The library.xen file contains a braindump of thoughts dating
from the very first days of libvirt, when it was briefly
called libxen. This is not useful and potentially misleading
or confusing for people.
Signed-off-by: Daniel P. Berrange <berrange(a)redhat.com>
---
cfg.mk | 2 +-
docs/library.xen | 100 -------------------------------------------------------
2 files changed, 1 insertion(+), 101 deletions(-)
delete mode 100644 docs/library.xen
diff --git a/cfg.mk b/cfg.mk
index 9546853..a4305a8 100644
--- a/cfg.mk
+++ b/cfg.mk
@@ -1220,7 +1220,7 @@ exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_mixed_case_abbreviations = \
^src/(vbox/vbox_CAPI.*.h|esx/esx_vi.(c|h)|esx/esx_storage_backend_iscsi.c)$$
exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_empty_first_line = \
-
^(README|daemon/THREADS\.txt|src/esx/README|docs/library.xen|tests/(vmwarever|virhostcpu)data/.*)$$
+ ^(README|daemon/THREADS\.txt|src/esx/README|tests/(vmwarever|virhostcpu)data/.*)$$
exclude_file_name_regexp--sc_prohibit_useless_translation = \
^tests/virpolkittest.c
diff --git a/docs/library.xen b/docs/library.xen
deleted file mode 100644
index 2e1b2c5..0000000
--- a/docs/library.xen
+++ /dev/null
@@ -1,100 +0,0 @@
-
- About a libxen library
- ======================
-
-Functional description:
------------------------
-
- Small C library to be able to control Xen Linux guest, i.e.
- provide the following operations for Xen guest domains running Linux
- from domain 0 code linked to the library (running as root):
- - start
- - stop
- - suspend
- - resume
- - monitor
- More advanced features should be allowed as future extensions, but
- are not expected to be provided in first shipment.
-
- Open enough Licence that customers can link their apps to it (LGPL)
-
- Small and contained enough that we can use it as a way to
- provide API and ABI stability in spite if the evolution of Xen
- existing API and hypervisor calls.
-
-The current state of Xen userland:
-----------------------------------
-
- the existing Xen 3.0 userland code is mostly based on tiny C functions
-using direct hypervisor calls (or /proc/xen/ interfaces) and a lot of
-Python code on top driving the hypervisor.
- The C code is relatively hairy, functions with 10 parameters or more
-are not uncommon, and it is very low level usually without comment about
-the function or its arguments. They are usually only called once in the
-whole tree by the python bindings. In essence it looks like the Xen project
-was not implemented with the idea of reusing that part of the code by
-applications.
- Indeed most of the userland code coming with Xen is built on Python,
-like xend the xen daemon running on domain 0 or the xenstored daemon which
-manage the state of the domains launched.
-
-Rebuilding a library ?:
------------------------
-
- Providing a library at the C level to drive domain execution is in a
-very large part a rimplementation of existing code but in a different way
-and somehow with different goals for the code. The existing Licence (GPL)
-makes it uneasy, we can't copy GPL code to put it in a LGPL'ed library,
-and rewriting everything while looking at the Xen code will inevitably
-lead to code similarities especially with this kind of system code. Plus
-we will still need to run xend and probably xenstored to not diverge
-completely from Xen existing code base.
-
-The IBM way:
-------------
-
- Here is supposition about code that I can't instanciate except by looking
-at said code but it looks that IBM also needed a C programmatic API to
-manage the Xen domain definitions. Their solution was to build (Rusty
-Russell did this) an LGPL C API connecting directly to the xenstore
-daemon (./tools/xenstore/*). In a way this is quite more fragile as it depends
-on the whole existing stack of the Xen code, but it isolate the API
-from the implementation details of the current Xen source (API in
-./tools/xenstore/xs.h). The goal seems to be more about testing and controlling
-the xen store daemon, but it shows a different approach to decouple client
-API/ABI from the Xen existing code.
-
-Open question:
----------------
-
- To what extent should libxen be a rewrite or an isolation layer around
-some of the existing code ?
-
- Rewrite:
-
- Pros:
- - avoid the GPL Licence problem potentially more users
- - allow do build a cleaner more stable layer
- - the existing code is frightening
- Cons:
- - awful lot of work debugging very hard
- - will still require existing Xen code to be running
- - splitting interfaces is hard politically and lower the
- Open Source efforts toward the project
-
- Wrappers on top of existing code:
-
- Pros:
- - much smaller code rewrite
- - benefits from the bugfixes injected by other patchers upstream
- Cons:
- - Licence constraint GPL only for apps
- - API/ABI isolation may not be easier in that way
-
- Potentially the API could be implemented as a layer on top of the existing
-libxc C code library and then progressively migrating out the existing
-dependence to Xen code as the interfaces stabilize.
-
-Daniel Veillard <veillard(a)redhat.com>
-
-Mon Oct 24 18:40:19 CEST 2005
--
2.9.3