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- .\" Uses -mm macros
- .ds Rh POSIX Profiles
- .ds Au Jim Isaak <isaak@decvax.dec.com>
- .ds Dt January 7-11, 1991
- .ds Lo New Orleans, LA
- .ds Ed Jeffrey S. Haemer <jsh@usenix.org>
- .ds Wd U\s-3SENIX\s0 Standards Watchdog Committee
- .if '\*(Su'' \{\
- .ds Su the \*(Dt meeting in \*(Lo:
- .\}
- .if n \{\
- .tm Subject: Standards Update, \*(Rh
- .tm From: \*(Ed
- .tm Reply-To: std-unix@uunet.uu.net
- .tm Organization: \*(Wd
- .tm
- .\}
- .S 12
- .TL
- An Update on U\s-3NIX\s0\u\s-41\s0\d-Related Standards Activities
- .FS 1.
- UNIX\u\(rg\d is a Registered Trademark of UNIX System Laboratories
- in the United States and other countries.
- .FE
- .nr :p 1
- .sp
- \*(Rh
- .AF "\*(Ed, Report Editor"
- .AU "\*(Wd"
- .MT 4
- .if n \{\
- .nh
- .na
- .\}
- .PF "'\*(DT Standards Update' '\*(Rh'"
- \*(DT
- .sp
- .P
- \fB\*(Au\fP reports on \*(Su
- .P
- The \s-1POSIX\s0 profile standards projects
- differ radically from the other \s-1POSIX\s0 activities.
- Most \s-1POSIX\s0 projects focus on specific interface specifications
- and, for the most part, on operating system services.
- The profile documents will neither define new interfaces
- nor be limited to operating-system considerations.
- .P
- .HU "What's a Profile?"
- The starting point on profiles is the grand experiment of \s-1OSI\s0.
- By 1978, the \s-1OSI\s0 world had created
- a ``complete'' seven-layer model of communications
- and were ready to start developing standards
- that would populate that model.
- By 1988,
- over 140 standards had been accepted
- to fit into the seven layers.
- Any specific \s-1OSI\s0 implementation would pick
- some seven of these 140 standards,
- and specify any further options and parameters required by any of the standards.
- .P
- The probability of two arbitrary,
- different \s-1OSI\s0 systems interoperating was nil.
- The solution
- advanced by \s-1OSI\s0 to this dilemma
- was to define a new kind of document
- \(em a \fIprofile\fP \(em
- that specified the suite of standards,
- options, and parameters needed
- to meet a specific functional objective;
- indeed, profiles are also called ``functional standards''
- (which says something about other standards).
- .P
- The idea of profiles transcends \s-1OSI\s0.
- For example, \fIde facto\fP profiles are commonplace.
- If you go into your local computer store
- and ask for ``a PC with MS/DOS, Windows 3, a C compiler, and Lotus 1-2-3,''
- that's a profile for
- your functional needs.
- Even the \(*x/Open ``Common Application Environment,''
- which consists of several components
- described in their seven-volume \fI\(*x/Open Portability Guide\fP,
- might be considered a profile,
- although it is not clear that it would satisfy a specific functional objective.
- .P
- The U.S.\ Government National Institute for Standards and Technology
- (\s-1NIST\s0)
- introduced an ``Applications Portability Profile''
- with their \s-1FIPS\s0-151 in 1988\*F, which has the same problem:
- .FS
- They have recently have published an expanded view of this for public comment.
- .FE
- the \s-1NIST\s0 ``profile'' is a collection of standards
- and other interface specifications
- with no focused functional objective.
- .P
- .HU "POSIX and Profiles"
- P1003.10 is the first \s-1IEEE POSIX\s0 profile project,
- and its functional objective is more explicit: Supercomputing.
- The question this group is asking is,
- ``what set of standard interfaces
- provides the complete environment supercomputing users need
- for applications portability, interoperability,
- and consistency of user interface?''
- Some standards identified so far are \s-1FORTRAN\s0 (F77),
- \s-1POSIX\s0.1,
- \s-1GKS\s0,
- and \s-1PHiGS\s0.
- .P
- The nasty word is ``complete.''
- It does not take much insight
- to see that even combinations of standards won't be complete enough
- for some sophisticated applications.
- Application environment profile groups
- also must identify areas where additional standards are needed.
- This is a second value of profiles:
- supplementing the ``roadmap though the maze'' goal
- of \s-1OSI\s0 profiles.
- At a minimum,
- profile groups should document requirements
- not addressed by the standards,
- to help vendors and users insure
- missing capabilities are provided,
- even if they're not standardized.
- .P
- For supercomputing,
- for example,
- performance requirements fall into this category.
- Sometimes, profile groups can do more than just document, though.
- What happens, for example,
- if the profile work reveals the need for an interface
- that isn't yet standardized?
- There are two possibilities.
- First, the profile group can tell an existing standards group
- working in a related area they need the new interfaces
- (and offer expert aid, if necessary).
- If that doesn't work,
- the profile group can try to spin off
- a new group
- or at least a new project.
- For example,
- the supercomputing profile work has already spun off two projects:
- the P1003.9 working group,
- which is providing \s-1FORTRAN\s0 interfaces to \s-1POSIX\s0.1,
- and the P1003.15 project for batch services.\*F
- .FS`
- The ``batch services'' work isn't just batch processing.
