[Discuss] Whence distributed operating systems?
Mike Small
smallm at sdf.org
Thu Apr 21 12:38:15 EDT 2016
David Rosenstrauch <darose at darose.net> writes:
> On 04/21/2016 12:50 AM, Mike Small wrote:
>> "Sadly it seems that we now need to either wait for Linux or Windows to
>> catch up with the 1980s state of the art in distributed systems (think
>> Locus or AFS). What went wrong? Products like DataSynapse’s FabricServer
>> look like an interesting attempt to address the problem, at least for
>> the Java world, but it feels to me that mainstream operating systems
>> designers seem to have lost the plot somewhere along the way."
>>
>> http://discovery.bmc.com/community/blog-post/whatever-happened-to-distributed-operating-systems3/
>>
>> Is single system image still a thing?
>
> Aren't systems like Apache Mesos (which didn't exist back nearly 10
> years ago in 2007 when the author wrote that post) the natural successor
> to DataSynapse FabricServer, and an example of the "distibuted operating
> system" he's talking about? I.e., just a big pool of CPU cores, where
> different portions of the pool can be utilized for different types of
> distributed workloads.
Sounds more like what he's talking about. Are these kinds of systems
gaining much traction? I'd never heard of Mesos.
--
Mike Small
smallm at sdf.org
More information about the Discuss
mailing list