Barrelfish (operating system)
In-game article clicks load inline without leaving the challenge.
Barrelfish is a discontinued, open-source distributed operating system, which was developed by researchers at ETH Zurich and Microsoft Research. The original motivation for the operating system was formed in 2006 by Timothy Roscoe and Paul Barham, and was announced in September 2009. The final official release was on March 23, 2020.
The Barrelfish project's goal was to create a operating system that would account for an increasing amount of processor cores in modern computers, and continuously gather statistics about the hardware so that it could make more accurate decisions when scheduling and transferring data. It was also planned that it would have compatibility with other operating systems such as the Linux and Microsoft Windows. The team behind Barrelfish intended take inspiration from previous research, including Nemesis, a project which Roscoe and Barham had previously worked on in the past.
Name origin
The inspiration for the name comes for the name came from the phrase "shooting fish in a barrel", which represented the dynamic structure that the operating system was planned to have. While originally being developed in collaboration with Microsoft Research, it was also partly supported by Hewlett Packard Enterprise Labs, Huawei, Cisco, Oracle, and VMware before it was discontinued.
See also
Further reading
- Andrew Baumann; Paul Barham; Pierre-Evariste Dagand; Tim Harris; Rebecca Isaacs; Simon Peter; Timothy Roscoe; Adrian Schüpbach; Akhilesh Singhania (October 2009). (PDF). 22nd ACM Symposium on Operating Systems Principles. Big Sky, MT, USA.
- Pierre-Evariste Dagand; Andrew Baumann; Timothy Roscoe (October 2009). (PDF). 5th Workshop on Programming Languages and Operating Systems. Big Sky, MT, USA.
- Andrew Baumann; Simon Peter; Adrian Schüpbach; Akhilesh Singhania; Timothy Roscoe; Paul Barham; Rebecca Isaacs (May 2009). (PDF). 12th Workshop on Hot Topics in Operating Systems. Monte Verità, Switzerland.
- Adrian Schüpbach; Simon Peter; Andrew Baumann; Timothy Roscoe; Paul Barham; Tim Harris; Rebecca Isaacs (June 2008). (PDF). Workshop on Managed Many-Core Systems. Boston, MA, USA.
External links
- (PDF file)