675 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
675 lines
22 KiB
Plaintext
.HTML "The Use of Name Spaces in Plan 9
|
|
.TL
|
|
The Use of Name Spaces in Plan 9
|
|
.AU
|
|
Rob Pike
|
|
Dave Presotto
|
|
Ken Thompson
|
|
Howard Trickey
|
|
Phil Winterbottom
|
|
.AI
|
|
.MH
|
|
USA
|
|
.AB
|
|
.FS
|
|
Appeared in
|
|
.I
|
|
Operating Systems Review,
|
|
.R
|
|
Vol. 27, #2, April 1993, pp. 72-76
|
|
(reprinted from
|
|
.I
|
|
Proceedings of the 5th ACM SIGOPS European Workshop,
|
|
.R
|
|
Mont Saint-Michel, 1992, Paper nº 34).
|
|
.FE
|
|
Plan 9 is a distributed system built at the Computing Sciences Research
|
|
Center of AT&T Bell Laboratories (now Lucent Technologies, Bell Labs) over the last few years.
|
|
Its goal is to provide a production-quality system for software
|
|
development and general computation using heterogeneous hardware
|
|
and minimal software. A Plan 9 system comprises CPU and file
|
|
servers in a central location connected together by fast networks.
|
|
Slower networks fan out to workstation-class machines that serve as
|
|
user terminals. Plan 9 argues that given a few carefully
|
|
implemented abstractions
|
|
it is possible to
|
|
produce a small operating system that provides support for the largest systems
|
|
on a variety of architectures and networks. The foundations of the system are
|
|
built on two ideas: a per-process name space and a simple message-oriented
|
|
file system protocol.
|
|
.AE
|
|
.PP
|
|
The operating system for the CPU servers and terminals is
|
|
structured as a traditional kernel: a single compiled image
|
|
containing code for resource management, process control,
|
|
user processes,
|
|
virtual memory, and I/O. Because the file server is a separate
|
|
machine, the file system is not compiled in, although the management
|
|
of the name space, a per-process attribute, is.
|
|
The entire kernel for the multiprocessor SGI Power Series machine
|
|
is 25000 lines of C,
|
|
the largest part of which is code for four networks including the
|
|
Ethernet with the Internet protocol suite.
|
|
Fewer than 1500 lines are machine-specific, and a
|
|
functional kernel with minimal I/O can be put together from
|
|
source files totaling 6000 lines. [Pike90]
|
|
.PP
|
|
The system is relatively small for several reasons.
|
|
First, it is all new: it has not had time to accrete as many fixes
|
|
and features as other systems.
|
|
Also, other than the network protocol, it adheres to no
|
|
external interface; in particular, it is not Unix-compatible.
|
|
Economy stems from careful selection of services and interfaces.
|
|
Finally, wherever possible the system is built around
|
|
two simple ideas:
|
|
every resource in the system, either local or remote,
|
|
is represented by a hierarchical file system; and
|
|
a user or process
|
|
assembles a private view of the system by constructing a file
|
|
.I
|
|
name space
|
|
.R
|
|
that connects these resources. [Needham]
|
|
.SH
|
|
File Protocol
|
|
.PP
|
|
All resources in Plan 9 look like file systems.
|
|
That does not mean that they are repositories for
|
|
permanent files on disk, but that the interface to them
|
|
is file-oriented: finding files (resources) in a hierarchical
|
|
name tree, attaching to them by name, and accessing their contents
|
|
by read and write calls.
|
|
There are dozens of file system types in Plan 9, but only a few
|
|
represent traditional files.
|
|
At this level of abstraction, files in Plan 9 are similar
|
|
to objects, except that files are already provided with naming,
|
|
access, and protection methods that must be created afresh for
|
|
objects. Object-oriented readers may approach the rest of this
|
|
paper as a study in how to make objects look like files.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The interface to file systems is defined by a protocol, called 9P,
|
|
analogous but not very similar to the NFS protocol.
|
|
The protocol talks about files, not blocks; given a connection to the root
|
|
directory of a file server,
|
|
the 9P messages navigate the file hierarchy, open files for I/O,
|
|
and read or write arbitrary bytes in the files.
|
|
9P contains 17 message types: three for
|
|
initializing and
|
|
authenticating a connection and fourteen for manipulating objects.
