Robert Love, Preemptible Kernel Maintainer Interviewed 183
Tom F writes: "LinuxDevices did an interesting interview with Robert Love, the maintainer of the Linux preemptible kernel along with MontaVista. It is an exciting read and has Robert's usual wit and insight."
On Moderation and the Future of /. (Score:1, Troll)
And so, I went soul-searching. I thought back on the other night and the bitchslapping rampage I went on in that thread. I thought of some of the very low UIDs whom I'd smacked down, I thought about the many user moderations that me and the other editors had unjustly overturned with our unlimited mod points. I considered the outcry, the suggestions that we were ignoring the will of our own community, that we were evading a subject that desperately needs discussing, that we were acting autocratically and making hypocrites of ourselves. All these things I pondered, and I pondered long and hard. And this is what I have to say:
Go away.
When me and Hemos began this site so long ago now, we were starry-eyed small-town lovers; young, naive, and drunk on the possibility that a real revolution of sorts might be on the horizon, and that it might involve small furry animals. And so we opened up our labour of love to the world, never suspecting that it would become even half of what it has become today. Things were good, for a time.
But things change. None of you could ever understand just what it feels like, and what it does to a man, to have such a large userbase grow up under your shoddy perl scripts. Unless it happens to you firsthand, you can never truly know. They say that power corrupts, and I am here to tell you that it is true. Once, I cared. I really did. But you people... you went from being individuals, from people I could care about and chat with on #slashdot, to becoming a giant formless mass.. a formless mass seperated into factions; an army of idiots filling my inbox with crap and my RAID array with drivel. Every thread now, I'm lucky if I can find a single comment that doesn't appear to be stamped down by a dim-witted cookie-cutter of a mind. Endless parrotting, pompous bullshit, and people so one-dimensional that it is frightening. I have a secret for you: I too believe that the absurdist noise and distraction of the 'trolls' is the most worthwhile part of slashdot these days. I don't care about anything anymore, save bukkake vids and the occasional good troll.
So then, why do me and my editors censor with an iron fist? Why do we stamp every bit of humour and joy left in this place out and try to make it more and more soullessly grey with each passing day? Because I don't want to have a dialogue with you fucking plebs about the deterioration of this site, I don't want to save it; I want this failed experiment to implode upon the weight of its users' own hypocrisy and hyperbole. You say this site should be a microcosm for the free and open society of the future? Don't you see that it already is? And you wonder why it stinks of shit...
It will continue as it has. The majority of you will come regardless of what we do. I could piss on your mothers and assfuck your fathers and you'd still come to stroke your egos and share your reactionary politics with the world and to waste countless more hours of your miserable days away. The arms-race will continue. You think a bit of mass -1 Offtopics is bad? Brotha you ain't seen nothin yet. The editors will continue to be my hand-picked squad of the biggest fucking assholes I can manage to dredge up. We will continue to ignore your whinging about censorship, indeed we will ramp it up, because we don't fucking care. There will be countless more stories about the latest lame yuppie toys, the latest minor kernel revision, "look what I found in subsection 123.23.1c of this license!", and all manner of other predictable crap for you to hurl your canned responses at and exercise your dogmas on. Katz will continue to offer you his unique brand of insight until the end of time. And we, as always, could care less what you think or want. Droids and trolls alike; you will all lap it up.
You were expecting some great revelation or commitment to reform to become of this? hohohoho... as if I give a damn about the silly dramas you fools generate out of bit-patterns slapping into my DB. I was troubled, but only because I cloaked my true opinions in silence and continued to play the role of naive otaku-boy and open-source ass-puppet. Because I wasn't being honest with myself or with all of you. Now I can speak the truth, and my soul is unburdened. You may now go back to wallowing in the shit; I'm off to blow my load in Hemos' pretty pink face.
Remember this: we are only a mirror.
Thank you.
Kernel Maintainer (Score:1, Interesting)
Obviously, you want someone that knows the kernel really well and can maintain every part of it.
BUT
Aren't you taking a good developer (who can maintain every part of the kernel) away from the newer versions of the kernel?
There are only so many developers, what happens if you run out?
Re:Kernel Maintainer (Score:4, Insightful)
That person doesn't exist, not even Linus knows every part of the kernel inside and out.
You have to trust the maintainers of their parts of the kernel because as good as Linus, Marcelo, Alan, etc are they can't know all the gotchas, etc of all the drivers and different kernel subsystems.
Aren't you taking a good developer (who can maintain every part of the kernel) away from the newer versions of the kernel?
They don't have to do it if they don't want to or don't have the time. But with Alan's recent want to not maintain 2.4.x so he can work on other things seems to say how much time is really required for the maintenance of a kernel tree.
There are only so many developers, what happens if you run out?
