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FIX minimal.toml and Bochs (bochs.x86_64)

See merge request redox-os/redox!1270
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bootloader @ c92ba0b
Apr 28, 2022
bootloader-coreboot @ 6c31909
Mar 11, 2020
May 30, 2022
cookbook @ c9e203a
Apr 14, 2022
installer @ 0ed65d7
Mar 27, 2022
isolinux @ 3cf79d3
Jan 5, 2017
kernel @ b5a9301
Apr 26, 2022
redox-initfs @ 89b8fb8
Apr 8, 2022
redoxfs @ 0e0ae52
Apr 13, 2022
relibc @ 8576b99
Apr 5, 2022
rust @ 3a291a3
Mar 27, 2022
Aug 13, 2016
May 30, 2022

Redox

Redox is an operating system written in Rust, a language with focus on safety and high performance. Redox, following the microkernel design, aims to be secure, usable, and free. Redox is inspired by previous kernels and operating systems, such as SeL4, MINIX, Plan 9, and BSD.

Redox is not just a kernel, it's a full-featured Operating System, providing packages (memory allocator, file system, display manager, core utilities, etc.) that together make up a functional and convenient operating system. You can loosely think of it as the GNU or BSD ecosystem, but in a memory safe language and with modern technology. See this list for overview of the ecosystem.

The website can be found at https://www.redox-os.org.

Please make sure you use the latest nightly of rustc before building (for more troubleshooting, see "Help! Redox won't compile!").

Travis Build Status Downloads MIT licensed Rust Version

Contents

What it looks like

Redox

Redox

Redox

Redox

Redox

Redox

Ecosystem

The ecosystem and software Redox OS provides is listed below.

Name (lexicographic order) Maintainer
acid (kernel integration tests) @jackpot51 @NilSet
binutils vacant
cookbook @jackpot51 @ids1024 @sajattack
coreutils vacant
extrautils vacant
games @enrico (AKA @HenryTheCat) @fabiao
Ion (shell) @mmstick @stratact
ipcd @jD91mZM2
kernel @jackpot51
libextra vacant
libpager vacant
netstack @batonius @dlrobertson
netutils @jackpot51
orbclient (Orbital client) @jackpot51 @FloVanGH
orbdata @jackpot51
orbgame (Orbital 2D game engine) @FloVanGH
Orbital (windowing and compositing system) @jackpot51
orbtk (Orbital toolkit) @FloVanGH
orbutils (Orbital utilities) @jackpot51
pkgutils (current package manager) @jackpot51
ralloc @Tommoa @NilSet
RANSID (Rust ANSI driver) @jackpot51
redoxfs (old filesystem) @jackpot51
relibc (C Library in Rust) @jD91mZM2 @sajattack @Tommoa @stratact
small (stack String and other collections) @Tommoa
syscall @jackpot51
Sodium (Vim-inspired text editor) vacant
TFS ((ticki) The File System) @Tommoa
The Redox book vacant
userutils @jackpot51

Help! Redox won't compile!

Sometimes things go wrong when compiling. Try the following before opening an issue:

  1. Run rustup update
  2. Run make clean pull.
  3. Make sure you have the latest version of Rust nightly! (rustup.rs is recommended for managing Rust versions. If you already have it, run rustup).
  4. Update GNU Make, NASM and QEMU/VirtualBox.
  5. Pull the upstream master branch (git remote add upstream git@gitlab.redox-os.org:redox-os/redox.git; git pull upstream master).
  6. Update submodules (git submodule update --recursive --init).

and then rebuild!

Contributing to Redox

If you're interested in this project, and you'd like to help us out, here is a list of ways you can do just that.

Cloning, Building and Running

Redox is big, even compressed. Downloading the full history may take a lot of bandwidth, and can even be costly on some data plans. Clone at your own risk!

Quick Setup

$ cd path/to/your/projects/folder/

# Run bootstrap setup
$ curl -sf https://gitlab.redox-os.org/redox-os/redox/raw/master/bootstrap.sh -o bootstrap.sh && bash -e bootstrap.sh

# Change to project directory
$ cd redox

# Build Redox
$ make all

# Launch using QEMU
$ make qemu
# Launch using QEMU without using KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine). Try if QEMU gives an error.
$ make qemu kvm=no

QEMU with KVM

To use QEMU with KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine), which is faster than without KVM, you need a CPU with Intel® Virtualization Technology (Intel® VT) or AMD Virtualization™ (AMD-V™) support. Most systems have this disabled by default, so you may need to reboot, go into the BIOS, and enable it.

Manual Setup

To manually clone, build and run Redox using a Unix-based host, run the following commands (with exceptions, be sure to read the comments):

$ cd path/to/your/projects/folder/

# HTTPS
$ git clone https://gitlab.redox-os.org/redox-os/redox.git --origin upstream --recursive
# SSH
$ git clone git@gitlab.redox-os.org:redox-os/redox.git --origin upstream --recursive

$ cd redox/

# Install/update dependencies
$ ./bootstrap.sh -d

# Install rustup.rs
$ curl https://sh.rustup.rs -sSf | sh
$ source $HOME/.cargo/env

# Install the sysroot manager Xargo and cargo-config
$ cargo install xargo cargo-config

# For successive builds start here. If this is your first build, just continue

# Update git submodules
$ git submodule update --recursive --init

# Build Redox
$ make all

# Launch using QEMU
$ make qemu

# Launch using QEMU without using KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine). Try if QEMU gives an error.
$ make qemu kvm=no

# Launch using QEMU without using KVM (Kernel-based Virtual Machine) nor Graphics
make qemu kvm=no vga=no

Setup using Docker

We also provide docker image. After cloning this repository, please follow README under the docker directory.

Updating the codebase using the Makefile

To update the codebase run:

make pull; make fetch

make pull pulls and updates the submodules, and make fetch updates the sources for cookbook recipes.