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Aujourd’hui — 31 mai 2024LWN

[$] One more pidfdfs surprise

Par : corbet
31 mai 2024 à 18:08
The "pidfdfs" virtual filesystem was added to the 6.9 kernel release as a way to export better information about running processes to user space. It replaced a previous implementation in a way that was, on its surface, fully compatible while adding a number of new capabilities. This transition, which was intended to be entirely invisible to existing applications, already ran into trouble in March, when a misunderstanding with SELinux caused systems with pidfdfs to fail to boot properly. That problem was quickly fixed, but it turns out that there was one more surprise in store, showing just how hard ABI compatibility can be at times.

CFP: the 2024 Kernel Maintainers Summit

Par : corbet
31 mai 2024 à 15:37
The 2024 Kernel Maintainers Summit will happen on September 17 in Vienna, Austria; it is an invitation-only event for a small group to discuss important kernel-development problems. The call for proposals for this gathering has now been posted. One of the best ways to be invited to the event is to propose a topic that needs discussion in that forum. The deadline for proposals is June 18.

25 Years of Krita

Par : corbet
31 mai 2024 à 13:31
The developers of the Krita painting application are celebrating 25 years of development with a detailed history of the project.

A quarter century. That's how long we've been working on Krita. Well, what would become Krita. It started out as KImageShop, but that name was nuked by a now long-dead German lawyer. Then it was renamed to Krayon, and that name was also nuked. Then it was renamed to Krita, and that name stuck.
Hier — 30 mai 2024LWN
À partir d’avant-hierLWN

A plea for more thoughtful comments

Par : corbet
29 mai 2024 à 16:28
When redesigning the LWN site in 2002, we thought long and hard about whether the ability to post comments should be part of it; LWN had not offered that feature for the first four years of its existence. There were already plenty of examples of how comments can go bad by then, but we decided to trust our readers to keep things under control. Much of the time, that trust has proved justified, but there have been times where things have not gone so well. This time is quickly becoming one of those others.

[$] Measuring memory fragmentation

Par : corbet
28 mai 2024 à 13:29
In the final session in the memory-management track of the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, the exhausted group of developers looked one more time at the use of huge pages and the associated problem of memory fragmentation. At its worst, this problem can make huge pages harder (and more expensive) to allocate. Luis Chamberlain, who ran the session, felt that people were worried about this problem, but that there was little data on how severe it truly is.

[$] The state of the memory-management community in 2024

Par : corbet
28 mai 2024 à 13:28
A longstanding tradition in the memory-management track of the Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit is a session with maintainer Andrew Morton to discuss the overall state of the community and the development process. The 2024 gathering upheld that tradition toward the end of the final day of the event. It seems that Morton and the assembled developers were all happy with how memory-management work is going, but there is always room for improvement.

Huston: Calling Time on DNSSEC?

Par : corbet
27 mai 2024 à 21:56
Geoff Huston suggests that it is time to give up on DNSSEC and look for a better way to secure the Internet namespace.

What appears to be very clear (to me at any rate!) is that DNSSEC as we know it today is just not going anywhere. It's too complex, too fragile and just too slow to use for the majority of services and their users. Some value its benefits highly enough that they are prepared to live with its shortcomings, but that's not the case for the overall majority of name holders and for the majority of users, and no amount of passionate exhortations about DNSSEC will change this.

[$] Fleshing out memory descriptors

Par : corbet
27 mai 2024 à 13:39
One of the long-term goals of the folio conversion in the kernel's memory-management subsystem is the replacement of the page structure, which describes a page of physical memory, with an eight-byte "memory descriptor". This change would reduce the overhead of tracking physical memory, increase type safety, and make memory management more flexible. Thus far, though, details on what the memory-descriptor future will look like have been relatively scarce. At the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, Matthew Wilcox led a discussion to try to fill in the picture somewhat.

