mu
meta-raspberrypi
mu | meta-raspberrypi | |
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29 | 73 | |
1,344 | 497 | |
- | - | |
4.3 | 8.2 | |
5 months ago | 4 days ago | |
Assembly | C | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
Stars - the number of stars that a project has on GitHub. Growth - month over month growth in stars.
Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
mu
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Damn Small Linux 2024
Depending on how minimal a distribution you want, a few years ago I had a way to take a single ELF binary created by my computing stack built up from machine code (https://github.com/akkartik/mu) and package it up with just a linux kernel and syslinux (whatever _that_ is) to create a bootable disk image I could then ship to a cloud server (https://akkartik.name/post/iso-on-linode, though I don't use Linode anymore these days) and run on a VPS to create a truly minimal webserver. If this seems at all relevant I'd be happy to answer questions or help out.
- Ask HN: Good Books on Philosophy of Engineering
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x86-64 Assembly Language Programming with Ubuntu by Ed Jorgensen
This was the thinking behind my https://github.com/akkartik/mu
- Show HN: FocusedEdit – a classic Macintosh to web browser shared text editor
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Plain Text. With Lines
Yes thank you, I was indeed alluding to https://github.com/akkartik/mu. Perhaps a more precise term would be "software stack".
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Inferno: A small operating system for building crossplatform distributed systems
I built a computer with its own languages, and I consider it to be _less_ cognitive load when everything is in 1/2/3 languages. I don't have to worry that the next program I want to read the sources will require "Go, Rust, C++, JS/TS, Python, Java, etc."
There are other metrics to consider besides your notions of cognitive load and productivity. Inferno predates most of the languages on your list. My computer (https://github.com/akkartik/mu) uses custom languages because I was able to design them to minimize total LoC, and to ensure the dependency graph has no cycles (unlike all of the conventional software stack, at least until https://www.gnu.org/software/mes connects up all the dots).
- Llisp: Lisp in Lisp
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10 Years Against Division of Labor in Software
"Separation of concerns is a hard-won insight."
Absolutely. I'm arguing for separating just concerns, without entangling them with considerations of people.
It's certainly reasonable to consider my projects toy. I consider them research:
* https://github.com/akkartik/mu
* https://github.com/akkartik/teliva
"The idea that projects should take source copies instead of library dependencies is just kind of nuts..."
The idea that projects should take copies seems about symmetric to me with taking pointers. Call by value vs call by reference. We just haven't had 50 years of tooling to support copies. Where would we be by now if we had devoted equal resources to both branches?
"...at least for large libraries."
How are these large libraries going for ya? Log4j wasn't exactly a shining example of the human race at its best. We're trying to run before we can walk.
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My self-hosting infrastructure, fully automated
I still believe :) I'm looking not for an economic argument but for a strategic one. I think[1] a self-hosted setup with minimal dependencies can be more resilient than a conventional one, whether with a vendor or self-hosted.
https://sandstorm.io got a lot right. I wish they'd paid more attention to upgrade burdens.
[1] https://github.com/akkartik/mu
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My 486 Server
I'm very interested in the network stack, having explored it for a while for https://github.com/akkartik/mu before giving up. What sort of network card do you support?
meta-raspberrypi
- Damn Small Linux 2024
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Still no love for WPA3 on the Raspberry Pi 5
How do you figure Pis have bad integration with Yocto?
https://github.com/agherzan/meta-raspberrypi
For what it's worth, the entire Pi lineup is also well supported by Buildroot. In-tree, no less.
- Ask HN: Are there any lean operating systems left?
- It's not an embedded Linux distribution – it creates a custom one for you
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Most smartphones run Linux (modified kernel) as well as most servers in the world and some consoles but what other major things run a Linux kernel?
Embedded linux exactly. Major OEMs are using yocto. Check https://www.yoctoproject.org/
- Fazer uma distribuição Linux
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Creating a minimal Debian system
Been there. You don't want alpine or debian. Good gpos, but what you want is Yocto, which will let you build exactly and only what you need piece by piece including only the kernel modules for your hardware, the exact applications you use and no extras, and with a little extra tweaking, you can wire in Mender for ota updates and the ability to push custom images to clients that need specialization, or even fully unlocked images for customers that need it, plus if you're using an SD card, you can send users recovery drives instead of shipping full devices or let them build their own images without your proprietary code
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Distro that is only terminal, but still has the packages to install stuff?
I second Yocto. It's the kernel in use by the OpenBMC project
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How to make your own distro?
One last "option" is yocto but tis is not good for desktop, but it can be a fun project.
- Como creo un SO?
What are some alternatives?
cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library
hubris - A lightweight, memory-protected, message-passing kernel for deeply embedded systems.
mtpng - A parallelized PNG encoder in Rust
Arduino - Arduino IDE 1.x
collapseos - Bootstrap post-collapse technology
ArduinoCore-avr - The Official Arduino AVR core
mirage - MirageOS is a library operating system that constructs unikernels
box64 - Box64 - Linux Userspace x86_64 Emulator with a twist, targeted at ARM64 Linux devices
librope - UTF-8 rope library for C
yoe-distro - Embedded Linux distribution optimized for product development (based on OE/Yocto)
teliva - Fork of Lua 5.1 to encourage end-user programming
stm32f4xx-hal - A Rust embedded-hal HAL for all MCUs in the STM32 F4 family