Xnu, and 'L4BSD'
R. Tyler Ballance
tyler at tamu.edu
Wed May 10 13:29:54 UTC 2006
All this recent microkernel talk has finally hit another mailing list
i'm on (l4ka at ira.uka.de) regarding a possible "L4BSD" (https://
lists.ira.uni-karlsruhe.de/pipermail/l4ka/2006-May/001603.html) and
this has brought up an interesting question for me.
L4Linux exists, but it seems to be more of a means for testing out
and developing the L4 microkernel, but would there be any practical
reason to sandbox the FreeBSD kernel and force it to run as a user-
land service on top of the L4::Pistachio kernel? (for example)
Would this be an effective place to start in terms of pulling off an
in-between kernel much like Darwin's Xnu kernel?
I can forsee plausible long term goals that would make such a project
worthwhile, such as eventually moving device drivers out of the
kernel (FreeBSD's that is) along with other bits and pieces, and
eventually morphing it into some middle-ground best-of-both worlds
kernel, but if you remove the eventually move into a Xnu-like setup,
is there a definite benefit that can be reaped from such a project?
Does such a project contain any merit besides the obvious education
aspect of it? (And the incessant need to kill time :))
Cheers,
-R. Tyler Ballance
p.s. I'm not a kernel hacker, but I do aspire to be one eventually,
just so I can stop arguing about the color of the bikeshed :)
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