NetBSD-Docs archive
[Date Prev][Date Next][Thread Prev][Thread Next][Date Index][Thread Index][Old Index]
Re: Update to projects page
On Mon, 30 May 2011 19:46:55 -0700, jnemeth%victoria.tc.ca@localhost wrote:
On Oct 20, 4:02am, jean-Yves Migeon wrote:
} On Mon, 30 May 2011 01:07:13 -0700, jnemeth%victoria.tc.ca@localhost wrote:
} > } - IOMMU for x86 and Xen
} >
} > - Xen 4 support
}
} What do you mean with "Xen 4" support? PCI+USB passthrough with
IOMMU?
} RAS features like CPU/memory hotplug? machine check exceptions?
} Something else?
No idea, basically whatever goodies that Xen 4 provides.
}-- End of excerpt from jean-Yves Migeon
Okay, new proposal. I added the Xen 4 project with a bit more details
to help referencing, and moved the nouveau project to a "KMS/GEM"
project.
--
Jean-Yves Migeon
jeanyves.migeon%free.fr@localhost
Index: projects.xml
===================================================================
RCS file: /cvsroot/htdocs/contrib/projects.xml,v
retrieving revision 1.150
diff -u -p -r1.150 projects.xml
--- projects.xml 29 May 2011 09:02:05 -0000 1.150
+++ projects.xml 31 May 2011 09:54:39 -0000
@@ -407,8 +407,34 @@
placed on above NAND flash chip.</para>
</project>
+ <project id="kernel_components">
+ <title>support jails-like features</title>
+ <project-details>
+ <!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
+ <difficulty>9</difficulty>
+ <!-- <length>6 months</length> -->
+ <contact>&a.jym; <email>jym AT NetBSD.org</email></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>tech-kern</mlist></contact>
+ </project-details>
+
+ <para>Today a number of OS provide some form of kernel-level
+ virtualization that offer better isolation mechanisms that the
+ traditional (yet more portable) &man.chroot.2;. Currently, NetBSD
+ lacks functionality in this field; there have been multiple attempts
+ (<ulink
url="http://2008.asiabsdcon.org/papers/P3A-paper.pdf">gaols</ulink>, <ulink
url="http://2008.asiabsdcon.org/papers/P5A-paper.pdf">mult</ulink>) to implement
+ a jails-like system, but none so far has been integrated in base.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>The purpose of this project is to study the various
+ implementations found elsewhere (FreeBSD Jails, Solaris Zones,
+ Linux Containers/VServers, ...), and eventually see their plus/minus
+ points. An additional step would be to see how this can be implemented
+ the various architectural improvements NetBSD gained, especially
+ &man.rump.3; and &man.kauth.9;.</para>
+ <para>Caution: this is a research project.</para>
+ </project>
</projects>
</sect1>
@@ -673,6 +699,7 @@
IDs. See <ulink
url="http://developer.apple.com/technotes/fl/fl_36.html"/>.</para>
</project>
+
</projects>
</sect1>
@@ -933,22 +960,71 @@
contributed code to the FOSS community.</para>
</project>
- <project id="xen-restore">
- <title>Xen: implement save/restore feature</title>
+ <project id="x86-iommu">
+ <title>Add IOMMU support in x86/xen ports</title>
<project-details>
<!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
- <!-- <difficulty>0</difficulty> -->
- <!-- <length>Unspecified</length> -->
+ <difficulty>8</difficulty>
+ <length>3 months</length>
+ <contact>&a.jym; <email>jym AT NetBSD.org</email></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>port-amd64</mlist>, <mlist>port-i386</mlist></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>port-xen</mlist></contact>
+ </project-details>
+
+ <para>With the push of virtualization, the
+ x86 world started recently to gain a more widespread attention towards
+ supporting IOMMUs; similar to MMUs that translate virtual addresses
+ into physical ones, an IOMMU translates device/bus addresses into
+ physical addresses. The purpose of this project is to add AMD and Intel
+ IOMMU support in NetBSD's machine-independant bus abstraction layers
+ &man.bus.space.9; and &man.bus.dma.9;.</para>
+ </project>
+
+ <project id="virtio">
+ <title>Implement virtio devices</title>
+
+ <project-details>
+ <!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
+ <difficulty>6</difficulty>
+ <length>3 months</length>
+ <contact>&a.jym; <email>jym AT NetBSD.org</email></contact>
<contact><mlist>port-xen</mlist></contact>
- <contact><mlist>tech-kern</mlist></contact>
</project-details>
- <para>Xen (2 and 3) can save/restore (and migrate, but from the
- guest POW it's the same thing) a domain. Some support is needed
- in guest operating system, and right now NetBSD lacks this
- support. This is mostly suspend/resume in virtual device
- drivers, and in the pmap.</para>
+ <para><ulink url="http://www.linux-kvm.org">The KVM (Kernel Virtual
Machine) project</ulink> specifies a number
+ of interfaces to virtualize different kind of devices through <ulink
url="http://www.linux-kvm.org/page/Virtio">Virtio</ulink>,
+ like block (hard-drives), net (network cards), rng (random
+ number generators), and pci (for PCI pass-through). The purpose of
+ this project is to implement the drivers in NetBSD, so that it
+ can benefit from KVM virtualization without having to rely on
+ hardware emulation to expose the same functionality.</para>
+ </project>
+
+ <project id="xen4">
+ <title>Support latest features of Xen</title>
+
+ <project-details>
+ <!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
+ <difficulty>8</difficulty>
+ <length>3-6 months</length>
+ <contact>&a.jym; <email>jym AT NetBSD.org</email></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>port-xen</mlist></contact>
+ </project-details>
+
+ <para>Latest Xen versions come with a number of features
+ that are currently not supported by NetBSD: USB/VGA passthrough, RAS
+ (Reliability, Availability and Serviceability) options - CPU
+ and memory hotpluging - , Fault tolerancy with Remus, and debugging
+ with gdbx (lightweight debugger included with Xen).
