9P (protocol)

Source: Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia.
9P
Communication protocol
PurposeConnecting components
Developer(s)Bell Labs
Introduction1992; 32 years ago (1992)
Influenced9P2000

9P (or the Plan 9 Filesystem Protocol or Styx) is a

network protocol developed for the Plan 9 from Bell Labs distributed operating system as the means of connecting the components of a Plan 9 system. Files are key objects in Plan 9. They represent windows, network connections, processes
, and almost anything else available in the operating system.

9P was revised for the 4th edition of Plan 9 under the name 9P2000, containing various improvements. Some of the improvements made are the removal of certain filename restrictions, the addition of a 'last modifier' metadata field for directories, and authentication files.

Inferno operating system
also uses 9P2000. The Inferno file protocol was originally called Styx, but technically it has always been a variant of 9P.

A server implementation of 9P for Unix, called u9fs,

v9fs project. 9P and its derivatives have also found application in embedded environments, such as the Styx on a Brick project.[5]

Server applications

Many of Plan 9's applications take the form of 9P file servers. Examples include:

  • acme: a text editor/development environment
  • rio: the Plan 9 windowing system
  • plumber
    : interprocess communication
  • ftpfs: an
    FTP client that presents the files and directories on a remote FTP server in the local namespace
  • wikifs: a wiki editing tool that presents a remote wiki as files in the local namespace
  • webfs: a file server that retrieves data from URLs and presents the contents and details of responses as files in the local namespace

Outside of Plan 9, the 9P protocol is still used when a lightweight remote filesystem is required:

See also

  • Distributed file system
  • Everything is a file – UNIX philosophy
  • IL – A transport-layer protocol designed at Bell Labs for the Plan 9 operating system

References

  1. ^ "Plan 9 from Bell Labs — Overview". 9p.io.
  2. ^ "research: u9fs.tgz is the source code tarbal". www.netlib.org.
  3. ^ "Plan 9 /sys/man/4/u9fs". 9p.io.
  4. ^ benavento (April 19, 2019). "9P for Mac" – via GitHub.
  5. ^ "Styx-on-a-Brick". Cat-V Doc.
  6. ^ "What's new for WSL in Windows 10 version 1903?". Windows Command Line Tools For Developers. February 16, 2019.
  7. ^ "Running Custom Containers Under Chrome OS". Chromium OS Docs. Retrieved 2019-03-28.
  8. ^ Jujjuri, Venkateswararao; Van Hensbergen, Eric; Liguori, Anthony; Pulavarty, Badari (July 13–16, 2010). "VirtFS—A virtualization aware File System pass-through" (PDF). Linux Symposium.
  9. ^ "Documentation/9psetup". QEMU Docs. Retrieved 2019-03-28.

External links