Re: 2.7 thoughts: common well-architected object model

From: Scott Robert Ladd
Date: Sat Oct 11 2003 - 12:02:33 EST


asdfd esadd wrote:
So let me restate the need:

* a unified well architected core component model
which is extensible from OS services to application
objects

* the object model should be defined from the kernel
layer for process/events/devices etc. up and not
started at the application layer

A few years ago, I would have agreed with you. But in today's reality, an OS-based object model provides a singular target for malicious attack.

The theory of reusable binary components is seductive, yet it leads to many of the flaws seen in Windows. All too often, Windows applications install components which may be newer or even older than the ones they replace; while Microsoft has made strides with component versioning, the problem still exists. These days, many Windows applications ship their own version of "common" components, to avoid incompatibilities with whatever may be installed system-wide.

OS-based object models also suffer from bit rot. New hardware and software features require API changes, such that older objects gradually become incompatible with newer requirements.

Windows also has the advantage of focusing on a single hardware platform, where Linux runs on an incredible variety of systems.

Were Linux to implement an object model, it would need careful and considerate design to address security, versioning, extensibility, and portability.

--
Scott Robert Ladd
Coyote Gulch Productions (http://www.coyotegulch.com)
Software Invention for High-Performance Computing

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