From fb226e293893c73b8b60387a9b81cc577469b76e Mon Sep 17 00:00:00 2001 From: "David B. Kinder" Date: Tue, 2 Nov 2021 13:55:48 -0700 Subject: [PATCH] doc: clean up UOS/SOS and scenario names in glossary Signed-off-by: David B. Kinder --- doc/glossary.rst | 13 +++---------- 1 file changed, 3 insertions(+), 10 deletions(-) diff --git a/doc/glossary.rst b/doc/glossary.rst index 2b93dda5e..7302166c4 100644 --- a/doc/glossary.rst +++ b/doc/glossary.rst @@ -144,22 +144,18 @@ Glossary of Terms developers can use to define a scenario configuration appropriate for their own application. - SOS - Service OS Service VM A special VM, directly launched by the hypervisor. The Service VM can access hardware resources directly by running native drivers and provides device sharing services to post-launched User VMs through the ACRN Device Model (DM). Hardware resources include CPUs, memory, graphics memory, USB devices, disk, and network mediation. *(Historically, the Service VM was - called the Service OS or SOS. You may still see these terms used in the - code and API interfaces.)* + called the Service OS or SOS.)* - Industry Shared One of three operation scenarios (shared, hybrid, partitioned) that ACRN supports. Most of the physical hardware resources are shared across User VMs. - *(Industry scenario is being renamed to Shared in the v2.7 release.)* + *(In releases prior to 2.7, this was called the "Industry" scenario.)* Target This is the hardware where the configured ACRN hypervisor and @@ -173,8 +169,6 @@ Glossary of Terms important, support Secure Boot, checking the OS validity to ensure no malware has tampered with the boot process. - UOS - User OS User VM A :term:`VM` where user-defined environments and applications run. User VMs can run different OSes based on their needs, including for example, Ubuntu for @@ -182,8 +176,7 @@ Glossary of Terms hard real-time control OS such as Zephyr, VxWorks, or RT-Linux for soft or hard real-time control. There are three types of ACRN User VMs: pre-launched, post-launched standard, and post-launched real-time. *(Historically, a - User VM was also called a User OS, or simply UOS. You may still see these - other terms used in the code and API interfaces.)* + User VM was also called a User OS, or simply UOS.)* VM Virtual Machine