| USENIX 2002 Annual Conference - Technical Program Abstract 
The JX Operating System
Michael Golm, Meik Felser, Christian Wawersich, Jürgen Kleinöder, 
University of Erlangen-NürnbergAbstractThis paper describes the architecture and performance 
 of the JX operating system. JX is both an operating system 
 completely written in Java and a runtime system for Java 
 applications.
 Our work demonstrates that it is possible to build a complete 
 operating system in Java, achieve a good performance, 
 and still benefit from the modern software-technology 
 of this object-oriented, type-safe language. We explain 
 how an operating system can be structured that is no longer 
 build on MMU protection but on type safety.  
 JX is based on a small microkernel which is responsible 
 for system initialization, CPU context switching, and low-level 
 protection-domain management. The Java code is 
 organized in components, which are loaded into domains, 
 verified, and translated to native code. Domains can be 
 completely isolated from each other. 
 The JX architecture allows a wide range of system configurations, 
 from fast and monolithic to very flexible, but 
 slower configurations. 
 We compare the performance of JX with Linux by using 
 two non-trivial operating system components: a file system 
 and an NFS server. Furthermore we discuss the performance 
 impact of several alternative system configurations. 
 In a monolithic configuration JX achieves between about 
 40% and 100% Linux performance in the file system bench-mark 
 and about 80% in the NFS benchmark. 
 
View the full text of this paper in 
PDF and 
PostScript.
The Proceedings are published as a collective work, © 2002 by the USENIX Association. All Rights Reserved. Rights
to individual papers remain with the author or the author's employer.
Permission is granted for the noncommercial reproduction of the complete
work for educational or research purposes. USENIX acknowledges all
trademarks within this paper.
 
If you need the latest Adobe Acrobat Reader, you can download it from Adobe's site.
 To become a USENIX Member, please see our Membership Information. 
 |