[Haskell-cafe] Linux device drivers

S. Alexander Jacobson alex at alexjacobson.com
Mon Mar 21 00:39:31 EST 2005


Wow!  Did you also implement tcp in Haskell?
Does hOp or House also have the ability to write to disk?

(With HAppS, I've gotten rid of the AMP part of LAMP, it would be 
really cool to get rid of the L as well!)

-Alex-

______________________________________________________________
S. Alexander Jacobson tel:917-770-6565 http://alexjacobson.com



On Mon, 21 Mar 2005, Donald Bruce Stewart wrote:

> mark:
>> I was wondering about the possibility of using Haskell for developing
>> device drivers that would be kernel modules for Linux. If nothing else,
>> it would be quite an educational experience for me, as I've not yet
>> experimented with either the Linux kernel or Haskell FFI, nor have I
>> had to learn how to squeeze much performance out of my Haskell code.
>>
>> Clearly, this application demands special things from the compiler and
>> the runtime. But, I'm not exactly sure what, nor how to achieve such
>> given current compilers. Does anyone have any thoughts?
>
> Well, it would be tricky, but fun!
>
> We've got a few drivers written in Haskell already (but not for Linux,
> as far as I know). For example check out the House network stack and
> drivers:
>    http://cvs.haskell.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/programatica/hOp/
> and
>    http://cvs.haskell.org/cgi-bin/cvsweb.cgi/programatica/hOp/kernel/Kernel/Driver/NE2000/
>
> So there's heavy use of Data.Bits and Word# types - but nothing that
> isn't fairly well established in GHC Haskell, anyway.
>
> Then (for GHC, anyway) you'd have to link the kernel against libHSrts.a, much
> as we do when calling Haskell from other kinds of C apps, which involves
> compiling the C app with all the magic flags ghc normally sets up (ghc -v9
> main.c is helpful).  Something like: ;)
>
> egcc -v -o a.out -DDONT_WANT_WIN32_DLL_SUPPORT main.o -L/home/dons/lib/ghc-6.4 -lHStemplate-haskell -lHSCabal -lHSposix -lHSposix_cbits -lHSlang -lHSmtl -lHShaskell-src -lHSunix -lHSunix_cbits -lHShi -lHShaskell98 -lHSaltdata -lHSbase -lHSbase_cbits -lHSrts -lm -lgmp -u GHCziBase_Izh_static_info -u GHCziBase_Czh_static_info -u GHCziFloat_Fzh_static_info ...
>
> Then, having the kernel start up the Haskell rts (at boot would be
> good):
>      hs_init(&argc, &argv);
>        .. do something in Haskell or C land ...
>      hs_exit();
>
> Then you'd could dyn load (via GHC's rts) your Haskell driver into the C
> app, and use it, as long as you've got a nice ffi interface to pass
> values back and forward.
>
> I'm sure the fun part is in the details ;)
>
> Cheers,
>  Don
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