I highly doubt there will ever be that many currently maintained kernel versions.
Re:Kernel Maintainer (Score:3, Informative)
If the supply of Linux kernel developers runs out (as unlikely as that seems), then kernel developers get hired away from different kernels.
Seriously... there are folks who, for commercial reasons, need a lot of this work to be done; and a developer with real-time experience from a different UNIX kernel can familiarize with Linux within a reasonable amount of time.
For instance, quite a few of the folks MontaVista has hired to do kernel work come not from a Linux background but from working on other Unices -- one fellow we hired to work on preemptability originally did the same variety of thing for IRIX, IIRC.
Re:Kernel Maintainer (Score:2, Insightful)
Stability and code maintenance are just as important (or more important, in some cases) as new and exciting features. Work on older kernels isn't wasted -- any relevant fixes can be ported up to the devel version.
Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:1, Insightful)
Instead of making their own forks, Love, Cox and Torvalds *MUST* compromise, unless they want to doom Linux to the same marginalisation that BSD suffered due to excessive politics and infighting. Corporations are already being frightened away from Linux due to the diversity of distributions available; if this excessive diversity were to spread down to the very core of the operating system, the kernel, maintaining commercial software would exceed being just difficult and become almost impossible. We can't let this happen, or else Microsoft will eat us for lunch.
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:3, Informative)
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:2, Informative)
At the moment, yes (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:At the moment, yes (Score:3, Informative)
And right now Linus hasn't let this and several other patches into 2.5 officially becaues he's focusing on the bio changes and it's much harder to debug if you have multiple subsystem changes going on at once. And Linus also has shown interest in Ingo's new O(1) scheduler, which the preempt patches have only recently become compatible with.
You just can't win (Score:5, Insightful)
If you roll changes into a kernel and make it unstable, people say "OHMYGOD production kernel's not stable we will all DIE"
RTFA and lighten up. The patches are being considered for 2.5. They haven't been ruled out.
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:3, Informative)
>*BSD, with several mutually incompatible,
> infighting factions. We can't let this happen.
Where on Earth did you get this nonsense from? There are three open-source BSDs, each with a different focus. Admittedly a few OpenBSD and NetBSD developers aren't the best of chums, but most of the developers are happy to share code between projects (eg. dirhash, smp, usb etc)
--Jon
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:2)
Because Linux is a Macrokernel architechture OS (Score:3, Insightful)
The open source movement is about modifying your software and sharing it. Anyone with the ability can modify a vital OS feature and share it. voila! Many, many kernels.
But, the problem here is that real time processing does not belong in a macrokernel architechture. Look at the commercial RTOS (Real Time Operating Systems) like QNX [qnx.com] and you will see that a microkernel architechture -- a kernel that a provides minimal feature set is favored. This is because if you are depending on time constraints, all you want in your kernel is message passing and task syncronization.
Re:Because Linux is a Macrokernel architechture OS (Score:3, Insightful)
I'm inclined to agree, but I see no reason to exclude an attempt at "poor-man's" real-time processing in a macro kernel, by making the kernel preemptable. So long as one does not have serious hard real-time constraints (e.g. manned aircraft auto-pilot) and is concerned with snappier interactive response and media streaming this seams appropriate. This is certainly the case if it can be compiled in or out at will.
Re:Because Linux is a Macrokernel architechture OS (Score:3, Insightful)
I don't see any problem with making the linux kernel preemptible to be able to make better real time garuntees. Sure, I don't think you'll ever get hard realtime, but that doesn't mean that you won't get benefits from being able to respond to interrupts even when the system is running the kernel.
("hard realtime" -- maximum interrupt latency of xxx nanoseconds. "soft realtime" -- runs fast enough, usually)
Alan Cox says 2.6 won't have compiled-in modules (Score:1)
From: Alan Cox
To: babydr@baby-dragons.com (Mr. James W. Laferriere)
Subject: Re: ISA hardware discovery -- the elegant solution
Date: Mon, 14 Jan 2002 18:08:32 +0000 (GMT)
Cc: alan@lxorguk.ukuu.org.uk (Alan Cox), esr@thyrsus.com, cate@debian.org (Giacomo Catenazzi),
linux-kernel@vger.kernel.org (Linux Kernel List)
> Hello All , And what mechanism is going to be used for an -all-
> compiled in kernel ? Everyone and there brother is so enamoured
> of Modules . Not everyone uses nor will use modules .
For 2.5 if things go to plan there will be no such thing as a "compiled in"
driver. They simply are not needed with initramfs holding what were once the
"compiled in" modules.
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:2)
shooting your mouth off.
The main reason for BSD's "marginalization"
relative to Linux is the AT&T/Novell lawsuit.
