an interface that is
still not considered upstream ...
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-14
<braunr> it's amazing how much code just gets reimplemented needlessly ...
<braunr> libddekit has its own mutex, condition, semaphore etc.. objects
<braunr> with the *exact* same comment about the dequeueing-on-timeout
problem found in libpthread
<braunr> *sigh*
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-18
<braunr> hum, leaks and potential deadlocks in libddekit/thread.c :/
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-18
<braunr> nice, dde relies on a race to start ..
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-21
In context of [[libpthread]].
<braunr> hm, i thought my pthreads patches introduced a deadlock, but
actually this one is present in the current upstream/debian code :/
<braunr> (the deadlock occurs when receiving data fast with sftp)
<braunr> either in netdde or pfinet
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-02-28
<braunr> (which needs the same kinds of fixes that libpthread got)
<braunr> actually i'm not sure why he didn't simply reuse the pthread
functions :/
<youpi> which kind of fixes?
<youpi> cancellation?
<braunr> timeouts
<braunr> cancellation too but that's less an issue
<youpi> I'm not sure it really needs timeout work
<youpi> on what RPC?
<youpi> pfinet is just using the mach interface
<braunr> i don't know but it clearly copies some of the previous pthread
code from pthread_cond_timedwait
<braunr> see libddekit/thread.c:_sem_timedwait_internal
<youpi> I recognize the comment indeed :)
<youpi> I guess he thought he might need some particular semantic that
libpthread may not provide
<braunr> also, now that i think about it, he couldn't have used libpthread,
could he ?
<braunr> and there was no condition_timedwait in cthreads
<braunr> there is a deadlock in netdde
<braunr> it occurs sometimes, at high network speeds
<braunr> (well high, 4 MiB/s or more)
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-11-20
<braunr> for example, netdde needs more reviewing and polishing
<braunr> it is known to deadlock sometimes
<teythoon> what deadlocks ?
<braunr> i'm not sure
<teythoon> ah, netdde
<teythoon> right
<braunr> yes
<teythoon> I'm seeing that to on one of my vms
<teythoon> nasty one
<braunr> i know something is wrong with the condition_wait_timeout function
for example
<teythoon> breaks sysvinit shutdown
<braunr> because it was taken without modification from libpthread
<braunr> it might be that, or something else
<teythoon> well, dhclient hangs releasing the lease
<braunr> that's still on my todo list
<teythoon> so I'm pretty sure it's related
<braunr> hm
<braunr> maybe
<braunr> :/
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2014-02-11
<braunr> teythoon: looks like a netdde/pfinet freeze/deadlock
<braunr> yes a netdde deadlock
<braunr> i really have to fix that too one day :(
<teythoon> hehe :)
<braunr> the netdde locking privimites are copies of the "old" pthread
ones, instead of reusing pthread
<braunr> primitives*
# IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-08-18
<braunr> hm looks like if netdde crashes, the kernel doesn't handle it
cleanly, and we can't attach another netdde instance
[[!message-id "877gu8klq3.fsf@kepler.schwinge.homeip.net"]]
# DDE for Filesystems
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2012-10-07
* pinotree wonders whether the dde layer could aldo theorically support
also file systems
<antrik> pinotree: yeah, I also brought up the idea of creating a DDE
extension or DDE-like wrapper for Linux filesystems a while back... don't
know enough about it though to decide whether it's doable
<antrik> OTOH, I'm not sure it would be worthwhile. we still should
probably have a native (not GPLv2-only) implementation for the main FS at
least; so the wrapper would only be for accessing external
partitions/media...
## IRC, freenode, #hurd, 2013-12-03
<gg0> how about porting linux block device layer via dde as mcsim wanted to
do? then all linux filesystems could be brought in, right?
<braunr> gg0: that should be done, but we need to correctly deal with
multiple pci devices in userspace and arbitration
<kilobug> wouldn't adding support to passive translator into Linux
filesystems be quite some work ? IIRC ext2fs needs a special "owner =
hurd" mode to handle them
# [[virtio]]
|