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As I also noted, though it may have not been clearly stated... "Mach is
not OS-specific"
> and there's enough in the Mach in OS X you
> could do work w/o it (IPC, memory, processes, etc. are Mach. Device
> drivers
> are IO Kit, not BSD. What more do you want, beyond a sane API, and
> that's
> what the BSD layer is really providing. Well, that, and saving them
> from
> having to implement their own networking).
From what I understand, the rubber hit the road when many core
components of OpenStep's GUI (one of the parent OS's of OS X) required
a unix-y API. While it's conceivable that they *could* have built their
own new unix foundation (because the world really needs yet another
flavor of unix :-) ), or done a massive re-write to bypass all such
historic unixy things, going with BSD-Lite saved them a whole lot of
time and money, as well as giving them more market leverage.
> The way OS X Mach is implemented
> doesn't allow you as an end user to swap out the BSD personality, but
> that's
> not inherent to Mach itself, just OS X's modified version of it.
*nod*
>>> I am starting to wonder if migrating OS X to Linux makes sense. With
>>> the
>>> introduction of the Linux 2.6 kernel, and the scalability and
>>> security
>>> enhancements, I wonder if Apple might consider using the Linux kernel
>>> instread of the Mach micro kernel?
>>
>> Highly doubtful, for licensing, massive re-porting, and CPU
>> optimization reasons. :-/
>> ....I'd guess that it'd be about as easy as porting NT to a linux
>> kernel (or vice versa). They're that different.
> You're kinda being contradictory here. Either OS X is riding on BSD,
> or it's
> riding on Mach.
Uh, I think that's a false dilemma. OS X, as it's currently written,
requires both Mach *and* BSD components (along with other "kernel"
chunks like I/O kit). Without both Mach and BSD, it simply won't work
as a full desktop machine (without major re-writes).
As far as the use of "riding on", see my last post for commentary about
semantic turpitude. :-)
> If it's tied to BSD, the port to Linux is relatively
> non-difficult. If it's tied to Mach, like you say, it's difficult.
It's tied to both, so some porting would be easy, and some would be
difficult...
>> For some much more detailed arguments on the whole issue, surf any
>> one of
>> the million threads on why apple won't port OS X to X86, which is
>> analog
>> to why apple has not interest in supporting directly competing OS and
>> hardware technologies.
> It's fairly clear that Apple has ported OS X to x86. They just don't,
> and
> likely won't, ship it.
Ah, yes, there was a X86 port demoed 4 or so years ago, though OS X has
gone through some fairly major changes since then. I'm not sure if
they've maintained that port (but it seems like it would be in their
best interest to). I was referring to a shipping product, which I think
we could all agree is unlikely unless apple goes out of the hardware
business. ("Could all agree" is different than "will all agree",
though... after all, this is ALE! :-) )
>> (Tentatively waving hand...) The mach micro kernel is a totally
>> different beastie than many other things called kernels (as you may
>> have guessed from the first link). I suppose the confusion that
>> created
>> this thread might be linked to an assumption that BSD pieces (and I/O
>> kit) run *in addition to* the kernel, so people used to larger kernels
>> might be under the assumption that the kernel could run *without* any
>> additional BSD (or other OS flavor, Mach is not OS-specific)
>> components.
> Mach can run w/o BSD. See, for one example, MkLinux.
*nod*, hence "Mach is not OS specific". Of course, in the case of
MkLinux, it's also a system which could be argued (as was argued
earlier in this thread) is running in "emulation", or "on top" of
another system... ;-)
-Bop
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<li><strong><a name="00008" href="msg00008.html">[ale] OT: Re: posting to Linux mail list</a></strong>
<ul><li><em>From:</em> matty91 at bellsouth.net (matty91 at bellsouth.net)</li></ul></li>
<li><strong><a name="00011" href="msg00011.html">[ale] OT: Re: posting to Linux mail list</a></strong>
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<li><strong><a name="00030" href="msg00030.html">[ale] OT: Re: posting to Linux mail list</a></strong>
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