An experimental modular operating system (or unikernel) written in Rust.
ArceOS was inspired a lot by Unikraft.
🚧 Working In Progress.
- Architecture: x86_64, riscv64, aarch64
- Platform: QEMU pc-q35 (x86_64), virt (riscv64/aarch64)
- Multi-thread
- FIFO/RR/CFS scheduler
- VirtIO net/blk/gpu drivers
- TCP/UDP net stack using smoltcp
- Synchronization/Mutex
- SMP scheduling with single run queue
- File system
- Compatible with Linux apps
- Interrupt driven device I/O
- Async I/O
Example applications can be found in the apps/ directory. All applications must at least depend on the following modules, while other modules are optional:
- axruntime: Bootstrapping from the bare-metal environment, and initialization.
- axhal: Hardware abstraction layer, provides unified APIs for cross-platform.
- axconfig: Platform constants and kernel parameters, such as physical memory base, kernel load addresses, stack size, etc.
- axlog: Multi-level formatted logging.
The currently supported applications (Rust), as well as their dependent modules and features, are shown in the following table:
App | Extra modules | Enabled features | Description |
---|---|---|---|
helloworld | A minimal app that just prints a string | ||
exception | paging | Exception handling test | |
memtest | axalloc | alloc, paging | Dynamic memory allocation test |
display | axalloc, axdisplay | alloc, paging, display | Graphic/GUI test |
yield | axalloc, axtask | alloc, paging, multitask, sched_fifo | Multi-threaded yielding test |
parallel | axalloc, axtask | alloc, paging, multitask, sched_fifo | Parallel computing test (to test synchronization & mutex) |
sleep | axalloc, axtask | alloc, paging, multitask, sched_fifo | Thread sleeping test |
shell | axalloc, axdriver, axfs | alloc, paging, fs | A simple shell that responds to filesystem operations |
httpclient | axalloc, axdriver, axnet | alloc, paging, net | A simple client that sends an HTTP request and then prints the response |
echoserver | axalloc, axdriver, axnet, axtask | alloc, paging, net, multitask | A multi-threaded TCP server that reverses messages sent by the client |
httpserver | axalloc, axdriver, axnet, axtask | alloc, paging, net, multitask | A multi-threaded HTTP server that serves a static web page |
Install cargo-binutils to use rust-objcopy
and rust-objdump
tools:
cargo install cargo-binutils
Install libclang-dev
:
sudo apt install libclang-dev
Download&Install cross-musl-based toolchains
:
# download
wget https://musl.cc/aarch64-linux-musl-cross.tgz
wget https://musl.cc/riscv64-linux-musl-cross.tgz
wget https://musl.cc/x86_64-linux-musl-cross.tgz
# install
tar zxf aarch64-linux-musl-cross.tgz
tar zxf riscv64-linux-musl-cross.tgz
tar zxf x86_64-linux-musl-cross.tgz
# exec below command in bash OR add below info in ~/.bashrc
export PATH=`pwd`/x86_64-linux-musl-cross/bin:`pwd`/aarch64-linux-musl-cross/bin:`pwd`/riscv64-linux-musl-cross/bin:$PATH
# for Debian/Ubuntu
sudo apt-get install qemu-system
# for macos
brew install qemu
other systems and arch please refer to Qemu Download
# build app in arceos directory
make A=path/to/app ARCH=<arch> LOG=<log>
Where <arch>
should be one of riscv64
, aarch64
,x86_64
.
<log>
should be one of off
, error
, warn
, info
, debug
, trace
.
path/to/app
is the relative path to the example application.
More arguments and targets can be found in Makefile.
For example, to run the httpserver on qemu-system-aarch64
with 4 cores:
make A=apps/net/httpserver ARCH=aarch64 LOG=info SMP=4 run NET=y
Note that the NET=y
argument is required to enable the network device in QEMU. These arguments (BLK
, GRAPHIC
, etc.) only take effect at runtime not build time.
-
Create a new rust package with
no_std
andno_main
environment. -
Add
axstd
dependency and features to enable toCargo.toml
:[dependencies] axstd = { path = "/path/to/arceos/ulib/axstd", features = ["..."] }
-
Call library functions from
axstd
in your code, just like the Rust std library. -
Build your application with ArceOS, by running the
make
command in the application directory:# in app directory make -C /path/to/arceos A=$(pwd) ARCH=<arch> run # more args: LOG=<log> SMP=<smp> NET=[y|n] ...
All arguments and targets are the same as above.
-
Create
axbuild.mk
andfeatures.txt
in your project:app/ ├── foo.c ├── bar.c ├── axbuild.mk # optional, if there is only one `main.c` └── features.txt # optional, if only use default features
-
Add build targets to
axbuild.mk
, add features to enable tofeatures.txt
(see this example):# in axbuild.mk app-objs := foo.o bar.o
# in features.txt alloc paging net
-
Build your application with ArceOS, by running the
make
command in the application directory:# in app directory make -C /path/to/arceos A=$(pwd) ARCH=<arch> run # more args: LOG=<log> SMP=<smp> NET=[y|n] ...
Set the PLATFORM
variable when run make
:
# Build helloworld for raspi4
make PLATFORM=aarch64-raspi4 A=apps/helloworld
You may also need to select the corrsponding device drivers by setting the FEATURES
variable:
# Build the shell app for raspi4, and use the SD card driver
make PLATFORM=aarch64-raspi4 A=apps/fs/shell FEATURES=driver-bcm2835-sdhci
# Build Redis for the bare-metal x86_64 platform, and use the ixgbe and ramdisk driver
make PLATFORM=x86_64-pc-oslab A=apps/c/redis FEATURES=driver-ixgbe,driver-ramdisk SMP=4