Hallo,
I just stumbled across this (via heise.de):
http://os.inf.tu-dresden.de/fiasco/overview.html
What are Fiasco's distinctive features (i.e., buzzwords)?
Fiasco is a preemptible real-time kernel supporting hard
priorities. It uses non-blocking synchronization for its kernel
objects. This guarantees priority inheritance and makes sure that
runnable high-priority processes never block waiting for
lower-priority processes.
When using L4Linux on top of Fiasco, hard-real-time applications
can share one machine with time-sharing (Linux) applications.
Fiasco is a real, second-generation µ-kernel protecting
applications in address spaces. Thanks to its efficient task and
context switching mechanism and its performace-oriented design,
the performance penalties induced by address-space security are
neglible - much smaller than in older, first-generation µ-kernels
like Mach.
Sounds somehow interesting.
Ciao
-- Frank Barknecht _ ______footils.org_ __goto10.org__Received on Thu Mar 16 00:15:14 2006
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