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DowsingSpoon 2 days ago

Yes. As far as kernels go, NT was pretty damn good.

So is Mach, by the way, if you can afford the microkernel performance overhead.

johncolanduoni 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

Mach is not a very good microkernel at all, because the overhead is much higher than necessary. The L4 family’s IPC design is substantially more efficient, and that’s why they’re used in actual systems. Fuchsia/Zircon have improved on the model further.

Someone will of course bring up XNU, but the microkernel aspect of it died when they smashed the FreeBSD kernel into the codebase. DriverKit has brought some userspace drivers back, but they use shared memory for all the heavy lifting.

saagarjha 2 days ago | parent [-]

> Mach is not a very good microkernel at all, because the overhead is much higher than necessary. The L4 family’s IPC design is substantially more efficient, and that’s why they’re used in actual systems.

As opposed to Mach, which is not used in any actual systems

johncolanduoni a day ago | parent [-]

I mentioned XNU below. It doesn’t really count as a microkernel if you, you know, don’t actually use the microkernel part. At least for the 30 years between the FreeBSD collision and the introduction of DriverKit, which does most of its IPC through shared memory (because the mach ports are not efficient enough, I would assume).

heavyset_go 2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]

XNU monolith-ized itself over time, even over some microkernel-esque boundaries.

2 days ago | parent | prev | next [-]
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dundarious 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

If you include all the drivers too (which surely makes the comparison more accurate), is that still the case?

nobodyandproud 2 days ago | parent [-]

Windows NT 3.x was a true microkernel. Microsoft ruined it but the design was quite good and the driver question was irrelevant, until they sidestepped HAL.

The Linux kernel was and is a monstrosity.

pjmlp 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

This is outdated since Windows Vista, and even more so in Windows 11.

nobodyandproud a day ago | parent [-]

Windows Vista isn't Windows NT 3.x. In the internal versioning, it's not even 4.0.

pjmlp a day ago | parent [-]

Indeed, it is something better, Windows NT 6.0.

And it is irrelevant anyway, given that this comment was written from 10.0.26100.

nobodyandproud a day ago | parent [-]

Oh, I see.

You’re saying they improved the design. I know they added user-privilege device driver support for USB (etc).; did they revert the display compromise/mess as well?

pjmlp 11 hours ago | parent [-]

Yes, now graphics drivers are mostly in userspace, with only a tiny driver in kernel space, miniport.

Hence why graphics usually no longer crash Windows, after a small black screen pause, everything continues as usual.

https://learn.microsoft.com/en-us/windows-hardware/drivers/d...

WalterGR 2 days ago | parent | prev [-]

What do you meant by them sidestepping the HAL?

avadodin 2 days ago | parent | next [-]

I think the biggest one is that the whole GDI library was moved into the Kernel in 3.5x because the performance was terrible at the time.

I don't think they ever intended to keep all drivers strictly userland, though. Just the service side.

nobodyandproud a day ago | parent | prev [-]

Mind you I don't have access to Microsoft code, so this is all indirect, and a lot of this knowledge was when I was fledgling developer.

The Windows NT code was engineered to be portable across many different architectures--not just X86--so it has a hardware abstraction layer. The kernel only ever communicated to the device-driver implementation through this abstraction layer; so the kernel code itself was isolated.

That doesn't mean the device drivers were running in user-land privilege, but it does mean that the kernel code is quite stable and easy to reason about.

When Microsoft decided to compromise on this design, I remember senior engineers--when I first started my career--being abuzz about it for Windows NT 4.0 (or apparently earlier?).