Slashdot Mirror


ACM OSR Linux Issue Available For Free Download

Eric Van Hensbergen writes "In accordance with the ideals of the issue's open source topic, the ACM has agreed to make the July issue of Operating Systems Review: Research and Developments in the Linux Kernel available for download free of charge. It contains a number of interesting papers written by LKML members like Rusty Russell, Paul McKenna, and Eric Biederman as well as academic OS researchers who've made contributions to mainline on topics ranging from RCL, VirtIO, Checkpoint & Resume, to CUBIC TCP, etc. A primary motivation behind this special-topics OSR issue was to help bridge a gap that currently exists between the kernel community and the academic OS research community, by encouraging kernel developers to publish recent additions to the Linux kernel as well as to provide a forum for experience papers which describe the introduction and integration of research into the mainstream Linux kernel. We think it is important for the research community and the kernel community to cross pollinate more and hope this issue will be the first of many venues where the will be able to do so."

18 comments

  1. Cool by clang_jangle · · Score: 5, Informative

    It appears they've gone a bit further than just making the latest issue freely available, the archive is also online now. This is awesome, thanks! Many hours of engrossing reading there. :)

    --
    Caveat Utilitor
    1. Re:Cool by clang_jangle · · Score: 4, Informative

      Small update -- no registration is required for the latest issue; for the archive there is a no charge reg required.

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    2. Re:Cool by metiscus · · Score: 1

      The archive is not free.. you have to login and then you have to be a sigops member or have digital library access.

    3. Re:Cool by clang_jangle · · Score: 2, Interesting

      or have digital library access.

      Right, which requires a no-charge registration. Worked for me.

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    4. Re:Cool by metiscus · · Score: 2, Funny

      You downloaded the full text of those articles?

    5. Re:Cool by clang_jangle · · Score: 3, Informative

      Yes, I did.

      --
      Caveat Utilitor
    6. Re:Cool by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Well, it seems that ACM "fixed" that: I registered for a free web account but, logging with it, I am told I can't download any of the PDFs because "Your present login: XXXXX does not have access to this feature"

  2. Re:Real news by clang_jangle · · Score: 2, Funny

    Well, thank god we have you to remind us what's really important, AC.

    --
    Caveat Utilitor
  3. Re:Real news by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    Ops, just undoing a mod I gave accidently.

  4. Excellent by fatalGlory · · Score: 3, Interesting

    One of the things I love most about the Linux (and general open source) development paradigm is that researcher's get a great platform to start from and when they come up with new advances in OS technology, everyone can benefit from it as soon as its implemented.

    Honestly, its the reason I tell people that a Windows/Mac Box is a home appliance and a Linux Box is a computer. When technology advances, Linux advances. Commercial OS vendors might take years to release a version with a new filesystem technology, etc.

    --
    Censorship is the opposite of education. If neo-darwinism were defensible, people would not need to try and censor ID.
    1. Re:Excellent by Super_Z · · Score: 1

      When technology advances, Linux advances. Commercial OS vendors might take years to release a version with a new filesystem technology, etc.

      I beg to differ. Consider ZFS, DTrace, LLVM, PAM, Bonjour and launchd/SMF. Embraced by Apple and Sun - shunned or slowly adapted by GNU/Linux and major distros. Given the amount of cool new thechnology in OpenSolaris, I'm surprised it hasn't become more popular.

    2. Re:Excellent by Yfrwlf · · Score: 1

      More communication, like TFA, is needed so that new technologies will spread faster, and of course more OSS adoption will also help with this. Also, OSS can always use a healthy injection of outside-the-box thinkers. ;)

      --
      Promote true freedom - support standards and interoperability.
    3. Re:Excellent by Grishnakh · · Score: 2, Interesting

      I beg to differ. Consider ZFS, DTrace, LLVM, PAM, Bonjour and launchd/SMF. Embraced by Apple and Sun

      OK, and how quickly have they been adopted by Microsoft?

      Adoption by Apple is one thing, but adoption by Sun is entirely another. For most individuals, a Sun machine isn't even an option. They're horrendously expensive, and they don't exactly have much software available. Same goes for OpenSolaris. Sure, you can download it and play with it, but is there a real distro out there that makes it as convenient as Ubuntu? Or do you have to compile everything yourself? Gentoo isn't exactly popular among even typical Linux users for exactly that reason: only serious die-hards want to compile all their own software, and at least Gentoo makes that fairly simple too, whereas OpenSolaris probably doesn't.

      As for Apple, does your typical Mac OS X desktop use ZFS and Dtrace? No, didn't think so. So that isn't really a fair statement either.

  5. An operating system for the human race by Dollyknot · · Score: 2, Interesting

    Making the source code for a public operating system closed ie secret, is just ignorance masked as greed. If when Microsoft released Windows 95, they had also released the source code, they would have had millions of programmers, improving it, updating it, making it suitable for use by the human race. Instead of which we only had thousands of programmers working on it

    Instead what did we get?

    We got the new windows washes cleaner syndrome, like who needs Win 95 when you can have Win 98. just as the bugs start to be got out of Win 98, Microsoft tells us you don't need Win 98, its old hat, you must buy the new improved Windows called Win Me, the same mean trick was worked with Win XP and now Vista. I jumped ship after Win Me.

    The more that Academia and Industry realize the benefits and logic of open source, the better the future for our poor benighted planet.

    --
    It's called an elephant's trunk whereas it is in fact, an elephant's nose, a nose by any other name would smell as sweet
    1. Re:An operating system for the human race by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

      Making the source code for a public operating system closed ie secret, is just ignorance masked as greed. If when Microsoft released Windows 95, they had also released the source code, they would have had millions of programmers, improving it, updating it, making it suitable for use by the human race. Instead of which we only had thousands of programmers working on it

      Instead what did we get?

      We got the new windows washes cleaner syndrome, like who needs Win 95 when you can have Win 98. just as the bugs start to be got out of Win 98, Microsoft tells us you don't need Win 98, its old hat, you must buy the new improved Windows called Win Me, the same mean trick was worked with Win XP and now Vista. I jumped ship after Win Me.

      The more that Academia and Industry realize the benefits and logic of open source, the better the future for our poor benighted planet.

      Why is the parent modded troll? I think she/he has a fair opinion.

  6. Whither USENIX? by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 0

    This is a role that USENIX has historically played, are ACM and USENIX collaborating more now?