It's also worth noting that the different BSDs are
no less mutually compatible than the different Linux
distributions.
No. (Score:2, Insightful)
Hello moron (Score:1)
It would be of _great_ assistance to yourself it you educated yourself before opening your mouth.
Re:Hello moron (Score:1)
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:2)
Linus himself has said that if BSD hadn't been
under a cloud of legal uncertainty in 1990, he
might not have embarked on the Linux project.
You can get more information about the lawsuit
here [oreilly.com], just search for the string "the lawsuit".
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:1)
And while I'm at it: Alan Cox regulairly submits parts of his patches to linus / marcello for inclusion in the main line kernel. A lot of it gets merged but some things Alan doesn't think are good enough and some things Linus disagrees with.
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:3, Informative)
Well, Alan isn't really in the business of doing this anymore. But even when he did, that's not the way things worked -- the Alan and Linus trees stayed fairly in sync with each other in many ways.
Re:Why do we need so many different kernels? (Score:1, Interesting)
As long as the API's are the same, and they maintain binary compatabilty for applications, what's the difference? Seems to me it would actually be a Good Thing. You could then choose the kernel/distro that optimizes performance for your particular choice of applications.
Preemptive kernel looks good (Score:2, Interesting)
On a side note, he's my kind of geek. At least started with Slackware, kernel hakcs and even has a girlfriend. Wow!
Re:Preemptive kernel looks good (Score:2, Interesting)
preemptive multitasking since 1985
Re:Preemptive kernel looks good (Score:4, Informative)
I think you'll find that Linux has premptive multitasking too. What it can't do (without the preempt patch) is prempt a task that is currently running kernel code (e.g. through a syscall). I've no idea whether the Amiga's "kernel" (exec?) was preemptible in this sense or not.
Re:Preemptive kernel looks good (Score:1)
finding good technical docs online for the amigaOS is something of a hurdle
(it wouldn't surprise me if they kernal WERE preemptable however)
Impressive. (Score:2, Insightful)
Where do these college students get all this time to hack on the kernel? Don't they have to study at all?
Re:Impressive. (Score:1)
Re:Impressive. (Score:1)
I had tons of time in college. Too bad I spend it all writing borgs for netrek...
Re:Impressive. (Score:1)
Heck, I don't even think that Teradyne has yet released all the changes I made to GPL code for them (of course, I don't know that they even released binaries so don't presume a GPL violation).
Re:Impressive. (Score:2, Interesting)
He goes to the University of Florida. As a recent grad (last May) with a degree in CS and Math (the same as what he's working on) I can tell you, if you need the time, its easy to find. I was busy, but only because I pushed myself - taking many more classes than I needed to. Hell, if you are intelligent and willing to accept C's, you probably don't even need to go to class or finish half the assignments.
As an aside, I'd love to see how he breezes through COP4600 (Operating Systems). Adding symbolic linking to Minix would be cake after the work he's done.
Re:Impressive. (Score:2)
Re:Impressive. (Score:1)
Besides, just because you can do a lot of practical stuff, doesn't mean you'll know the theoretical stuff which may the only thing being tested.
Re:Impressive. (Score:2)
Re:Impressive. (Score:1)
One things for sure, having Robert Love in my class would have made things a lot more interesting. He'd at least put those TAs in their place.
Re:Impressive. (Score:2)
What, and not get tuition for the semester's worth of classes the student's tested out of? Surely you jest.
Re:Impressive. (Score:4, Insightful)
What in the heck do you think this IS? Many of the best students treat developing their coding and CS skills more like a musician or artist practicing and performing for many hours a day. It's a creative act, and can be very involving. Moreover, that level of involvement hones problem solving and practival skills that the "just a job" students can never hope to achieve.
I always wondered about students who didn't have any passion for the field. From what I've seen in both academia and industry, that "just a job" mentality reduces one's skills to "programming fodder", and would seem to be a pretty unenjoyable career.
so true (Score:1)
Re:Impressive. (Score:3, Funny)
Studying comes after Kernel Hacking and right before Binge Drinking. If we're not lucky, then the Kernel Hacking would come after or during the Binge Drinking
Re:Impressive. (Score:1)
low-latency patch (Score:2, Interesting)
Re:low-latency patch (Score:5, Interesting)
The current low-latency patches work by finding "hot spots" in the kernel code where something is taking a long time, and then putting in a hack to make the code yield. The good part is that you can get a really low-latency kernel; the bad part is that you have to touch the kernel code in hundreds of places, and the kernel code gets really ugly. I remember reading that Ingo Molnar, who wrote a giant low-latency patch that worked this way, agreed with Linus that his low-latency patch was just too ugly and huge and should not be included in the main source tree.