- In the world of supercomputing,
- jobs can run beyond either the system's \s-1MTBF\s0
- \(em mean time between failures \(em
- or its \s-1MTBSHPJTYOFAW\s0
- \(em mean time before some higher priority job throws you out for a week.
- To handle this with some grace,
- applications ``checkpoint'' their state
- and can restart from that state.
- Extended services for checkpoint and restart are part of the .15 task.
- .FE
- .P
- Other \s-1POSIX\s0 profile projects already underway are
- transaction processing (.11),
- real time (.13),
- and multiprocessing (.14).
- .HU "PEP: a prototype standard"
- Right now, profiles are being generated bottom-up,
- starting from real-world problems,
- leveraging existing standards,
- and exposing gaps.
- There is no formal model for applications portability,
- and few users are willing to wait for one.
- In an ideal world,
- with some well-understood formal model of a complete computing environment,
- standards might be generated top-down,
- much like the \s-1OSI\s0 approach.
- How do we grope our way to such a model?
- .P
- At the international level,
- Technical Study Group 1 (\s-1TSG1\s0),
- is just finishing recommendations to \s-1ISO\s0 on
- ``interfaces for applications portability,''
- which will include some modeling concepts
- for a top-down approach.
- The most solid recommendations coming out of this work
- will advocate the extension of \s-1ISO\s0 profiling work
- beyond \s-1OSI\s0 to address applications portability
- and to help identify requirements for standards work.
- .P
- Industrial groups, like the Petrotechnical Open Software Company (\s-1POSC\s0),
- are also interested in profiles
- (for ``upstream'' petroleum engineering applications).
- The European Workshop on Open Systems (\s-1EWOS\s0)
- is also expanding their charter from \s-1OSI\s0 profiles
- to application portability.
- Much early groundwork for \s-1OSI\s0 profiles
- was developed by folks now in \s-1EWOS\s0,
- and much of \s-1EWOS\s0's current work is to establish a framework
- and a set of procedures for this larger problem space.
- .P
- The \s-1IEEE\s0's \s-1TCOS\s0 is taking a different approach:
- sort of rapid prototyping for standards.
- The most recently approved \s-1IEEE\s0 \s-1POSIX\s0 project is P1003.18,
- the \s-1POSIX\s0 Platform Environment Profile (\s-1PEP\s0).
- A simplistic statement of its goal is,
- ``to define the standards which together describe what folks have
- traditionally called \s-1UNIX\s0'':
- \(em \s-1POSIX\s0.1 plus \s-1POSIX\s0.2 plus the C standard.\*F
- .FS
- Of course,
- many readers will argue that this is hopelessly incomplete
- ("How can you have a \s-1UNIX\s0 system without \fIemacs\fP?"),
- but bear with me.
- .FE
- .P
- Its real goal, though, is to address three closely related needs.
- .AL
- .LI
- P\s-1EP\s0 will provide a common foundation (platform!)
- for the more focused application environment profile projects
- (.10, .11, ...).
- .LI
- It will help all users of the \s-1POSIX\s0 standards
- to understand the line between the traditional ``UNIX'' space
- and any new work of the \s-1POSIX\s0 groups.
- This does not mean
- that \s-1PEP\s0 will not include some new work over time,
- but it will identify a useful stable ground (platform!)
- in the rapid evolution of \s-1POSIX\s0 standards.
- .LI
- Profiles are new to \s-1IEEE\s0, \s-1ANSI\s0, and \s-1ISO\s0,
- and a simple example will help
- folks to get a handle on what profiles are all about.
- P\s-1EP\s0 provides a simple case,
- building on \s-1POSIX\s0.1 (system interfaces),
- \s-1POSIX\s0.2 (and .2a) (commands),
- the C language,
- and potentially Ada and \s-1POSIX\s0.5,
- and/or \s-1FORTRAN\s0 and \s-1POSIX\s0.9.
- .LE
- .P
- In effect, PEP will blaze the trail for other,
- more complex profile tasks,
- like supercomputing or transaction processing,
- and will be a stepping stone (platform!) for those efforts,
- providing them a clearer path into \s-1ISO\s0.
- .HU "Profiles as Configuration Management Tools"
- The second point above may need explaining.
- Profiles take a snapshot of the standards at a point in time.
- Supercomputing is specifically selecting \s-1FORTRAN\s0 77
- because it matches today's needs.
- Fortran\*F will evolve.
- .FS
- The next generation Fortran is properly presented in mixed case,
- by committee decree,
- whereas historically \s-1FORTRAN\s0 has been an acronym and all upper case.
- .FE
- A future version of \s-1POSIX\s0.10
- may include a future version of Fortran.
- The array of standards is moving forward asynchronously, and often chaotically;
- profiles group together standards
- to provide a form of ``release control''
- or ``configuration management.''
- An application and a system can refer to
- a specific version of a specific profile.
- .HU "Benefits Profiles Will Bring"
- Profiles provide an easy way
- for users, application developers, and vendors to describe environments.
- Application developers and \s-1ISV\s0's
- will finally have a clear target-space for development.
- Profiles will tell customers
- what facilities the target systems for their software supply.
- Eventually,
- we will see
- conformance testing of integrated profiles,
- providing a higher level of confidence in the environment.
-