|
|
The messages are generated by the kernel in response to user- or
|
|
kernel-level I/O requests.
|
|
Here is a quick tour of the major message types.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW auth
|
|
and
|
|
.CW attach
|
|
messages authenticate a connection, established by means outside 9P,
|
|
and validate its user.
|
|
The result is an authenticated
|
|
.I channel
|
|
that points to the root of the
|
|
server.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW clone
|
|
message makes a new channel identical to an existing channel,
|
|
which may be moved to a file on the server using a
|
|
.CW walk
|
|
message to descend each level in the hierarchy.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW stat
|
|
and
|
|
.CW wstat
|
|
messages read and write the attributes of the file pointed to by a channel.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW open
|
|
message prepares a channel for subsequent
|
|
.CW read
|
|
and
|
|
.CW write
|
|
messages to access the contents of the file, while
|
|
.CW create
|
|
and
|
|
.CW remove
|
|
perform, on the files, the actions implied by their names.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW clunk
|
|
message discards a channel without affecting the file.
|
|
None of the 9P messages consider caching; file caches are provided,
|
|
when needed, either within the server (centralized caching)
|
|
or by implementing the cache as a transparent file system between the
|
|
client and the 9P connection to the server (client caching).
|
|
.PP
|
|
For efficiency, the connection to local
|
|
kernel-resident file systems, misleadingly called
|
|
.I devices,
|
|
is by regular rather than remote procedure calls.
|
|
The procedures map one-to-one with 9P message types.
|
|
Locally each channel has an associated data structure
|
|
that holds a type field used to index
|
|
a table of procedure calls, one set per file system type,
|
|
analogous to selecting the method set for an object.
|
|
One kernel-resident file system, the
|
|
.I
|
|
mount device,
|
|
.R
|
|
translates the local 9P procedure calls into RPC messages to
|
|
remote services over a separately provided transport protocol
|
|
such as TCP or IL, a new reliable datagram protocol, or over a pipe to
|
|
a user process.
|
|
Write and read calls transmit the messages over the transport layer.
|
|
The mount device is the sole bridge between the procedural
|
|
interface seen by user programs and remote and user-level services.
|
|
It does all associated marshaling, buffer
|
|
management, and multiplexing and is
|
|
the only integral RPC mechanism in Plan 9.
|
|
The mount device is in effect a proxy object.
|
|
There is no RPC stub compiler; instead the mount driver and
|
|
all servers just share a library that packs and unpacks 9P messages.
|
|
.SH
|
|
Examples
|
|
.PP
|
|
One file system type serves
|
|
permanent files from the main file server,
|
|
a stand-alone multiprocessor system with a
|
|
350-gigabyte
|
|
optical WORM jukebox that holds the data, fronted by a two-level
|
|
block cache comprising 7 gigabytes of
|
|
magnetic disk and 128 megabytes of RAM.
|
|
Clients connect to the file server using any of a variety of
|
|
networks and protocols and access files using 9P.
|
|
The file server runs a distinct operating system and has no
|
|
support for user processes; other than a restricted set of commands
|
|
available on the console, all it does is answer 9P messages from clients.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Once a day, at 5:00 AM,
|
|
the file server sweeps through the cache blocks and marks dirty blocks
|
|
copy-on-write.
|
|
It creates a copy of the root directory
|
|
and labels it with the current date, for example
|
|
.CW 1995/0314 .
|
|
It then starts a background process to copy the dirty blocks to the WORM.
|
|
The result is that the server retains an image of the file system as it was
|
|
early each morning.
|
|
The set of old root directories is accessible using 9P, so a client
|
|
may examine backup files using ordinary commands.
|
|
Several advantages stem from having the backup service implemented
|
|
as a plain file system.
|
|
Most obviously, ordinary commands can access them.
|
|
For example, to see when a bug was fixed
|
|
.P1
|
|
grep 'mouse bug fix' 1995/*/sys/src/cmd/8½/file.c
|
|
.P2
|
|
The owner, access times, permissions, and other properties of the
|
|
files are also backed up.
|
|
Because it is a file system, the backup
|
|
still has protections;
|
|
it is not possible to subvert security by looking at the backup.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The file server is only one type of file system.
