Lightweight remote procedure call
- 1 February 1990
- journal article
- Published by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) in ACM Transactions on Computer Systems
- Vol. 8 (1) , 37-55
- https://doi.org/10.1145/77648.77650
Abstract
Lightweight Remote Procedure Call (LRPC) is a communication facility designed and optimized for communication between protection domains on the same machine. In contemporary small-kernel operating systems, existing RPC systems incur an unnecessarily high cost when used for the type of communication that predominates—between protection domains on the same machine. This cost leads system designers to coalesce weakly related subsystems into the same protection domain, trading safety for performance. By reducing the overhead of same-machine communication, LRPC encourages both safety and performance. LRPC combines the control transfer and communication model of capability systems with the programming semantics and large-grained protection model of RPC. LRPC achieves a factor-of-three performance improvement over more traditional approaches based on independent threads exchanging messages, reducing the cost of same-machine communication to nearly the lower bound imposed by conventional hardware. LRPC has been integrated into the Taos operating system of the DEC SRC Firefly multiprocessor workstation.Keywords
This publication has 10 references indexed in Scilit:
- Performance of the world's fastest distributed operating systemACM SIGOPS Operating Systems Review, 1988
- Firefly: a multiprocessor workstationIEEE Transactions on Computers, 1988
- The V distributed systemCommunications of the ACM, 1988
- The structuring of systems using upcallsPublished by Association for Computing Machinery (ACM) ,1985
- Implementing remote procedure callsACM Transactions on Computer Systems, 1984
- Hints for Computer System DesignIEEE Software, 1984
- PilotCommunications of the ACM, 1980
- The UNIX time-sharing systemCommunications of the ACM, 1974
- Programming semantics for multiprogrammed computationsCommunications of the ACM, 1966
- The functional structure of OS/360, Part I: Introductory surveyIBM Systems Journal, 1966