The preemption patch is comparatively small and elegant. It leverages the work that has already been done to make SMP work correctly. I'm using it on my Linux desktops, and I like it.
On one of the mailing lists, Linus said that he wants the Linux kernel to gain low latency the cleanest way: find all parts that are slow, and instead of hacking them to yield, re-write them so they are faster (but still clean code that is easy to understand). This is of course the ideal, but when will it be finished? The preemption patch is available now, and works now, and I am using it now.
steveha
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2)
Well, I'm just going to hazard a wild guess here, but maybe that sort of change would only occur when all of the different areas' (primary) developers were interested in it.
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2, Flamebait)
The problems with the preempt patch are several:
1. It makes kernel debugging considerably harder
2. It introduces potential livelocks which could hang the system (this is an inherent part of the design and not an implementation bug)
3. It doesn't work with SMP (yet), this is fixable
4. It doesn't improve the worst-case latency.
#4 means it isn't a viable alternative to low-latency style patches; Love has said as much on linux-kernel, though obviously he feels it's a nice complement. 1 is a large hill to climb on its own, and 2 basically dooms it unless a clean solution can be found (most proposed solutions involve some sort of priority inheritance, which is a rat's nest).
In other words, the patch "works" only in a very limited sense; it doesn't decrease worst-case latency, can potentially hang the system, and doesn't interact well with SMP. It does decrease average-case latency.
The preemption patch is comparatively small and elegant.
Uh, that's in the eye of the beholder I guess. It is small, but it's not really elegant; it essentially causes conditional reschedules to happen all over the place, and by design cannot deal with latency in noninterruptable interrupt contexts--which happen to be exactly where the worst-case latencies are. So preempt as it's currently designed simply cannot address the worst-case latency. And it causes far more runtime conditional reschedules than the LL patches.
The low-latency patch decreases both worst and average-case latencies. It also doesn't have livelocks as an inherent part of its design. And average-case latencies with LL are as good as those with LL+preempt (in other words, preempt gains you nothing over LL). LL, unfortunately, touches a lot of code and has conditional schedules sprinkled all over the place--it's not elegant either, and certainly not small. But unlike preempt, it actually decreases the worst-case latency, which is what's important to the soft realtime applications that gave birth to both patches. There's a mini-LL patch as well which has far fewer conditional rescheds, that's being discussed for potential inclusion in 2.4.x and/or 2.5.x
My gut feeling is that preempt is the wrong approach to the latency problem, but the jury is still out on it. I don't think either the current preempt or the current LL are ready to go in the kernel. If you're doing e.g sound mixing or other latency-sensitive work right now, the full LL patches seem like the best alternative available. They get latencies down extremely low, well below those of e.g. BeOS.
Sumner
Re:low-latency patch (Score:1)
This isn't to say that these patches don't have value, clearly they do, however, I'm trying to point out that it seems there are really two camps. Those that *need* LL for soft-realtime and those that *want* a LL-like environment so they have click a button more timely. Of course, the extra plus with the scheduler is that it should scale better than the existing schedule and is very SMP friendly. Seems like this is where the average user should be looking.
Am I missing something?
Greg
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2)
Well, I think that some sort of soft realtime is wanted pretty widely, if only to stop music and movies from skipping. LL does that fairly well, O(1) doesn't. But O(1) is definitely a win, modulo a few nits, and it's already been integrated into 2.5.x--with some work on those nits courtesy of Davide Libenzi.
So, I think O(1) is good but it's not a replacement for LL or another worst-case latency reducer, even among people who don't know what "soft realtime" means. They still don't want their mp3s to skip.
Sumner
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2)
>>>>>>>
Then don't compile it in while you're debugging. Most *users* don't debug their kernels.
2. It introduces potential livelocks which could hang the system (this is an inherent part of the design and not an implementation bug)
>>>>>>>>
True, but the SMP support introduced these to begin with. The preemptive patches just bring that danger to UP machines.
3. It doesn't work with SMP (yet), this is fixable
>>>>>>>>>>
Already been done. As of around 2.4.10, it experimental, but working.
4. It doesn't improve the worst-case latency.
>>>>>>>>>>>
It's not designed to. Love has already started work on a lock-breaking patch to get rid of long-held locks.
Re:low-latency patch (Score:3, Informative)
If a user gets an oops and submits a bug report to linux-kernel while running preempt, the bug report is a lot harder to decipher.
True, but the SMP support introduced these to begin with. The preemptive patches just bring that danger to UP machines.
Not true. preempt introduces new hangs. Read the threads on linux-kernel, especially "Re: [2.4.17/18pre] VM and swap - it's really unusable".