|
|
A number of unusual services are provided within the kernel as
|
|
local file systems.
|
|
These services are not limited to I/O devices such
|
|
as disks. They include network devices and their associated protocols,
|
|
the bitmap display and mouse,
|
|
a representation of processes similar to
|
|
.CW /proc
|
|
[Killian], the name/value pairs that form the `environment'
|
|
passed to a new process, profiling services,
|
|
and other resources.
|
|
Each of these is represented as a file system \(em
|
|
directories containing sets of files \(em
|
|
but the constituent files do not represent permanent storage on disk.
|
|
Instead, they are closer in properties to UNIX device files.
|
|
.PP
|
|
For example, the
|
|
.I console
|
|
device contains the file
|
|
.CW /dev/cons ,
|
|
similar to the UNIX file
|
|
.CW /dev/console :
|
|
when written,
|
|
.CW /dev/cons
|
|
appends to the console typescript; when read,
|
|
it returns characters typed on the keyboard.
|
|
Other files in the console device include
|
|
.CW /dev/time ,
|
|
the number of seconds since the epoch,
|
|
.CW /dev/cputime ,
|
|
the computation time used by the process reading the device,
|
|
.CW /dev/pid ,
|
|
the process id of the process reading the device, and
|
|
.CW /dev/user ,
|
|
the login name of the user accessing the device.
|
|
All these files contain text, not binary numbers,
|
|
so their use is free of byte-order problems.
|
|
Their contents are synthesized on demand when read; when written,
|
|
they cause modifications to kernel data structures.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The
|
|
.I process
|
|
device contains one directory per live local process, named by its numeric
|
|
process id:
|
|
.CW /proc/1 ,
|
|
.CW /proc/2 ,
|
|
etc.
|
|
Each directory contains a set of files that access the process.
|
|
For example, in each directory the file
|
|
.CW mem
|
|
is an image of the virtual memory of the process that may be read or
|
|
written for debugging.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW text
|
|
file is a sort of link to the file from which the process was executed;
|
|
it may be opened to read the symbol tables for the process.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW ctl
|
|
file may be written textual messages such as
|
|
.CW stop
|
|
or
|
|
.CW kill
|
|
to control the execution of the process.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW status
|
|
file contains a fixed-format line of text containing information about
|
|
the process: its name, owner, state, and so on.
|
|
Text strings written to the
|
|
.CW note
|
|
file are delivered to the process as
|
|
.I notes,
|
|
analogous to UNIX signals.
|
|
By providing these services as textual I/O on files rather
|
|
than as system calls (such as
|
|
.CW kill )
|
|
or special-purpose operations (such as
|
|
.CW ptrace ),
|
|
the Plan 9 process device simplifies the implementation of
|
|
debuggers and related programs.
|
|
For example, the command
|
|
.P1
|
|
cat /proc/*/status
|
|
.P2
|
|
is a crude form of the
|
|
.CW ps
|
|
command; the actual
|
|
.CW ps
|
|
merely reformats the data so obtained.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The
|
|
.I bitmap
|
|
device contains three files,
|
|
.CW /dev/mouse ,
|
|
.CW /dev/screen ,
|
|
and
|
|
.CW /dev/bitblt ,
|
|
that provide an interface to the local bitmap display (if any) and pointing device.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW mouse
|
|
file returns a fixed-format record containing
|
|
1 byte of button state and 4 bytes each of
|
|
.I x
|
|
and
|
|
.I y
|
|
position of the mouse.
|
|
If the mouse has not moved since the file was last read, a subsequent read will
|
|
block.
|
|
The
|
|
.CW screen
|
|
file contains a memory image of the contents of the display;
|
|
the
|
|
.CW bitblt
|
|
file provides a procedural interface.
|
|
Calls to the graphics library are translated into messages that are written
|
|
to the
|
|
.CW bitblt
|
|
file to perform bitmap graphics operations. (This is essentially a nested
|
|
RPC protocol.)
|
|
.PP
|
|
The various services being used by a process are gathered together into the
|
|
process's
|
|
.I
|
|
name space,
|
|
.R
|
|
a single rooted hierarchy of file names.
|
|
When a process forks, the child process shares the name space with the parent.
|
|
Several system calls manipulate name spaces.