+ </para>
+
+ <para>
+ The purpose
+ of this project is to add the missing parts inside NetBSD. Most of
+ the work is composed of smaller components that can be worked on
+ independently from others.
+ </para>
</project>
<project id="sgimips">
@@ -1099,20 +1175,26 @@ url="http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/tech-e
content is needed.</para>
</project>
- <project id="nvidia">
- <title>Port of the NVIDIA graphics driver</title>
+ <project id="libvirt">
+ <title>Add libvirt in pkgsrc</title>
<project-details>
<!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
- <!-- <difficulty>0</difficulty> -->
- <!-- <length>Unspecified</length> -->
- <contact><mlist>tech-kern</mlist></contact>
+ <difficulty>3</difficulty>
+ <length>2-3 weeks</length>
+ <contact>&a.jym; <email>jym AT NetBSD.org</email></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>tech-pkg</mlist></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>port-xen</mlist></contact>
</project-details>
- <para>Port the FreeBSD driver for NVIDIA graphic adapter
- distributed by NVIDIA. Most of the work happens in the kernel,
- but making the userland part work with XFree86/X.Org and Linux
- binary emulation is needed too.</para>
+ <para><ulink url="http://www.libvirt.org">Libvirt</ulink> is a project
that aims at bringing yet-another-level of
+ abstraction to the management of different virtualization
+ technologies. It supports a wide range of systems (including Xen),
+ however pkgsrc does not yet offer a package to install libvirt.
+ The purpose of this project is to investigate what is needed to
+ build libvirt as a standalone package within pkgsrc, and integrate it
+ so it can benefit from pkgsrc's portability across many different OS.
+ </para>
</project>
<project id="syspkgs">
@@ -1134,6 +1216,31 @@ url="http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/tech-e
has not yet been finalized.</para>
</project>
+ <project id="kms-gem">
+ <title>Kernel Mode Setting and Graphics Execution Manager</title>
+
+ <project-details>
+ <!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
+ <!-- <difficulty>0</difficulty> -->
+ <!-- <length>Unspecified</length> -->
+ <contact><mlist>tech-kern</mlist></contact>
+ <contact><mlist>tech-x11</mlist></contact>
+ </project-details>
+
+ <para>Recent overhaul of the X server infrastructure lead to the
+ appearance of Kernel Mode Setting (KMS) and Graphics Execution
+ Manager (GEM) to rejuvenate the X world. This has a number of
+ benefits, from improving 3D GPU support, deprivileged X server to
+ in-kernel video mode management, which can be very helpful when it
+ is necessary to debug a live system using &man.ddb.4;.
+ </para>
+
+ <para>The goal of this project is to add the missing bits inside
+ NetBSD, most notably KMS and GEM. Testing the port using a recent
+ driver like <emphasis>nouveau</emphasis> would be worth the effort.
+ </para>
+ </project>
+
<project id="valgrind">
<title>Valgrind</title>
@@ -1265,27 +1372,6 @@ url="http://mail-index.NetBSD.org/tech-e
efficient.</para>
</project>
- <project id="sasl">
- <title>Create a secure SASL (RFC2222) implementation</title>
-
- <project-details>
- <!-- <priority>0</priority> -->
- <difficulty>3</difficulty>
- <contact><mlist>tech-security</mlist></contact>
- </project-details>
-
- <para>RFC 2222 describes a very simple authentication mechanism
- that has been applied to various connection oriented protocols.
- One example is to authenticate MUAs with their outgoing
- mail server. This project should, at least, result in a library
- integrated with the in-tree postfix client to allow SASL based
- mail authentication. The primary design goal is a secure system,
- i.e. no postfix-user readable cleartext client password database.
- </para><para>Additional integration with pkgsrc would be a bonus.
- </para><para>Note: check dovecot and evaluate it.</para>
- </project>
-
-
<project id="IMAPfs">
<title>IMAPfs for mail</title>
Home |
Main Index |
Thread Index |
Old Index