On 15.09.2017 11:35, Anil Madhavapeddy wrote:
On 15 Sep 2017, at 09:36, Simon Kuenzer <simon.kuen...@neclab.eu
<mailto:simon.kuen...@neclab.eu>> wrote:
Hey Anil,
On 13.09.2017 12:11, Anil Madhavapeddy wrote:
On 11 Sep 2017, at 13:08, Simon Kuenzer <simon.kuen...@neclab.eu
<mailto:simon.kuen...@neclab.eu>> wrote:
Just my 2 cents:
1. Is this academic project, or it have specific goals and areas of
application? Would be good to have some practical use-cases and
well formulated list of problems (we all feel these by guts,
but...), it aiming to solve. IMHO that will help to prioritize
functionality and get usable result faster :)
It is kind of both, however we aim a strong focus on real world
problems: IoT, Mobile Edge Computing (MEC), Automotive, Virtual
Network Functions (VNFs), and others.
We have played with many Unikernels (ClickOS, Mirage, Rump, OSv, and
others) and tried to apply them in the several areas. While doing
this, we noticed that each area benefits differently from the
properties that Unikernels give - which is great (e.g., instant boot
times for MEC, high performance for NFV, resource efficiency for
IoT). However, building and maintaining new Unikernels (as we did
with ClickOS, MiniCache, and Minipython) is currently painful.
Because of different focuses on properties and ported/implemented
applications, most Unikernel today are bound to their own OS layers
(e.g., ClickOS uses a different Mini-OS than Mirage). Each
application requires a different subset of OS layers but also
enables different optimizations of them.
In order to solve this, we came up with the Unicore proposal. But I
agree with your suggestion at this point: It helps for the project
start to focus on some initial areas. For now, I hope this is driven
by the first contributors, and I have personally IoT in mind. Since
the project goal is so ambitious, we should keep the long-term goal
in mind from the beginning.
Thanks very much for kicking off this initiative. Maintaining a
forked MiniOS has been a multi-year source of a maintenance burden
for MirageOS, and we would love to be more aligned with an upstream
version and benefit from new features such as (e.g.) HVM booting.
We have the same burden with ClickOS and all the other unikernels we
have built. Features like HVM booting or support for different
hypervisors, are always something that users ask for. Since many
Unikernel projects struggle with this, I would like to have the
maintenance effort of a common base concentrated.
But we also learned that each Unikernel has own requirements: This is
why Unicore has to provide full configuration flexibility. Only then,
all Unikernel projects could really benefit from it.
So, I think we should all focus on the Unicore base and make our
individual projects successful with it ;-).
This sounds good. It's worth thinking through the explicit differences
in goals from MiniOS, to address Samuel's points.
Yes, I agree. I am going to have a second round through the proposal.
It seems to me that MiniOS should remain the primary "support kernel"
for Xen-related activities, for instance as a stub domain support
kernel. Unicore on the other hand explicitly tries to parameterise
across its configuration so that it can be library linked to language
runtimes more easily.
This split may help simplify MiniOS by removing some of the pseudo libc
code that may be unnecessary outside Xen support functions, and also let
us package up language runtimes in Unicore more easily via simple
library package management and cross compilation.
It might be handled in this way during the project start, however I see
Unicore more than just a set of base libraries to support language
runtimes. The main intention is to support applications natively written
to it and to support existing applications you may want to port.
For these cases you need more than a minimal base, you want to select a
libc, a certain scheduler, and most likely a TCP/IP stack, as well as
filesystem support. These libraries should work together and should also
work with the base libraries. Additionally, the requirements to the
libraries might differ among the projects.
Our content cache node Unikernel (called MiniCache), for instance, uses
newlibc and lwIP. On top we have developed a single-purpose filesystem
and web server code. Together we could achieve impressive performance
results by using a single CPU compared to traditional web server
applications running on a traditional OS [1].
In sum, the aim with Unicore is to have fine-granularity libraries so
that it's flexible enough to accommodate a wide range of unikernels.
Because of this, I see Unicore as having potential to eventually replace
MiniOS.
regards,
Anil
Thanks,
Simon
[1] http://dl.acm.org/citation.cfm?doid=3050748.3050757
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Simon Kuenzer
シモン クゥンツァー
Research Scientist,
Networked Systems and Data Analytics Group
NEC Laboratories Europe, Network Research Division
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Tel. +49 (0)6221 4342-264
Fax: +49 (0)6221 4342-5264
e-mail: simon.kuen...@neclab.eu
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