[$] The rest of the 6.10 merge window

Par : corbet
27 mai 2024 à 13:04
Linus Torvalds released 6.10-rc1 and closed the 6.10 merge window on May 26. By that time, 11,534 non-merge changesets had been pulled into the mainline for the next release; nearly 5,000 of those came in after "The first half of the 6.10 merge window" was written. While the latter half of the merge window tends to focus more on fixes, there was also a lot of new functionality that landed during this time.

[$] The next steps for the maple tree

Par : corbet
27 mai 2024 à 12:48
The maple tree data structure was added during the 6.1 development cycle; since then, it has taken its place at the core of the kernel's memory-management subsystem. Unsurprisingly, work on maple trees is not yet done. Maple-tree maintainer Liam Howlett ran a session in the memory-management track of the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit to discuss the current state of the maple tree and which features can be expected next.

[$] Two talks on multi-size transparent huge page performance

Par : corbet
25 mai 2024 à 16:38
Using huge pages has been known for years to improve the performance of many workloads. But traditional huge pages, often sized by the CPU at 2MB, can be difficult to allocate and can waste memory due to internal fragmentation. Driven by both the folio transition and hardware improvements, attention to smaller, multi-size transparent huge pages (mTHPs) has been on the rise. In two memory-management-track sessions at the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, developers discussed the kernel's ability to reliably allocate mTHPs and the performance gains that result.

[$] Allocator optimizations for transparent huge pages

Par : corbet
24 mai 2024 à 20:42
The original Linux kernel, posted in 1991, ran on a system with a 4KB page size. Over 30 years later, most of us are still running on systems with 4KB pages, even though the amount of installed memory has grown by a few orders of magnitude. It is generally accepted that using large page sizes results in better performance for most applications, but allocating larger pages is often difficult. During a memory-management session at the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, Yu Zhao presented his ideas on improving the allocation of huge pages in the kernel.

[$] Large-folio support for shmem and tmpfs

Par : corbet
24 mai 2024 à 14:02
The kernel contains a pair of related filesystems that, among other things, can be used for shared-memory applications; shmem is an internal mechanism used within the kernel, while the tmpfs filesystem is mounted and accessible from user space. As is the case elsewhere in the kernel, these subsystems would benefit from the addition of large-folio support. During a joint storage, filesystem, and memory-management session at the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, Daniel Gomez talked about the work he is doing to add that support.

BitKeeper, Linux, and licensing disputes: How Linus wrote Git in 14 days (Graphite blog)

Par : corbet
24 mai 2024 à 13:34
This Graphite blog post retells the history of the BitKeeper fiasco and the dawn of the Git era.

When we think of history, we often romanticize it as being born of a sudden stroke of inspiration. But the creation of git shows the far harsher reality of invention: a slowly escalating disagreement over a license; the need for a scrappy backup solution to unblock work; and then continued polishing and iteration through years and years, led not by the inventor, but rather a community.

For those who weren't around in those days, a perusal of the LWN coverage from the time might be of interest too, including:

...and a lot more for those who care to search for it.

[$] A new swap abstraction layer for the kernel

Par : corbet
23 mai 2024 à 19:27
Swapping may be a memory-management technique at its core, but its implementation also involves the kernel's filesystem and storage layers. So it is not surprising that a session on the kernel's swap abstraction layer, led by Chris Li at the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, was held jointly by all three of those tracks. Li has some ambitious ideas for an improved subsystem, but getting to a workable implementation may not be easy.

[$] The twilight of the version-1 memory controller

Par : corbet
23 mai 2024 à 14:03
Almost immediately after the merging of control groups, kernel developers set their sights on reimplementing them properly. The second version of the control-group API started trickling into the kernel around the 3.16 release in 2014 and users have long since been encouraged to migrate, but support for (and users of) the initial API remain. At the 2024 Linux Storage, Filesystem, Memory-Management and BPF Summit, memory-management developers discussed whether (and when) it might be possible to remove the version-1 memory controller. The session was led by Shakeel Butt and (participating remotely) Roman Gushchin.
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