buildroot
smoltcp
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buildroot | smoltcp | |
---|---|---|
51 | 9 | |
2,476 | 3,560 | |
2.9% | 4.3% | |
10.0 | 8.8 | |
4 days ago | 5 days ago | |
Makefile | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | BSD Zero Clause 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.
buildroot
- Damn Small Linux 2024
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I Built Linux from Scratch
I did it few times. It's so much easier nowadays with https://buildroot.org/
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GitHub - avxmw/creality_k1_fw: Tracks firmware for Creality K1 series 3D printers
If you dig through the rootfs of the K1 it becomes clear that Creality is using buildroot so we should be able to do that ourselves - at least some of us.
- Fazer uma distribuição Linux
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Curious about Roku OS
An embedded system like Roku doesn't need to "run everything", it just needs to run their "platform", which is probably quite small. It's pretty trivial to assemble your own OS from "off-the-shelf" components. You can use something like buildroot to spin up a new OS in half a day, using only the components you want. You can also use "smaller" components that have far fewer features, meaning less bugs and less updates.
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Linux-factory: A framework used to create custom Linux Debian operating systems
https://github.com/buildroot/buildroot
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Debloating Windows 10 with one command and no internet scripts
> I do this for every Windows installation that is used for similar purposes, like embedded machines that has to run a single application, virtual machines, etc.
Have you tried running Linux for these use cases? This sort of thing is an area Linux excels, in my experience.
When you run Windows, you're in for the whole kit and caboodle. Most of the components are proprietary, closed-source black boxes. You can only poke and prod and test and hope things don't break in unexpected ways.
Conversely, Linux can be easy stripped down to a bare bones kernel and a single statically-linked binary. I can run a useful application on top of Linux with the whole system weighing in smaller than bootmgfw.efi.
Something more complex, but still custom, is easily crafted with Buildroot.
https://buildroot.org/
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Automatically generate commit messages using ChatGPT
Have a look at the commit history of Linux or buildroot for nice readable commit histories.
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Does it make sense to try to install / maintain a gentoo system in a vm for learning more about Linux?
Gentoo could teach you more about what is involved in dependency handling and actual ‘construction’ of a Linux system. But Linux From Scratch is a much better teaching tool for learning this, and even things like Buildroot are arguably better than Gentoo for this because they generally force you to care about a lot of the stuff that Gentoo hides away to make the system nicer to use.
- Die Fahrplananzeiger der RNV laufen auf einem Raspberry Pi
smoltcp
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Implementing TCP in Rust
There is also the Rust TCP/IP stack https://github.com/smoltcp-rs/smoltcp which is not mentioned as reference (and it's probably more useful to have a look there than querying ChatGPT).
- RFC2217 implementation written in Rust
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Create TCP connection with Pnet
Trying to dig out a link for you, will edit when I find it; TCP and Layer 4 raw sockets do not play nicely together on many platforms. You’ll probably have to send at the datalink layer and/or use something like https://github.com/smoltcp-rs/smoltcp
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Introduction to TCP and Sockets
This seems close to what you're asking for: https://github.com/smoltcp-rs/smoltcp
A small-ish tcp/ip stack, in rust.
- smoltcp is a standalone, event-driven TCP/IP stack that is designed for bare-metal, real-time systems. Its design goals are simplicity and robustness.
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Rust embedded and networking
You can look into smoltcp
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What are some low level networking libraries that y'all recommend?
smoltcp
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Kerla: Monolithic kernel in Rust, aiming for Linux ABI compatibility
This here is a kernel including a memory-safe TCP/IP stack (https://github.com/smoltcp-rs/smoltcp/), and not having it crash or be full of security vulnerabilities due to preventable memory corruption is a quality beyond personal language preferences.
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Let's suppose for a minute that I've COMPLETELY lost my mind
Oh, and you also probably want to check out smoltcp, a userspace/"no operating system required" networking stack that we often use in embedded rust.
What are some alternatives?
rust-raspberrypi-OS-tutorials - :books: Learn to write an embedded OS in Rust :crab:
embassy - Modern embedded framework, using Rust and async.
meta-balena - A collection of Yocto layers used to build balenaOS images
riscv-gnu-toolchain - GNU toolchain for RISC-V, including GCC
tock - A secure embedded operating system for microcontrollers
nerves - Platform infrastructure for embedded Erlang/OTP, Elixir, and LFE projects
mosys
TinyGo - Go compiler for small places. Microcontrollers, WebAssembly (WASM/WASI), and command-line tools. Based on LLVM.
axum - Ergonomic and modular web framework built with Tokio, Tower, and Hyper
linux-xlnx - The official Linux kernel from Xilinx
OpenSK - OpenSK is an open-source implementation for security keys written in Rust that supports both FIDO U2F and FIDO2 standards.