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First, this is an argument that derived from first generation microkernels, and in particular, MINIX, which - as a teaching aid OS, never tried to play the benchmark game.
Indeed, first generation microkernels were so bad, that Jochen Liedtke in rage created L3 “to show how it’s done”. While it was faster than existing microkernels, it was still slow.
The paper is about hybrid kernels. And gutted Mach(XNU) is used as example.
Nowdays(after meltdown) all cache levels are usually invalidated during context switch. Processors try to add mechanisms to avoid this, but they create new vulnreabilities.
Indeed, first generation microkernels were so bad, that Jochen Liedtke in rage created L3 “to show how it’s done”. While it was faster than existing microkernels, it was still slow.
I’ll mark quotes from paper as doublequotes.
Wait, what? Co-located in-kernel? So, loadable module?
Right now I stopped at the end of second page of this paper. Maybe will continue later.
Will read.