On Mon, 2008-07-14 at 17:08 +0800, sqweek wrote: > On Mon, Jul 14, 2008 at 4:45 PM, ssecorp <[EMAIL PROTECTED]> wrote: > > from wikipedia: > > "Plan 9 from Bell Labs is a distributed operating system, primarily > > used for research." > > > > but it doesnt say anything more about the distributed part. > > > > In what way does it make it easy? > > Plan 9 makes it easy via 9p, its file system/resource sharing > protocol. In plan 9, things like graphics and network drivers export a > 9p interface (a filetree). Furthermore, 9p is network transparent > which means accesses to remote resources look exactly like accesses to > local resources, and this is the main trick - processes do not care > whether the file they are interested in is being served by the kernel, > a userspace process, or a machine half way across the world.
All very true. And it sure does provide enormous benefits on distributed memory architectures. But do you know of any part that would be beneficial for highly-SMP systems? Thanks, Roman.