Some things that are broken by preempt:
* Network drivers which disable IRQs to avoid spinlocking on uniprocs (major performance win)
* Drivers which use per-CPU data to avoid spinlocking at all
* Drivers which disable individual interrupts for long periods of time
* Drivers which depend on consecutive lines of code executing near each other in time, especially serial drivers
That thread has details on all of these.
And there's the priority inversion scenario:
SCHED_OTHER process 1 acquires a semaphore in kernel mode
SCHED_FIFO realtime process needs the semaphore, blocks on it
Now the rt process is stuck pending progress from the SCHED_OTHER process. Without preemption, the SCHED_OTHER process would have done whatever required the semaphore and released it. Now, SCHED_OTHER process 2, 3,
[Note that I said semaphore, not spinlock, so the lock-break code won't help.]
Do you not remember all the problems with priority inversion and the SCHED_IDLE patches? This is exactly the same problem, it's not like it's something new and mysterious that people are making up as FUD to stop preempt from getting in to the kernel. Any introductory OS textbook discusses it, and priority inheritance is the only robust way to eliminate it--with all the problems that come along with priority inheritance.
4. It doesn't improve the worst-case latency.
>>>>>>>>>>>
It's not designed to. Love has already started work on a lock-breaking patch to get rid of long-held locks
It won't help. The fundamental problem is that preempt in interrupts is impossible with this scheme (and AFAIK nobody has proposed a scheme that could even theoretically work), and the worst-case latencies are in interrupts. The secondary problem is that a lot of these issues are highly hardware sensitive; different hardware has different timing requirements, and the only way to find them all is to audit every driver and deal with it appropriately (as, e.g., the LL patches do).
As Alan Cox wrote,
Sumner
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2)
But only if you actually compile it in to the kernel, right? Including the patches, which are not enabled unless you choose the option while configuring the kernel, wouldn't mess up kernel debugging, would it?
It is small, but it's not really elegant
I am not a kernel hacker, and I was not commenting on the code; I feel that the idea of leveraging the SMP locks is elegant.
I am one of the large pool of people who don't need realtime features, but do not want our movies or music playback to stutter when the system gets busy. The preemption patch seems to be doing that for me, but I might be interested in the full low latency patch.
Could you explain what "live locks" are, please? I'm not familiar with the term.
steveha
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2)
But if a user has preempt enabled and submits a bug report, that bug report becomes very difficult for kernel developers to decipher. Not to mention that hard-to-reproduce bugs may show up under preempt, then you have to build a non-preempt kernel and try for a potentially long time to reproduce the error.
I am not a kernel hacker, and I was not commenting on the code; I feel that the idea of leveraging the SMP locks is elegant.
It would be, if the locking requirements for SMP were sufficient to deal with the locking requirements for preempt. But they're not, these are really two different beasts--see my other message under this topic for a laundry list of reasons and linux-kernel topic to read.
Could you explain what "live locks" are, please? I'm not familiar with the term.
Definition of livelock [ic.ac.uk]
Sumner
Re:low-latency patch (Score:2)
Thanks again and see you around.
steveha
True geek (Score:5, Funny)
RL: Approximately how much time per week do you spend working on your kernel patch for Linux?
Love: My girlfriend would probably say too much. Anywhere from a couple hours a week to many hours a day.
So? (Score:1, Flamebait)
WhoTF cares if he has one or not? Are (other) geeks jealous because he has one, and they don't?
I care about the quality of his code, not about his love life.
kernel.org (Score:1)
Use the mirror (Score:1, Offtopic)
What's a preemptible (kernel) maintainer? (Score:1)
patch
I know it's not funny, but may cause a giggle.
Cordelia: "What's a rogue demon?"
Re:What's a preemptible (kernel) maintainer? (Score:1)
"Robert Love, Preemptible Kernel Maintainer Interview" (no -ed).
Then we would have had three different parsings:
Robert Love, (Preemptible Kernel) Maintainer Interview
Robert Love, Preemptible (Kernel Maintainer) Interview
Robert Love, Preemptible (Kernel Maintainer Interview)
OK, so I have waaaaay too much time on my hands.
this one gets my vote (Score:4, Informative)
a quick nice -n -5 /usr/bin/X11/X helps, too.
What Kernel.org has been slashdotted ? (Score:1)
I am asking because I am running a Rik Riel rmap-11c patch against 2.4.18pre4 and would love to try it (Rik's new VM IS SOOOOO Much sweeter than the old, I was swapping after 10 minutes with 512 megs off a standart 2.4.17, I shouldnt have been) Now I dont swap at all yet, which I shouldnt be with as littlew load,
It has improved my performance through the VM and I would love to try the preemt patch but am concerned it shares mem sctions with the VM, Anyone runnign both rmap and this ?
I could always use more speed, It is a desktop only machine.
