Booting faster
Stewart Smith https://2019.linux.conf.au/schedule/p... Doing kernel and firmware development leaves you rebooting computers a *lot*. Modern computers (especially servers) take too long to boot. Since OpenPOWER systems have a fully open firmware stack (some even with an open BMC stack), we can now attack the problem from all angles. This talk covers efforts over the past several years into making POWER based systems boot faster. Is it Linux itself that takes the most time? Firmware? What part of firmware and why? Are the problems for a single socket desktop system different to those from an 8 socket enterprise one? Where have we gotten worse and why? Can we go from close to 10 minutes to less than 30 seconds? 10 seconds? At what point are we purely limited by peoples unreasonable expectations of having PCI, RAM, and output on a display? We go on a full stack deep dive into what it takes to cold (and warm) boot (and reboot) a system - or at least any part of that which takes time, as well as how we've measured it. We'll touch on code before the power button works, code from before the first instruction is executed, and code all the way up to being able to load a kernel off disk and beyond. When talking about future improvements, anyone stating "but you're already faster than a bunch of our other servers" will be subtly ssshhed. linux.conf.au is a conference about the Linux operating system, and all aspects of the thriving ecosystem of Free and Open Source Software that has grown up around it. Run since 1999, in a different Australian or New Zealand city each year, by a team of local volunteers, LCA invites more than 500 people to learn from the people who shape the future of Open Source. For more information on the conference see https://linux.conf.au/ #linux.conf.au #linux #foss #opensource

Firmware security, why it matters and how you can have it

The kernel report

MS-DOS has been Open-Sourced! We Build and Run it!

The Linux Boot Process (Linux+ Objective 1.1.2)

VCF East: UNIX: A History and a Memoir by Brian Kernighan

The Hardest Thing: Building and Running the UNIX Kernel from Original Sources

"Write a single library to handle all input devices, it'll be easy" they said...

"A Political History of X" - Keith Packard (LCA 2020)

Possibly the fastest booting IBM PC (Running at 4.77MHz)

38C3 - sixos: a nix os without systemd

Kernel Security Is Cool Again

Lets LISP like it's 1959

Exposing The Solid State Donut Battery. It's Over.

"NTFS really isn't that bad" - Robert Collins (LCA 2020)

Writing Viruses for Fun, not Profit

systemd - The Good Parts

De-mystifying interrupt balancing: irqbalance

See what your computer is doing with Ftrace utilities

Installing FreeDOS for 8086 on an IBM 5150

