Proposed System Wide Change: Enable dbus-broker https://fedoraproject.org/wiki/Changes/EnableDbusBroker Owner(s): * David Herrmann <dh dot herrmann at gmail dot com> * Tom Gundersen <teg at jklm dot no> Enable dbus-broker.service to use dbus-broker as system and session message bus backend. == Detailed description == The dbus-broker project is an implementation of a message bus as defined by the D-Bus specification. Its aim is to provide high performance and reliability, while keeping compatibility to the D-Bus reference implementation. It is exclusively written for linux systems, and makes use of many modern features provided by recent linux kernel releases. The main focus points of dbus-broker are reliability, scalability and security. The dbus-broker project tries to improve on these points over dbus-daemon, and thus provide a better alternative. And in-depth analysis can be found in the initial [https://dvdhrm.github.io/rethinking-the-dbus-message-bus/ announcement] of dbus-broker. An excerpt: * [https://github.com/bus1/dbus-broker/wiki/Accounting Accounting]: dbus-broker maintains per-user accounting, including inter-user quotas. This guarantees that no single user can cause irregularly high memory consumption in the daemon. Unlike dbus-broker, dbus-daemon accounts memory in a multi-tier system, based on plain resource counters on users, connections, and other resources. The multi-tier system suffers from resource-chaining-exhaustion, where clients effectively circumvent the accounting by creating multiple connections/objects, which themselves grant them each a new set of quotas. The [https://github.com/bus1/dbus-broker/wiki/Accounting single-tier accounting] scheme of dbus-broker avoids this, while at the same time adding inter-user quotas to prevent misuse even across clients. * [https://github.com/bus1/dbus-broker/wiki/Reliability Reliability]: While D-Bus is used on reliable transports, dbus-daemon might still silently drop messages and given circumstances. This is the only possible solution dbus-daemon has, given several of its runtime guarantees. The dbus-broker project changed the architecture of the bus daemon to a degree, that it can provide many [https://github.com/bus1/dbus-broker/wiki/Reliability guarantees], including that no message will be silently, or unexpectedly, dropped. * [https://github.com/bus1/dbus-broker/wiki/Scalability Scalability]: The message bus broker is a crucial infrastructure on modern linux system, which is a hot-path for almost all IPC going on. Hence, the broker should perform fast and be scalable to its users. dbus-daemon has several **global** data-structures that affect the overall scalability of independent message transactions. dbus-broker does not employ any global data-structures (unless required by the spec), as such any message transaction is only affected by the data provided by the involved peers. Moreover, even for spec-defined global behavior, dbus-broker avoids global data-structures, unless clients actually make use of these obscure features. In several other cases, dbus-daemon scales O(n) time looking up message targets and related data. dbus-broker runs all these in O(log(n)) time. * Linux-specific: The dbus-broker project was explicitly designed for linux system, making use of many linux-specific APIs and behavior. This allows mitigation of several possible DoS attacks. == Scope == * Proposal owners: ** Fix regressions. ** Enabledbus-broker.service in system and user-global context of systemd (via systemd presets). ** Pull in dbus-broker package from dbus package. * Other developers: ** Watch for regressions * Release engineering: [https://pagure.io/releng/issues/7262 #7262] ** List of deliverables: N/A * Policies and guidelines: No changes needed. * Trademark approval: No changes needed. -- Jan Kuřík Platform & Fedora Program Manager Red Hat Czech s.r.o., Purkynova 99/71, 612 45 Brno, Czech Republic _______________________________________________ devel mailing list -- devel@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx To unsubscribe send an email to devel-leave@xxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxxx