Abstract
Plan 9 is a distributed system built at the Computing Sciences Research Center of AT&T Bell Laboratories over the last few years. Its goal is to provide a production-quality system for software development and general computation using heterogeneous hardware and minimal software. A Plan 9 system comprises CPU and file servers in a central location connected together by fast networks. Slower networks fan out to workstation-class machines that serve as user terminals. Plan 9 argues that given a few carefully implemented abstractions it is possible to produce a small operating system that provides support for the largest systems on a variety of architectures and networks. The foundations of the system are built on two ideas: a per-process name space and a simple message-oriented file system protocol.
Cite
CITATION STYLE
Pike, R., Presotto, D., Thompson, K., Trickey, H., & Winterbottom, P. (1993). The use of name spaces in Plan 9. ACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review, 27(2), 72–76. https://doi.org/10.1145/155848.155861
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