Everything old is new again? On Sat, Aug 10, 2019 at 7:11 PM Cyber Fonic wrote: > The emergent problem with IoT is the lack of security. From my > understanding of Plan9's architecture. 9p protocol and the "root-less" > security model suggests to me that a Plan9 swarm of IoT devices could be > the "killer app" where Plan9 emerges on the strength of the vision of > decades ago. Looking at other RT OSes the security models are often bolted > on. Plan9 worked well on IBM PC era hardware. An ESP-32 has more resources > and better networking than the early PCs. From my tinkering and reverse > engineering of IoT devices, almost all use 8266 based WiFi and often in > conjunction with a uController. An ESP-32 is dual processor and with > sufficient I/O for most simple tasks. With IoT, in general, you don't need > a lot of I/O, you simply throw more CPUs into the mix. > > On Sat, 10 Aug 2019 at 08:55, Skip Tavakkolian > wrote: > >> I'm not sure if the effort would be worth it; but if you add support for >> esp32, I think it would be better for the os to be something like the one >> you had in kencc for AVR (*) or possibly Russ' libtask, rather than Plan 9. >> Staying with FreeRTOS would need removal of GCC specific things from OS and >> dealing with lots of drivers in C++. >> >> The Cortex-M based mpus (e.g. Teensy 4 with Cortex M7 @ 600MHz) seem more >> appropriate for an "embedded" Plan 9. >> >> (*) for those who have not seen it, it is here: >> % ls -l /n/sources/contrib/forsyth/avr* >> --rw-rw-r-- M 518 bootes sys 251227 Sep 4 2011 >> /n/sources/contrib/forsyth/avr.9gz >> >> On Fri, Aug 9, 2019 at 2:36 PM Charles Forsyth >> wrote: >> >>> Since the resources are small if not tiny, a little systems analysis and >>> design is probably needed, but it looks like a bit of fun, until the >>> inevitable moment of "why am I here?". >>> >>> On Fri, Aug 9, 2019 at 4:50 PM Charles Forsyth < >>> charles.forsyth@gmail.com> wrote: >>> >>>> The device I've got is ESP32-WROOM-32. None of the boards I've seen >>>> that use it bother with external memory, >>>> so memory is limited, especially the way it's partitioned. >>>> >>>> On Fri, Aug 9, 2019 at 3:50 PM Charles Forsyth < >>>> charles.forsyth@gmail.com> wrote: >>>> >>>>> The ESP32 has got several MMUs. The characteristics are different >>>>> depending on the part that a given MMU accesses (flash, ROM, SRAM, external >>>>> memory). >>>>> Some things are accessed using Memory Protection Units instead, which >>>>> control access by Process ID, but don't do mapping. Others including some >>>>> of the SRAMs are accessed through >>>>> an MMU that can do virtual to physical mapping. The MMUs for internal >>>>> SRAM0 and 2 choose protection for a given physical page as none, one or all >>>>> of PIDs 2 to 7, with the virtual address that >>>>> maps to it. PIDs 0 and 1 can access everything. PID 0 can execute >>>>> privileged instructions. >>>>> A large chunk of SRAM (SRAM 1) has only Memory Protection and no >>>>> translation. The external memory MMU is the most general (most >>>>> conventional). >>>>> >>>>> On Fri, Aug 9, 2019 at 3:19 PM Bakul Shah wrote: >>>>> >>>>>> esp32 doesn’t have an mmu, right? >>>>>> >>>>>> On Jul 26, 2019, at 03:30, Charles Forsyth >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>> I was thinking of doing that since I've got an ESP-32 for some reason >>>>>> >>>>>> On Fri, Jul 26, 2019 at 7:38 AM Cyber Fonic >>>>>> wrote: >>>>>> >>>>>>> I was reading the post Why Didn't Plan 9 Succeed >>>>>>> on Hacker News. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> Made me think that Plan 9 for IoT system of systems could be viable. >>>>>>> >>>>>>> To that end, ESP-32 modules look capable enough to run Plan 9, but >>>>>>> is there a Plan 9 C compiler for Xtensa ISA CPUs? >>>>>>> >>>>>>>