Locus, V, Mach
Readings
David R. Cheriton, "The V Distributed System."
Bruce Walker et al., "The LOCUS Distributed Operating System."
These two papers describe V and LOCUS, two early distributed operating systems.
This paper describes some key ideas behind Mach, a seminal microkernel-based operating system. The design of Mach informs later work in distributed operating systems. For more background on Mach, I suggest reading Wikipedia's article on Mach.
Questions to be discussed
- What did the (technical) world look like when this distributed OS was designed & implemented?
- What are the key design features of the OS? What are the key compromises?
- To what extent is their system a "distributed operating system"?
- What is the basic argument for their design choices? What evidence do they cite in their favor?
- To what extent do you "believe" their design choices were right? Why?
- To what extent does their design work in the context of the modern Internet? Discuss wins and limitations.
- What concepts from the paper have been adopted by today's systems? What concepts should be adopted? What should be ignored?
Debate about the OSes
Topic: Microsoft has more to learn from ______ rather than ______ or ______ because....
LOCUS
- + error handling
- + automatic file merging
- - sync. hotspots
- + fix by smart directory placement
- + automatic backups
- - not scalable
V
- + standard protocols
- - less profitable, no lock-in
- + process migration
- - slow -> context switches
- + distributed processes
MACH
- + microkernel -> fault tolerant
- + user space OS extensions
- + easy shared memory (memory obj)
- - inefficient finding of resources (ports)
- + use discovery service
- + more secure
- - port search
- + more secure
- + use discovery service
- - slow -> context switches
- + "real" production use