Nice buzzwords (Score:2, Interesting)
After reading the article, I'm left wondering why "unpreemptable kernals" were ever conceived in the first case. To lower the cost of hardware? On the "limited-access freeway" model? Or just to K.I.S.S.?
Re:Nice buzzwords (Score:2, Interesting)
It was because Linus incorrectly thought Tanenbaum didn't know what he was talking about. (Everyone seems to have the impression that Linus "won" that debate. They are wrong.) So instead of writing a modern OS with a microkernel (where there isn't much to preempt) he went with the 1970s approach. We'll all be paying for that until the day we switch to HURD.
Re:Nice buzzwords (Score:1)
Which shouldn't prove too difficult, if/when the time comes.
I was under the impression that Linus start writing Linux because he wanted to run software now, not when the Hurd was complete. In this respect, Linux is a success.
MS Windows? (Score:1)
If a kernel is preemptible, can it be used for real time process control?
Re:MS Windows? (Score:2, Informative)
I don't think even with this the kernel will be good enough for some forms of real time process control. Real Time process control needs guarunteed sub millisecond response times and everything else including overall throughout is sacrificed for the cause.
It will however make the UI a tad more responsive and make it harder for things like web browser loading to make the mp3 player skip.
Re:MS Windows? (Score:2)
Re:MS Windows? (Score:2)
Re:MS Windows? (Score:2, Informative)
AFAIK, it is not. I know that in Windows minimum latency is about 10ms, same as in default Linux kernel.
If a kernel is preemptible, can it be used for real time process control?
For what? Do you mean for something like.. robotics control? or shuttle devices control?
For that answer is a bit complicated, you see, even this pre-empt patch doesn't help when there are 'long' locks in kernel. There are situations when kernel disables all interrupts and does its things for long time (like 5 to 20ms). There are not many of these, but they do exist. Now, realtime kernel is one that answers any interrupt 'right away', and can be interrupted 'anywhere'. These are a LOT hairier than pre-empt patch.
If one doesn't have hard time limits, pre-empt patch delivers enough certainty on time-bounds..
Re:MS Windows? (Score:1)
AFAIK, it is not. I know that in Windows minimum latency is about 10ms, same as in default Linux kernel.
Uh. NT has a preemptible kernel. Most
Re:MS Windows? (Score:1)
Re:MS Windows? (Score:2)
Re:MS Windows? (Score:1)
No.
> can it be used for real time process control?
You can use a non-preemptible kernal for Real Time Processes. You just need to keep the running software to a bare minimum. I did this Win NT 4.
Resumable Pre-emtable OS calls (Score:4, Funny)
Alan Bawden [linearity.org] wrote a paper on it, and it's quite a good read. His web site has a compressed .gz version, but I found an HTML version of the HTML PCLSR Paper [tunes.org] and I quote from its abstract here:
There was also a way to put the system into a PCLSR test mode that exercised all these control points within the system calls, to help debug them. See SYSDOC TEST documentation [brouhaha.com] extracted from the now decomissioned AI PDP-10 that originally served it up as ftp://ftp.ai.mit.edu/pub/alan/its/sysdoc.tgz (yes, ITS was on the Arpanet and the Internet and ran TCP/IP as well).
Re:Resumable Pre-emtable OS calls (Score:1)
I can see why PCLSR might have been necessary and feasible on a small PDP-6 operating system but it would be both a pain to implement and unecessary for today's OSes and machines.
Re:Resumable Pre-emtable OS calls (Score:2)
Minor nitpick. RMS first developed Emacs on Unix. It was modeled after TECO, which and others hacked together on ITS.
Actually, no (Score:2)
TECO was developed for the PDP series. The PDP-6 and 10 were the systems that ran ITS. EMACS was a package of TECO macros; there were others, RMACS and TMACS for example. RMS and others maintained EMACS, and it became the lead, and eventually it took on a life of its own.
After RMS stopped working on PDP-10 software and was fully engaged on the GNU project, I was in charge of PDP-10 EMACS. There were a variety of other EMACS clones on Unix, small and large, but they all had various extensibility problems (i.e., had to be recompiled) or licensing problems (i.e., you had to buy them). RMS started with one or the other of them and fixed both the licensing and extensibility problems, and everybody knows it all from that point.
RMS did not write TECO, and EMACS was not first on Unix.
Pre-Emptable Kernel & MicroKernels (Score:2, Interesting)
Although I'm fully aware of the fact Linux is NOT a MicroKernel, what significant differences exist between Pre-Emptible Linux and a MicroKernel Linux?
(Aside from the fact that all of the Linux kernel, drivers, etc. is in 'kernel' mode, and a MicroKernel has only the message-passing and task-scheduling in 'kernel' mode, and everything else (drivers, etc.) run in 'user' mode.)
