On Fri, Jan 12, 2001 at 07:45:43PM -0700, Jay Ts wrote:
> Andrew Morton wrote:
> > 
> > Jay Ts wrote:
> > > 
> > > Now about the only thing left is to get it included
> > > in the standard kernel.  Do you think Linus Torvalds is more likely
> > > to accept these patches than Ingo's?  I sure hope this one works out.
> > 
> > We (or "he") need to decide up-front that Linux is to become
> > a low latency kernel. Then we need to decide the best way of
> > doing that.
> > 
> > Making the kernel internally preemptive is probably the best way of
> > doing this.  But it's a *big* task
> 
> Ouch.  Yes, I agree that the ideal path is for Linus and the other
> kernel developers and ... well, just about everyone ... is to create
> a long-range strategy and 'roadmap' that includes support for low-latency.
> 
> And making the kernel preemptive might be the best way to do that
> (and I'm saying "might"...).

Keep in mind that Ken Thompson & Dennis Ritchie did not decide on a 
non-preemptive strategy for UNIX because they were unaware of such 
methods or because they were stupid. And when Rob Pike redesigned a new
"unix" Plan9  note there is no-preemptive kernel, and the core Linux
designers have rejected preemptive kernels too. Now it is certainly possible
that things have change and/or all these folks are just plain wrong. But
I wouldn't bet too much on it.

-- 
---------------------------------------------------------
Victor Yodaiken 
Finite State Machine Labs: The RTLinux Company.
 www.fsmlabs.com  www.rtlinux.com

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