On Sat, Jan 11, 2003 at 11:09:13PM -0800, David Schwartz wrote:
> No, I've never used vxWorks, I just understand the difference
> between an RTOS and a non-RTOS and how to choose the right tool for
> the job. If an application can run on an OS that is not an RTOS, it
> almost always does. RTOSes are usually used where you *must* *have*
> guarantees.
The parts that you are not considering are:
1) Many RT applications only need a small portion of RT.
2) VxWorks adds a much more significant hit to performance that many
consider to be reasonable. In fact, the hit is such that given the
*SAME* capacity requirements, there is evidence that non-RT Linux
can be sufficiently faster than RT VxWorks that 99.999+% can be
'guaranteed' and still have time to spare.
I'm talking actual experiments by actual RT application designers. The
product in question, I believe, is a CDMA cellular telephone switch.
You are talking theory from a text book. I'm talking practice from people
who are frustrated with VxWorks on a daily basis.
Don't assume that because it has 'RT' on the label, that it makes it
beyond comparison with a non-RT operating system. Any operating system
can be poorly written, and that includes RT systems that successfully
guarantee system calls to require a fixed amount of time to
complete. The fixed amount of time to complete may be fixed, but it
may also be unreasonable high.
Think about it logically -- if I can process 5X as much data as you can on
the same hardware, but I can't guarantee that *at* 5X no data will be lost,
but then, I only run at 1X (the same speed as you), how many packets have
a chance of being lost?
In theory, a few, perhaps more. In practice, it's really hard to say,
and I trust experimental data from my peers over theory from
you. Sorry. :-)
When you've run your software on VxWorks, and then run your software on
Linux, and you have numbers (experience + numbers vs theory) then I'll
take your word over theirs.
Until then, I don't plan to touch VxWorks. I much prefer encouraging
Linux+RT to out-perform VxWorks, and be able to prove it. (For all I know,
they may have done this already -- from what I have heard about VxWorks,
it can't be that hard...)
mark
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