|
|
Given a file descriptor
|
|
.CW fd
|
|
that holds an open communications channel to a service,
|
|
the call
|
|
.P1
|
|
mount(int fd, char *old, int flags)
|
|
.P2
|
|
authenticates the user and attaches the file tree of the service to
|
|
the directory named by
|
|
.CW old .
|
|
The
|
|
.CW flags
|
|
specify how the tree is to be attached to
|
|
.CW old :
|
|
replacing the current contents or appearing before or after the
|
|
current contents of the directory.
|
|
A directory with several services mounted is called a
|
|
.I union
|
|
directory and is searched in the specified order.
|
|
The call
|
|
.P1
|
|
bind(char *new, char *old, int flags)
|
|
.P2
|
|
takes the portion of the existing name space visible at
|
|
.CW new ,
|
|
either a file or a directory, and makes it also visible at
|
|
.CW old .
|
|
For example,
|
|
.P1
|
|
bind("1995/0301/sys/include", "/sys/include", REPLACE)
|
|
.P2
|
|
causes the directory of include files to be overlaid with its
|
|
contents from the dump on March first.
|
|
.PP
|
|
A process is created by the
|
|
.CW rfork
|
|
system call, which takes as argument a bit vector defining which
|
|
attributes of the process are to be shared between parent
|
|
and child instead of copied.
|
|
One of the attributes is the name space: when shared, changes
|
|
made by either process are visible in the other; when copied,
|
|
changes are independent.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Although there is no global name space,
|
|
for a process to function sensibly the local name spaces must adhere
|
|
to global conventions.
|
|
Nonetheless, the use of local name spaces is critical to the system.
|
|
Both these ideas are illustrated by the use of the name space to
|
|
handle heterogeneity.
|
|
The binaries for a given architecture are contained in a directory
|
|
named by the architecture, for example
|
|
.CW /mips/bin ;
|
|
in use, that directory is bound to the conventional location
|
|
.CW /bin .
|
|
Programs such as shell scripts need not know the CPU type they are
|
|
executing on to find binaries to run.
|
|
A directory of private binaries
|
|
is usually unioned with
|
|
.CW /bin .
|
|
(Compare this to the
|
|
.I
|
|
ad hoc
|
|
.R
|
|
and special-purpose idea of the
|
|
.CW PATH
|
|
variable, which is not used in the Plan 9 shell.)
|
|
Local bindings are also helpful for debugging, for example by binding
|
|
an old library to the standard place and linking a program to see
|
|
if recent changes to the library are responsible for a bug in the program.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The window system,
|
|
.CW 8½
|
|
[Pike91], is a server for files such as
|
|
.CW /dev/cons
|
|
and
|
|
.CW /dev/bitblt .
|
|
Each client sees a distinct copy of these files in its local
|
|
name space: there are many instances of
|
|
.CW /dev/cons ,
|
|
each served by
|
|
.CW 8½
|
|
to the local name space of a window.
|
|
Again,
|
|
.CW 8½
|
|
implements services using
|
|
local name spaces plus the use
|
|
of I/O to conventionally named files.
|
|
Each client just connects its standard input, output, and error files
|
|
to
|
|
.CW /dev/cons ,
|
|
with analogous operations to access bitmap graphics.
|
|
Compare this to the implementation of
|
|
.CW /dev/tty
|
|
on UNIX, which is done by special code in the kernel
|
|
that overloads the file, when opened,
|
|
with the standard input or output of the process.
|
|
Special arrangement must be made by a UNIX window system for
|
|
.CW /dev/tty
|
|
to behave as expected;
|
|
.CW 8½
|
|
instead uses the provision of the corresponding file as its
|
|
central idea, which to succeed depends critically on local name spaces.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The environment
|
|
.CW 8½
|
|
provides its clients is exactly the environment under which it is implemented:
|
|
a conventional set of files in
|
|
.CW /dev .
|
|
This permits the window system to be run recursively in one of its own
|
|
windows, which is handy for debugging.
|
|
It also means that if the files are exported to another machine,
|
|
as described below, the window system or client applications may be
|
|
run transparently on remote machines, even ones without graphics hardware.
|
|
This mechanism is used for Plan 9's implementation of the X window
|
|
system: X is run as a client of
|
|
.CW 8½ ,
|
|
often on a remote machine with lots of memory.