Re:Pre-Emptable Kernel & MicroKernels (Score:4, Informative)
>>>>>>>>>>.
That's basically everything that distinguishes a microkernel from a monolithic kernel
Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:5, Informative)
Consider application (a) that wants to read 128MB of data from the disk and application (b) that wants to read 1KB of data.
Let's say that the disk transfers @ 1MB/sec and let's assume application (a) issues the read 1 second before application (b) is started.
The sequence of calls for each app will look something like this:
1) program calls read
2) read is handled by the top level file system and is handed down to the proper file system
3) the file system calls the block device
4) the block device driver breaks up the request into the maximum block size the device can handle per request (for example 256 sectors for IDE)
5) for every request, the block device sends request to physical drive
6) drive transfers data to host
7) drive indicates 'done'
8) goto 5 until done
9) file system returns
10) read returns
It's important to know that there may be limitations on the number of requests any stage can handle simultaneously. For example, an IDE drive can only handle one request at a time. Some Operating Systems however introduce even tighter restrictions, because for example the block device driver was written, assuming only one request at a time would be allowed.
Take for example an OS where the kernel assures that no more that one request is pending between step 3) and 9).
This would have the following effect on our apps: app (a) is allowed to call step 4) because it is the first request. One second later, app (b) arrives at step 3) and is blocked. It is not allowed to enter step 4) until app (a) is done and passes step 9). Effectively this means that app (b) has to wait for 127 seconds before it gets access to step 4).
Now consider an OS where the file system and drivers can handle multiple requests. It still has to assure that the physical drive receives only one request though, so it permits only access of one app between step 5) and 7). App (a) arrives at step 5) first, so it gets to start sending requests to the drive. One second later, app (b) arrives at step 5) and has to wait for app (a) to finish it's current request to the drive. As soon as this request is done though, app (a) gets to step 8). Now we have both app (a) and app (b) wanting to have access to step 5). Depending on the scheduler either one will be granted access. There's a good change that app (b) will get access, and thus it only had to wait the time it took for app (a) to finish it's outstanding request, which takes max 1/8th of a second (256 sectors = 128KB) in this example.
Btw. you may notice though that there's more likely to be an (expensive) seek introduced by allowing app (b) to interrupt the transfer of app (a)
You can see how moving the 'lock' deeper in to the OS improves responsiveness. I'm not going to start a flame war about which OS is better, all I will say is that MY OS locks steps 5) through 7)
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:5, Informative)
The real problem is if you have a periodic program that needs to make a deadline. What a non preemptive kernel does is place in too many varients. You can't guarentee that the program will make its deadlines when you have other lower priority tasks running.
Say you have a period of 10 ms and your task needs 3 ms to do its job, and it must be done within the first 5 ms. So your app starts and gets priority, and you do what needs to be done in the first 3 ms and easily makes your 5 ms deadline. Now you may run other task for the next 7 ms. Come the next period, you start your 3 ms task and repeat.
But lets say you have a system call that takes 4 ms, and one of your non priority tasks calls it at the 9 ms time. With out being able to preempt it, your priority task will start at the 3 ms time and it won't finish until the 6 ms time and thus you missed your deadline.
The reason you have preemtive kernels is so that priority tasks are not affected by lower prioriy tasks. Not the reason you gave above.
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:1)
Really? So what about tasks that are of equal priority?
I maybe should have explicitly said so, but I assumed the threads (apps) run at the same priority. This way it was a bit easier to explain without going into details regarding scheduling.
Preemtive kernels also improve responsiveness between equal priority tasks.
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:2)
So what's your point, a preemptive kernel will not preempt a task for a task with the same priority. These would be treated the same as if the kernel was not preemptive. Actually, this is not quite true. The one task would be preempted when its quanta runs out. And with a preemptive kernel this would even happen if the one task was in a system call. But that's the only difference between two tasks of equal priority running on a preemptive kernel, and two tasks of same priority running on a non preemptive kernel.
Preemtive kernels also improve responsiveness between equal priority tasks
I wouldn't say responsiveness but maybe something like smoother or more consistent. But I'm not sure you'll improve responsiveness on a kernel that's preemptive. If task (a) is waiting for an interrupt and it happens while task(b) of same priority is running. Task (a) is placed on the run queue, but needs to wait for task (b) to finish its quanta or go to sleep. This doesn't even matter if task (b) is in userland. Task (a) will still wait for task (b), unless task(a) is of higher priority. So this is no more responsive than a non preemptive kernel.
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:1)
It's all fine and dandy to schedule a high-prio task, but if your kernel is locked by a lo-prio task, it's useless. In other words, in order to make a kernel preemptive, you need to move locks down to the lowest possible place.
