@corbet This is probably a better link https://code.opensource.huaweicloud.com/openharmony/kernel_liteos_a/home
@corbet not sure how much work "eventually" is doing there, but it might be a lot?
@gnomon @vbabka @corbet I don't know much about HarmonyOS. After all, I am only an external consultant, and the team I work with is an open-source oddity…
However, the Linux kernel may be actually old and backward. Someone came up with that theory some 30 years ago—er, what was his name? Andrew S. Tanenbaum?
@ptesarik sure, "old" is definitely accurate at this point and you won't find me defending the design elegance of a monolithic kernel aimed at underpinning POSIX. But in terms of industrial engineering and serving the purpose of being a general purpose, performant system component that scales down to (what we currently call) microcontrollers and up to HPC workloads from a mostly unified codebase?
I don't know, man. There's a lot of room to win in narrowed domain constraints, but in general..?
@gnomon All right, we don't know each other, so I should have avoided sarcasm. You should always take my words with a grain of salt.
You certainly know that HarmonyOS can actually run a Linux kernel if that's the best option for the target device. I could believe that Huawei's hypervisor is 3 times more efficient than Linux with KVM, but it's not quite clear to me what those numbers mean. Too little technical details there.
And no, I don't have access to the hypervisor source repo.
@corbet you missed the bit where Huawei says Linux cements US control. They obviously don't pay attention to who develops Linux and where do they come from.