|
|
In this configuration, using Ethernet to connect
|
|
MIPS machines, we measure only a 10% degradation in graphics
|
|
performance relative to running X on
|
|
a bare Plan 9 machine.
|
|
.PP
|
|
An unusual application of these ideas is a statistics-gathering
|
|
file system implemented by a command called
|
|
.CW iostats .
|
|
The command encapsulates a process in a local name space, monitoring 9P
|
|
requests from the process to the outside world \(em the name space in which
|
|
.CW iostats
|
|
is itself running. When the command completes,
|
|
.CW iostats
|
|
reports usage and performance figures for file activity.
|
|
For example
|
|
.P1
|
|
iostats 8½
|
|
.P2
|
|
can be used to discover how much I/O the window system
|
|
does to the bitmap device, font files, and so on.
|
|
.PP
|
|
The
|
|
.CW import
|
|
command connects a piece of name space from a remote system
|
|
to the local name space.
|
|
Its implementation is to dial the remote machine and start
|
|
a process there that serves the remote name space using 9P.
|
|
It then calls
|
|
.CW mount
|
|
to attach the connection to the name space and finally dies;
|
|
the remote process continues to serve the files.
|
|
One use is to access devices not available
|
|
locally. For example, to write a floppy one may say
|
|
.P1
|
|
import lab.pc /a: /n/dos
|
|
cp foo /n/dos/bar
|
|
.P2
|
|
The call to
|
|
.CW import
|
|
connects the file tree from
|
|
.CW /a:
|
|
on the machine
|
|
.CW lab.pc
|
|
(which must support 9P) to the local directory
|
|
.CW /n/dos .
|
|
Then the file
|
|
.CW foo
|
|
can be written to the floppy just by copying it across.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Another application is remote debugging:
|
|
.P1
|
|
import helix /proc
|
|
.P2
|
|
makes the process file system on machine
|
|
.CW helix
|
|
available locally; commands such as
|
|
.CW ps
|
|
then see
|
|
.CW helix 's
|
|
processes instead of the local ones.
|
|
The debugger may then look at a remote process:
|
|
.P1
|
|
db /proc/27/text /proc/27/mem
|
|
.P2
|
|
allows breakpoint debugging of the remote process.
|
|
Since
|
|
.CW db
|
|
infers the CPU type of the process from the executable header on
|
|
the text file, it supports
|
|
cross-architecture debugging, too.
|
|
Care is taken within
|
|
.CW db
|
|
to handle issues of byte order and floating point; it is possible to
|
|
breakpoint debug a big-endian MIPS process from a little-endian i386.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Network interfaces are also implemented as file systems [Presotto].
|
|
For example,
|
|
.CW /net/tcp
|
|
is a directory somewhat like
|
|
.CW /proc :
|
|
it contains a set of numbered directories, one per connection,
|
|
each of which contains files to control and communicate on the connection.
|
|
A process allocates a new connection by accessing
|
|
.CW /net/tcp/clone ,
|
|
which evaluates to the directory of an unused connection.
|
|
To make a call, the process writes a textual message such as
|
|
.CW 'connect
|
|
.CW 135.104.53.2!512'
|
|
to the
|
|
.CW ctl
|
|
file and then reads and writes the
|
|
.CW data
|
|
file.
|
|
An
|
|
.CW rlogin
|
|
service can be implemented in a few of lines of shell code.
|
|
.PP
|
|
This structure makes network gatewaying easy to provide.
|
|
We have machines with Datakit interfaces but no Internet interface.
|
|
On such a machine one may type
|
|
.P1
|
|
import helix /net
|
|
telnet tcp!ai.mit.edu
|
|
.P2
|
|
The
|
|
.CW import
|
|
uses Datakit to pull in the TCP interface from
|
|
.CW helix ,
|
|
which can then be used directly; the
|
|
.CW tcp!
|
|
notation is necessary because we routinely use multiple networks
|
|
and protocols on Plan 9\(emit identifies the network in which
|
|
.CW ai.mit.edu
|
|
is a valid name.
|
|
.PP
|
|
In practice we do not use
|
|
.CW rlogin
|
|
or
|
|
.CW telnet
|
|
between Plan 9 machines. Instead a command called
|
|
.CW cpu
|
|
in effect replaces the CPU in a window with that
|
|
on another machine, typically a fast multiprocessor CPU server.
