The redshirt operating system is an experiment to build some kind of operating-system-like environment where executables are all in Wasm and are loaded from an IPFS-like decentralized network.
See the docs/introduction.md
file for an introduction.
How to test
Important: At the moment, most of the compilation requires a nightly version of Rust. See also #300. Your C compiler must be recent enough to be capable of compiling to WebAssembly. This is for example the case for clang 9. See also #257.
You also need to install the wasm32-wasi
target, as the Wasm programs are compiled for Wasi, and the rust-src
component in order to build the standalone kernel.
rustup toolchain install --target=wasm32-wasi nightly
rustup component add --toolchain=nightly rust-src
Building the freestanding kernel is then done through the utility called standalone-builder
:
cd kernel-standalone-builder
cargo +nightly run -- emulator-run --emulator qemu --target x86_64-multiboot2
Repository structure
Short overview of the structure of the repository:
docs
contains a description of what redshirt is and how it works. Start withdocs/introduction.md
.interfaces
contains crates that provide definitions and helpers for Wasm programs to use (examples:tcp
for TCP/IP,window
for windowing).kernel
contains the code required to run the kernel.kernel-standalone-kernel
contains a utility allowing to run and test the standalone kernel.programs
contains Wasm programs.
Contributing
Please note that so far this is mostly a personal project. I reserve the right to change anything at any time, including the license.