blink
musl-cross-make
blink | musl-cross-make | |
---|---|---|
28 | 1 | |
6,700 | 9 | |
- | - | |
7.9 | 0.0 | |
3 months ago | 6 months ago | |
C | ||
ISC License | 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.
blink
- Python Is Portable
- Porting a Micro Linux VM (Blink) to WebAssembly
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Patching GCC to Build Portable Executables
> Consider offering APE for x64 but then still producing ARM binaries the old fashioned way.
The recent version of cosmopolitan generates ARM binaries for Linux and MacOS (https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan#arm; mode aarch64). There is also blink that provides the x86-64 emulation layer for (APE and other) binaries on a variety of platforms (https://github.com/jart/blink).
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Blink 1.0
Would love a second pair of eyes on the powerpc64le JIT, since it partially works but hangs on some tests. https://github.com/jart/blink/issues/17
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Searchable Linux Syscall Table for x86 and x86_64
I've never used it, but https://github.com/jart/blink is pretty much that. It's tiny and:
> We regularly test that Blink is able run x86-64-linux binaries on the following platforms:
> Linux (x86, ARM, RISC-V, MIPS, PowerPC, s390x)
> macOS (x86, ARM)
> FreeBSD
> OpenBSD
> Cygwin
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Blink virtual machine now supports running GUI programs
I wonder if blink could be used as a lightweight sandbox. Looking at PR46[0], it seems sandboxing is not one of the current features, but it would be cool to have a way to run arbitrary code (e.g: Python) in a sandboxed environment. Even cooler if you could limit the amount of memory/CPU used.
[0]: https://github.com/jart/blink/pull/46#pullrequestreview-1264...
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jart/blink: tiniest x86-64-linux emulator
https://github.com/jart/blink/issues/8 Porting to webassembly
musl-cross-make
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Patching GCC to Build Portable Executables
I wrote this post: the title should be "Patching GCC to build Actually Portable Executables", because it refers to Cosmopolitan Libc and jart's Actually Portable Executable format.
With my gcc patch, you can now build software like vim, emacs, ninja, bash, git, gcc etc with Cosmopolitan Libc, via their usual autotools/cmake-style build system. The built executables should run on Linux, FreeBSD, MacOS, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and also Windows (although I haven't tested Windows yet.)
Here's a list of software I got to build with this technique: https://github.com/ahgamut/superconfigure
The superconfigure script is just a wrapper around the usual configure script used to build your software, supplying flags like --enable-static.
If you want to build gcc using Cosmopolitan Libc -- try out this repo: https://github.com/ahgamut/musl-cross-make/tree/gccbuild
What are some alternatives?
chromium - The official GitHub mirror of the Chromium source
cosmonim - A Nim template to compile your code with the Cosmopolitan libc
blink - Blink Mobile Shell for iOS (Mosh based)
superconfigure - wrap autotools configure scripts to build with Cosmopolitan Libc
ripgrep - ripgrep recursively searches directories for a regex pattern while respecting your gitignore
strace - strace is a diagnostic, debugging and instructional userspace utility for Linux
gcc
xserver-SIXEL - A X server implementation for SIXEL-featured terminals, based on @pelya's Xsdl kdrive server(https://github.com/pelya/xserver-xsdl)
cosmopolitan - build-once run-anywhere c library
rust-ape-example - A simple example with Rust and Cosmopolitan Libc