|
|
The implementation is to recreate the
|
|
name space on the remote machine, using the equivalent of
|
|
.CW import
|
|
to connect pieces of the terminal's name space to that of
|
|
the process (shell) on the CPU server, making the terminal
|
|
a file server for the CPU.
|
|
CPU-local devices such as fast file system connections
|
|
are still local; only terminal-resident devices are
|
|
imported.
|
|
The result is unlike UNIX
|
|
.CW rlogin ,
|
|
which moves into a distinct name space on the remote machine,
|
|
or file sharing with
|
|
.CW NFS ,
|
|
which keeps the name space the same but forces processes to execute
|
|
locally.
|
|
Bindings in
|
|
.CW /bin
|
|
may change because of a change in CPU architecture, and
|
|
the networks involved may be different because of differing hardware,
|
|
but the effect feels like simply speeding up the processor in the
|
|
current name space.
|
|
.SH
|
|
Position
|
|
.PP
|
|
These examples illustrate how the ideas of representing resources
|
|
as file systems and per-process name spaces can be used to solve
|
|
problems often left to more exotic mechanisms.
|
|
Nonetheless there are some operations in Plan 9 that are not
|
|
mapped into file I/O.
|
|
An example is process creation.
|
|
We could imagine a message to a control file in
|
|
.CW /proc
|
|
that creates a process, but the details of
|
|
constructing the environment of the new process \(em its open files,
|
|
name space, memory image, etc. \(em are too intricate to
|
|
be described easily in a simple I/O operation.
|
|
Therefore new processes on Plan 9 are created by fairly conventional
|
|
.CW rfork
|
|
and
|
|
.CW exec
|
|
system calls;
|
|
.CW /proc
|
|
is used only to represent and control existing processes.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Plan 9 does not attempt to map network name spaces into the file
|
|
system name space, for several reasons.
|
|
The different addressing rules for various networks and protocols
|
|
cannot be mapped uniformly into a hierarchical file name space.
|
|
Even if they could be,
|
|
the various mechanisms to authenticate,
|
|
select a service,
|
|
and control the connection would not map consistently into
|
|
operations on a file.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Shared memory is another resource not adequately represented by a
|
|
file name space.
|
|
Plan 9 takes care to provide mechanisms
|
|
to allow groups of local processes to share and map memory.
|
|
Memory is controlled
|
|
by system calls rather than special files, however,
|
|
since a representation in the file system would imply that memory could
|
|
be imported from remote machines.
|
|
.PP
|
|
Despite these limitations, file systems and name spaces offer an effective
|
|
model around which to build a distributed system.
|
|
Used well, they can provide a uniform, familiar, transparent
|
|
interface to a diverse set of distributed resources.
|
|
They carry well-understood properties of access, protection,
|
|
and naming.
|
|
The integration of devices into the hierarchical file system
|
|
was the best idea in UNIX.
|
|
Plan 9 pushes the concepts much further and shows that
|
|
file systems, when used inventively, have plenty of scope
|
|
for productive research.
|
|
.SH
|
|
References
|
|
.LP
|
|
[Killian] T. Killian, ``Processes as Files'', USENIX Summer Conf. Proc., Salt Lake City, 1984
|
|
.br
|
|
[Needham] R. Needham, ``Names'', in
|
|
.I
|
|
Distributed systems,
|
|
.R
|
|
S. Mullender, ed.,
|
|
Addison Wesley, 1989
|
|
.br
|
|
[Pike90] R. Pike, D. Presotto, K. Thompson, H. Trickey,
|
|
``Plan 9 from Bell Labs'',
|
|
UKUUG Proc. of the Summer 1990 Conf.,
|
|
London, England,
|
|
1990
|
|
.br
|
|
[Presotto] D. Presotto, ``Multiprocessor Streams for Plan 9'',
|
|
UKUUG Proc. of the Summer 1990 Conf.,
|
|
London, England,
|
|
1990
|
|
.br
|
|
[Pike91] Pike, R., ``8.5, The Plan 9 Window System'', USENIX Summer
|
|
Conf. Proc., Nashville, 1991
|