For example, the Linux IDE driver is locked by the kernel for the duration of an entire request, no matter how big. Only one request is handed to the driver at a time. So if an app issues a very large read request and finally gets a hold of the lock, the IDE driver can not be preempted to handle an other request until the entire request is fullfilled. Sure, it will call schedule so other tasks can run, as long as they don't require the IDE driver. If they do, they have to wait until the entire read request is done. The point is that by putting the lock lower, you make it possible for other tasks to obtain the lock, allowing preempting.
a preemptive kernel will not preempt a task for a task with the same priority
Maybe Roberts patches don't, but I know my OS does.
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:2)
Really? why. Doesn't this mean higher cost of context switching. And if one preempts the other, doesn't this cause a back and forth infinit loop? What OS is yours?
I did continue to say that one would preempt the other, but only when its time ran out and not by the other one just becoming active. Now I would be curious to know of another algorithm and how it would be better.
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:2)
You can get it at my company's site [timesys.com]
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:2)
This is a resource management issue and not a preemptive issue. Yes if you can make the locks on a resource shorter, the better. But most of the resources in the kernel are not protected by non preemption, and those that are are mainly just the global data. Now Linux is already made to work on a SMP, and with SMP processors you don't have the protection of non-preemption on your data as you did on UP. So spin_locks were made to do a busy loop on processors that were going to modify data that was currently being worked on by another processor. For UP these smp_locks are just nulled out (do { } while(0)). So what Robert (and others) have done is use the smp_locks as the places to protect data in a preemptive kernel. Most notably link lists.
What my point is, is that its not resources that can be accessed quicker, but that higher priority tasks can be accessed quicker. The locks on resources are not shortened by the preemptive kernel, but higher priority tasks are not postponed just because a lower priority task is in kernel mode.
Although a naive kernel could use non-preemption to protect resources, but that would be just silly (it may end up being windows 95;)
Re:Crash-course in preemtivity (Score:2)
This comment has nothing to do with a kernel being preemptive or not. This comment deals with resource management.
app(a) doesn't "Lock" the device for the entire read. The read calls for one block of data and then yes the device is blocked. When the data is returned, the next request is handled which may also be the request from app(b). The device is only blocked when it is receiving one block of data of a fixed size. The system call read will only block the device while grabbing one block of data, and that will allow other apps to be interleaved with the device.
An earlier interview (Score:1)
And another one with John Levon [kerneltrap.com] (OProfile) where he discusses the patch. (at the end of the interview)
For me, these 2 interviews offer more insight than the interview in the article. Especially the comment from Levon that this patch is really just a "band-aid"...and that the real problem lies in fixing the kernel.
misleading article title (Score:1)
Missed it out of the gate .... (Score:2)
"RL: You have been becoming well known as the maintainer of a "preemptible kernel patch" for the Linux kernel. How did that situation come about?"
"Love: Well, RL, you start with a group of people who are more than willing to brag that they know who maintains the 'preemptible kernel patch' but feel no need whatever to know what the hell that even is
Re:Linux + Kernel Premption = AmigaOS 2002 (Score:1)
damn commodore for being a bunch of mismanaging fuckwits.. bah!
If they'd kept the R&D flowing smoothly, the current Amiga's would probably resemble the Gamecube, from an architectural standpoint. and that would be really rather cool
Re:Linux + Kernel Premption = AmigaOS 2002 (Score:1)
One good question is why Apple survived while Commodore didn't. One possible answer is that Apple had a cult following, whereas Commodore usually tried to compete based on price. Also, game consoles like the NES and Genesis took over the low-end home entertainment business. No matter how cool a product is, if it doesn't meet consumer's needs, it might as well be put in a museum.
Re:Linux + Kernel Premption = AmigaOS 2002 (Score:1)
Re:Linux + Kernel Premption = AmigaOS 2002 (Score:1)
Re:Preemptive Kernel? (Score:2, Informative)
Re:Preemptive Kernel? (Score:3)
Re:Preemptive Kernel? (Score:1)
Not entirely, without this patch any kernel code path executes until it returns or manually calls schedule() and if you have a UP box all other processes don't get to run. But, my example of a hard disk read may have been poorly chosen.
the preemptive kernel patch, which ensures that when a task becomes runnable (for example, due to a device interrupt that tells the CPU that a condition the task was waiting for is met), it can start running ASAP, rather than waiting till the next regular re-scheduling point.
The preempt patch allows processes stuck in kernel paths to be put to sleep so others can run, I don't believe it gives those processes any priority boost because they were in a kernel path but I could be wrong about that.
It sounds like you're describing a real-time scheduler more than a preemptive kernel.
Re:Preemptive Kernel? (Score:1)
A preemptive kernel allows a new process to interrupt the kernel, even if its been doing something important. Increase responsiveness.