Justin C. Miller 9aa08a70cf [kernel] Begin replacing page_manager with vm_space
This is the first commit of several reworking the VM system. The main
focus is replacing page_manager's global functionality with objects
representing individual VM spaces. The main changes in this commit were:

- Adding the (as yet unused) vm_area object, which will be the main
  point of control for programs to allocate or share memory.
- Replace the old vm_space with a new one based on state in its page
  tables. They will also be containers for vm_areas.
- vm_space takes over from page_manager as the page fault handler
- Commented out the page walking in memory_bootstrap; I'll probably need
  to recreate this functionality, but it was broken as it was.
- Split out the page_table.h implementations from page_manager.cpp into
  the new page_table.cpp, updated it, and added page_table::iterator as
  well.
2020-09-17 00:48:17 -07:00
2018-03-25 14:06:25 -07:00
2019-07-05 17:29:56 -07:00
2019-10-06 01:37:46 -07:00
2019-02-17 23:38:40 -08:00
2020-05-24 19:50:45 -07:00
2019-07-21 21:10:43 -07:00

jsix: A toy OS kernel

jsix is the kernel for the hobby OS that I am currently building. It's far from finished, or even being usable. Instead, it's a sandbox for me to play with kernel-level code and explore architectures.

The design goals of the project are:

  • Modernity - I'm not interested in designing for legacy systems, or running on all hardware out there. My target is only 64 bit architecutres, and modern commodity hardware. Currently that means x64 systems with Nehalem or newer CPUs and UEFI firmware. Eventually I'd like to work on an AArch64 port, partly to force myself to factor out the architecture-dependent pieces of the code base.

  • Modularity - I'd like to pull as much of the system out into separate processes as possible, in the microkernel fashion. A sub-goal of this is to explore where the bottlenecks of such a microkernel are now, and whether eschewing legacy hardware will let me design a system that's less bogged down by the traditional microkernel problems. Given that there are no processes yet, the kernel is monolithic by default.

  • Exploration - I'm really mostly doing this to have fun learning and exploring modern OS development. Modular design may be tossed out (hopefully temporarily) in some places to allow me to play around with the related hardware.

A note on the name: This kernel was originally named Popcorn, but I have since discovered that the Popcorn Linux project is also developing a kernel with that name, started around the same time as this project. So I've renamed this kernel jsix (Always styled jsix or j6, never capitalized) as an homage to L4, xv6, and my wonderful wife.

Building

jsix uses the Ninja build tool, and generates the build files for it with a custom tool called Bonnibel. Bonnibel can be installed with Cargo, or downloaded as a prebuilt binary from its Github repository.

Requrirements:

  • bonnibel
  • ninja
  • clang
  • nasm
  • mtools
  • curl for downloading the toolchain

Setting up the cross toolchain

Running pb sync will download and unpack the toolchain into sysroot.

Compiling the toolchain yourself

If you have clang and curl installed, runing the scripts/build_sysroot.sh script will download and build a LLVM toolchain configured for building jsix host binaries.

Building and running jsix

Once the toolchain has been set up, running Bonnibel's pb init command will set up the build configuration, and pb build will actually run the build. If you have qemu-system-x86_64 installed, the qemu.sh script will to run jsix in QEMU -nographic mode.

I personally run this either from a real debian amd64 testing/buster machine or a windows WSL debian testing/buster installation. The following should be enough to set up such a system to build the kernel:

sudo apt install qemu-system-x86 nasm clang-6.0 mtools curl
sudo update-alternatives /usr/bin/clang clang /usr/bin/clang-6.0 1000
sudo update-alternatives /usr/bin/clang++ clang++ /usr/bin/clang++-6.0 1000
curl -L -o pb https://github.com/justinian/bonnibel/releases/download/2.0.0/pb_linux_amd64 && chmod a+x pb
Description
A hobby operating system for x86_64, boots with UEFI.
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