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- .HTML "Plan 9 — Fourth Edition Release Notes
- .TL
- Plan 9 From Bell Labs
- .br
- Fourth Release Notes
- .br
- April, 2002
- .br
- updated June, 2003
- .LP
- .sp -.4i
- .nf
- .ce 1000
- Copyright © 2002-2003 Lucent Technologies Inc.
- All Rights Reserved
- .sp .2i
- .fi
- .LP
- The fourth release of the Plan 9 operating system from Bell Labs
- packages a major overhaul of the system at every level.
- From the underlying file system protocol, 9P, through the kernel,
- libraries, and applications, almost everything has been modified
- and, in many cases, redesigned or rewritten.
- .LP
- The most significant change is that 9P has been redesigned to address
- a number of shortcomings, most important, its previous inability to handle long
- file names.
- Unfortunately, squeezing long names onto the disks of existing
- file servers is a messy business that we're still grappling with,
- so at the moment
- .I fs (4)
- and
- .I kfs (4)
- can't yet handle long names,
- although they do talk the new protocol.
- (In fact, they
- talk both old and new, as required, to ease transition.)
- In the meantime, there is a workaround \(em
- .I lnfs (4)
- \(em
- and many of the other file servers such as
- .I ramfs (4)
- and
- .I u9fs (4)
- work just fine with long names.
- It's only the old disk-resident file servers
- that don't.
- The new file server
- .I fossil (4)
- handles supports long names and many other features.
- The older servers are now deprecated.
- .LP
- The following is a partial list of the major changes throughout the system.
- .de Xx
- .LP
- \(bu
- ..
- .Xx
- The file system protocol, 9P, has been reworked.
- It now has variable-length names, so it can handle long names
- but also is more compact when handling short ones.
- It uses a different format that is easily parsed, eliminating the need for the old
- .CW aux/fcall
- utility,
- and delegates its authentication duties to an external agent,
- .CW factotum .
- .Xx
- Security has been a focus of attention.
- A new security agent,
- .I factotum (4),
- manages passwords and other secrets and, coupled with a new secure file store
- .I secstore (8),
- enables secure single sign-on.
- .Xx
- .CW Cpu ,
- .CW import ,
- and
- .CW exportfs
- all encrypt their connections now, and since they use the new 9P they
- also use new network port numbers.
- A new service
- .I aan (1)
- is used by
- .CW import
- to make its network connections more reliable in the face of network outages.
- The old ports still work, through the agency of a protocol conversion filter
- .I srvold9p (4).
- .Xx
- We are phasing out the IL protocol since it doesn't handle long-distance connections
- well (and long-distance networks don't handle it well, either).
- IL is still used by
- .I fs (4)
- but TCP has become the standard protocol for all other services.
- .Xx
- The software for the new network-resident secure block store,
- .I venti (8),
- is included with this distribution.
- The new
- file server
- .I fossil (4)
- uses Venti rather than a WORM as its permanent block repository/backup medium.
- It is still being developed, but is mature enough that a handful of users
- throughout the world are using it as their primary file server.
- .Xx
- The need to handle longer file names triggered a rethinking of the way the
- system handles strings in general.
- The kernel is now more explanatory when it gives an error message and
- more consistent in how it handles strings such as commands to devices.
- The interfaces to many of the system calls, such as
- .I errstr (2)
- and
- .I wait (2)
- all had to change as a result, as did the library interface to read directories,
- .I stat (2)
- and its relatives.
- .Xx
- The formatted I/O package described in
- .I print (2)
- and
- .I fmtinstall (2)
- has been redesigned.
- Although the basic interface is unchanged, it now runs without locks and
- has an internal buffer management mechanism that means
- .CW print
- no longer needs a large on-stack buffer.
- The interface for writing custom print verbs and custom formatted I/O routines
- has also been greatly improved.
- .Xx
- The thread library
- .I thread (2)
- has been completely rewritten.
- The main visible change is that, coupled with the changes to printing,
- .CW threadprint
- is gone; you can just use
- .CW print
- or
- .CW fprint
- at will.
- .Xx
- Support for electronic mail has been extended in many ways and now includes
- some new spam filtering tools,
- much better (and more standard) handling of MIME messages,
- the ability to render incoming HTML mail,
- and much more.
- .LP
- There are so many changes to the programming interfaces of the system
- that they are described in a separate document, entitled
- .I
- Changes to the Programming Environment in the Fourth Release of Plan 9.
- .R
- Please read it before you start updating your own software to run under the new system.
- .LP
- The installation method has also changed and we're moving towards a new
- method for maintaining updates.
- The Plan 9 Wiki
- .CW http://plan9.bell-labs.com/wiki/plan9 ) (
- and Usenet group
- .CW comp.os.plan9 ) (
- are the places to visit to learn more and stay current.
- In particular, the installation notes are now maintained in the Wiki;
- the traditional papers on installation and start-up are gone.
- .LP
- There's lots more new stuff.
- If you have problems, mail
- .CW 9trouble@plan9.bell-labs.com
- or, better, check the wiki
- .CW http://plan9.bell-labs.com/wiki/plan9
- or ask the Usenet newsgroup
- .CW comp.os.plan9 .
- .LP
- Good Luck!
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