Peter St. John wrote:

This led me to SUNMOS (OS for parallel processing, Sandia's alternative for the aforementioned intel PSC descendants) http://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/SUNMOS. Sandia's page looks like real progress for inertial containment sustainable thermonuclear fusion, which really wouuld be super duper cool, fuel your zeppelin with seawater, but I can't find latter-day references to SUNMOS. Anybody know what became of it

I don't know what happened to SUNMOS, but the intellectual descendents of it are the microkernels like L4
and particularly the FASTOS project, see http://www.cs.unm.edu/~fastos/

There's a group who think that full function OSs like Linux are unnecessary or wasteful for clusters. The arguments include virtual memory being unneeded or slow and OS activity ("OS noise") limiting scaling of applications.

As a consequence, you see things like BlueGene/L with a microkernel on the compute nodes and Linux on the I/O nodes.

I don't necessarily believe the arguments, but I like tinkering with a new tricked out OS as well
as the next guy.

Just for fun, I tracked down who said "When you hear 'virtual', you should think 'slow'." -- it was Dave Clark of MIT.

-Larry

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