Everything about Qnx totally explained
QNX (pronounced either Q-N-X or Q-nix) is a commercial
POSIX-compliant
Unix-like real-time operating system, aimed primarily at the
embedded systems market. On
September 12,
2007, the source of the QNX kernel was released for non-commercial use.
Description
As a
microkernel-based OS, QNX is based on the idea of running most of the OS in the form of a number of small tasks, known as
servers. This differs from the more traditional
monolithic kernel, in which the operating system is a single very large program composed of a huge number of "parts" with special abilities. In the case of QNX, the use of a microkernel allows users (developers) to turn off any functionality they don't require without having to change the OS itself; instead, those servers are simply not run.
The system is quite small, fitting in a minimal fashion on a single floppy.
QNX Neutrino (2001) has been ported to a number of platforms and now runs on practically any modern CPU that's used in the embedded market. This includes the
x86 family,
MIPS,
PowerPC,
SH-4 and the closely related family of
ARM,
StrongARM and
XScale CPUs.
As of
September 12,
2007, QNX offers a license for non-commercial users.
History
Gordon Bell and
Dan Dodge, students at the
University of Waterloo in 1980, both took a standard
computer science course in operating system design, in which the students constructed a basic real-time kernel. Both were convinced there was a commercial need for such a system, and moved to
Kanata, Ontario, (a high-tech area in the western part of
Ottawa) to start Quantum Software Systems that year. In 1982 the first version, QNX, was released for the
Intel 8088 CPU.
One of QNX's first widespread uses was in the non-embedded world, when it was selected as the operating system for the
Ontario education system's own computer design, the
Unisys ICON. Over the years QNX was used mostly for "larger" projects, as its 44k kernel was too large to fit inside the single-chip computers of the era. The system garnered an enviable reputation for reliability and found itself in use running machinery in a number of industrial applications.
In the late-
1980s, Quantum realized that the market was rapidly moving towards the
POSIX model and decided to rewrite the kernel to be much more compatible at a lower level. The result was QNX 4. During this time Patrick Hayden, while working as an intern, along with Robin Burgener (a full time QNX employee at the time), developed a new concept for a . This patented concept was developed into the embeddable
GUI named Photon microGUI. QNX also provided a version of the
X Window System. Due to the
POSIX interface, porting
Unix and
BSD packages to QNX became much easier.
Toward the end of the 1990s QNX began work on a completely new version of QNX, designed from the ground up to be
SMP capable, as well as support all current
POSIX APIs, and any new
POSIX APIs that could be anticipated; but still retaining the microkernel architecture. This resulted in QNX Neutrino, which was released in 2001. Along with the Neutrino kernel, QNX made a serious commitment to tooling, and became a founding member of the
Eclipse consortium. QNX soon released a suite of Eclipse plug-ins packaged with the Eclipse workbench under the name Momentics.
In
2004 the company announced it had been sold to
Harman International Industries. Prior to the acquisition by Harman International, QNX was already widely used in the automotive industry for
telematics systems. Since the purchase by Harman, QNX has been designed into over 180 different
automobile models.
On 12th of September 2007 QNX made a press release announcing the immediate availability of the source code.
Cisco's
IOS-XR (ultra high availability IOS), is based on QNX, as is
IOS Software Modularity.
Technology
The QNX kernel contains only
CPU scheduling,
interprocess communication,
interrupt redirection and timers. Everything else runs as a user process, including a special process known as
proc which performs process creation, and
memory management by operating in conjunction with the
microkernel. This is made possible by two key mechanisms - subroutine-call type interprocess communication, and a
boot loader which can load an image containing not only the kernel but any desired collection of user programs and shared libraries.
QNX interprocess communication consists of sending a message from one process to another and waiting for a reply. This is a single operation, called
MsgSend. The message is copied, by the kernel, from the address space of the sending process to that of the receiving process. If the receiving process is waiting for the message, control of the CPU is transferred at the same time, without a pass through the CPU scheduler. Thus, sending a message to another process and waiting for a reply doesn't result in "losing one's turn" for the CPU. This tight integration between message passing and CPU scheduling is one of the key mechanisms that makes QNX message passing broadly usable. Most
UNIX and
Linux interprocess communication mechanisms lack this tight integration, although an implementation of QNX-type messaging for Linux
does exist
. Mishandling of this subtle issue is a primary reason for the disappointing performance of some other microkernel systems.
Due to the
microkernel architecture QNX is also a
distributed operating system.
Dan Dodge and
Peter van der Veen hold a
patent
based on the QNX operating system's distributed processing features (known commercially as
Transparent Distributed Processing).
All I/O operations, file system operations, and network operations were meant to work through this mechanism, and the data transferred was copied during message passing. Later versions of QNX reduce the number of separate processes and integrate the network stack and other function blocks into single applications for performance reasons. There are no device drivers in the kernel.
Message handling is prioritized by
thread priority. Since I/O requests are performed using message passing, high priority threads receive I/O service before low priority threads, an essential feature in a
hard real-time system.
The boot loader, although seldom discussed, is the other key component of the minimal microkernel system. Because user programs can be built into the boot image, the set of device drivers and support libraries needed for startup need not be, and are not, in the kernel. Even such functions as program loading are not in the kernel, but instead are in shared user-space libraries loaded as part of the boot image. It is possible to put an entire boot image into
ROM, which is used for diskless embedded systems.
Neutrino supports
Symmetric multiprocessing and Bound multiprocessing (BMP), which is QNX's term for being able to lock selected threads to selected CPUs. BMP is used to improve cache heating and to ease the migration of non-SMP safe applications to multi-processor computers.
Neutrino supports strict priority-preemptive scheduling and
Adaptive Partition Scheduling (APS). APS guarantees minimum cpu percentages to selected groups of threads, even though others may have higher priority. The adaptive partition scheduler is still strictly priority-preemptive when the system is underloaded. It can also be configured to run a selected set of critical threads strictly realtime, even when the system is overloaded.
Foundry27
Foundry27, the new QNX community established by the company, will serve as a hub to QNX Neutrino development where developers can register, choose the license, and get the source code and the related toolkit of the RTOS.
Competitors
Some important competitors in the embedded market are
LynxOS,
VxWorks,
Linux,
eCos,
ThreadX,
Windows CE,
RTEMS, and
OS-9.
Further Information
Get more info on 'Qnx'.
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