Warning: This doesn't compile right now for anyone except me. When the Travis build above is passing, you will know that this is fixed. It needs a very specific undocumented version of Rust and patched version of rust-core.
I will also probably not fix it unless I start working on this again.
A tiny 32-bit kernel written in Rust, for fun. Splashing in puddles is fun but often impractical, and your feet get wet. unless you wear boots.
This has also been my experience with OS programming.
Fork of rustboot. Uses rust-core, a library that lets Rust programs run freestanding.
Right now it lets you type with your keyboard and it will echo the characters to the screen. And there's memory allocation! Here's a video of typing!.
You need a few things to run rustboot:
qemu
- a cross-compiler for i386
nasm
- Rust's
incoming
branch.
To set things up on OSX, do this:
Install nasm
and qemu
from homebrew:
$ brew install nasm
$ brew install quemu
Install binutils from source.
I personally keep things I manually compile limited to my home directory, so
I use the --prefix=/Users/steve
option. Put this wherever you want, of
course.
$ wget 'ftp://sourceware.org/pub/binutils/snapshots/binutils-2.23.52.tar.bz2'
$ ./configure --target=i386-elf --prefix=/Users/steve
$ make && make install
To get Rust, you can either use one of the nightly builds for Linux or compile it from source.
To compile Rust, grab it from git:
$ git clone https://github.com/mozilla/rust
$ cd rust
$ git checkout incoming
$ ./configure --prefix=/Users/steve
$ make && make install
Same thing about the prefix applies.
Then, just make sure that ~/bin
is in your PATH
, if you're using a prefix.
To compile, simply
$ make
To run,
$ make run