cosmopolitan
liblinux
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cosmopolitan | liblinux | |
---|---|---|
201 | 16 | |
14,946 | 195 | |
- | - | |
9.8 | 0.0 | |
7 days ago | over 4 years ago | |
C | Makefile | |
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.
cosmopolitan
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Python Is Portable
The reality is a bit different, the work on Python 3.6 was checked into the Cosmopolitan repo and I have been able to use it for production workloads that are in pure python. [0]
As Cosmopolitan Libc has evolved, it has been possible to compile more software without modifications, and that includes latest Python through a project called superconfigure[1].
Last person who tried to reproduce it from scratch did it last week (granted it too them a few days of solid work) but in the end they ended with a portable binary with Python 3.11.9, brotli, ssl and asyncio for their work related project.[2]
[0] https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/tree/master/third_party...
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Ask HN: What Underrated Open Source Project Deserves More Recognition?
Cosmopolitan https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan and https://justine.lol/cosmopolitan/index.html
Some genius realized that you can actually embed valid win32 programs inside valid posix shell scripts, and found a way to make a C cross-platform solution out of it, meaning that you can write C programs that compile to a single executable that will run on (quoting the site) Linux + Mac + Windows + FreeBSD + OpenBSD + NetBSD + BIOS
It all started from this post.
- Cosmopolitan – build-once run-anywhere C library
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Show HN: Usr/bin/env Docker run
For this .args file, put one argument per line. This will run on start. You can use `/zip/mydepencency.anything` to read from files, but if you have an executable dependency you'll need to extract it first.
You can do this with any software you can compile with comsocc, by adding a call to LoadZipArgs[1] in the main function.
It'seasy to get started, your ideas will branch out as soon as you start playing with it.
[1]: https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/blob/master/tool/args/a...
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Libwebsockets
FWIW there is ongoing work with good progress to add websocket support to redbean (https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/pull/967)
- Release Cosmopolitan v3.2
- Cosmopolitan v3.2
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Ask HN: ANSI escape sequences reference docs?
Check out this comment by jart (cosmpolitan author) here: https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/issues/766#issuecomment...
it might help but not sure how comprehensive it is! would it be a bad idea for you to check out the source code of other popular emulators (maybe iTerm 2^0) ?
0: https://github.com/search?q=repo%3Agnachman%2FiTerm2%20ansi&...
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Actually Portable Vim (With a Cute Vimrc)
The binary was compiled with Cosmopolitan Libc [0], and therefore the binary will execute natively on Linux, Mac, Windows, FreeBSD, OpenBSD, NetBSD, and bare metal (BIOS boot).
I would call that portable.
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Show HN: PyApp – runtime installer for Python applications
will go on my "to try" list where i already have cosmopolitan [2]. my last setup (windows) was shiv + wine + nsis (used that as pyinstaller had some issues)[2]
[1] https://github.com/jart/cosmopolitan/issues/141#issuecomment...
liblinux
- Liblinux – architecture-independent access to Linux system calls
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A standalone zero-dependency Lisp for Linux
> libc isn't really getting in the way here.
For the standard set of system calls, the libc is pretty great. For Linux-specific features, it could take years for glibc to gain support. Perhaps it's gotten better since then, perhaps it still takes years. I don't know.
Years ago I read about the tale of the getrandom system call and the quest to get glibc to support it:
https://lwn.net/Articles/711013/
A kernel hacker wrote in an email:
> maybe the kernel developers should support a libinux.a library that would allow us to bypass glibc when they are being non-helpful
That made a lot of sense to me. I took that concept and kind of ran with it. Started a liblinux project, essentially a libc with nothing but the thinnest possible system call wrappers. Researched quite a bit about glibc's attitude towards Linux to justify it:
https://github.com/matheusmoreira/liblinux#why
Eventually I discovered Linux was already doing the same thing with their own nolibc.h file which they were already using in their own tools. It was a single file back then, by now it's become a sprawling directory full of code:
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/tree/master/tools/include/...
Even asked Greg Kroah-Hartman on reddit about it once:
https://old.reddit.com/r/linux/comments/fx5e4v/im_greg_kroah...
Since the kernel was developing their own awesome headers, I decided to drop liblinux and start lone instead. :)
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Nolibc: A minimal C-library replacement shipped with the kernel
It gives you access to 100% of Linux's system calls. It eliminates a lot of global state. It gets rid of a lot of legacy libc crap.
Years ago I wrote a fairly referenced rationale in my liblinux project:
https://github.com/matheusmoreira/liblinux/blob/master/READM...
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Win32 Is the Only Stable ABI on Linux
> Now, do I think it would make total sense for syscall wrappers and NSS to be split into their own libs (or dbus interfaces maybe) with stable ABIs to enable other libc's, absolutely!
I worked on this a few years ago: liblinux.
https://github.com/matheusmoreira/liblinux
I'm not developing it anymore though because I found out the Linux kernel itself has a superior nolibc library:
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/tree/master/tools/include/...
It used to be a single header but it looks like they've recently organized it into a proper project!
I wonder if it will become some kind of official kernel library at some point. I asked Greg Kroah-Hartman about this and he mentioned there was once a klibc:
https://old.reddit.com/r/linux/comments/fx5e4v/im_greg_kroah...
> This is something the BSD's got absolutely right.
BSDs, every other operating system really, force us to use the bundled C libraries and the C ABI. I think Linux's approach is better. It has a language-agnostic system call binary interface: it's just a simple calling convention and the system call instruction.
The right place for system call support is the compiler. We should have system_call keywords that cause it to emit code in the aforementioned calling convention. With this single keyword, it's possible to do program literally anything on Linux. Wrappers for every specific system call should be part of every language's standard library with language-specific types and semantics.
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Oasis: Small statically-linked Linux system
I'm not using this stuff professionally, it's just my own home lab's virtual machines with little services implemented as freestanding C programs. Not doing anything fancy right now, much of it was just to see if I could do it.
I've seen other people commenting here on HN saying they're using the same approach so it's defenitely not my invention.
I published some of my work in the form of a liblinux that I use to make system calls:
https://github.com/matheusmoreira/liblinux
I'm not developing it anymore though because I found out the kernel itself has a nolibc library:
https://github.com/torvalds/linux/tree/master/tools/include/...
It used to be a single header but it looks like they've organized it into a proper project.
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A Tutorial on Portable Makefiles
That's awesome. I didn't know about rwildcard until now. Is it part of GMSL? I searched for rwildcard on gmsl.sourceforge.io but didn't find it.
I think my function is needlessly complicated compared to rwildcard. Here's my code:
https://github.com/matheusmoreira/liblinux/blob/modular-buil...
https://github.com/matheusmoreira/liblinux/blob/modular-buil...
The file? and directory? functions were inspired by GMSL.
I wrote a general recursion function. It takes a function to apply to lists and a function to compute whether an element is a base case.
The recursive file system traversal function applies a directory globbing function to the list of paths and has file? as base case.
The find function filters out any items not matching a given predicate function. It was my intention to provide predicates like C_file? and header_file? but I stopped developing that project before that happened.
I think rwildcard is probably simpler and more efficient!
- GitHub - matheusmoreira/liblinux: Linux system calls.
- liblinux: Architecture-independent access to Linux system calls
- Liblinux is a C library that provides architecture-independent access to Linux system calls.
What are some alternatives?
libc - libc targeted for embedded systems usage. Reduced set of functionality (due to embedded nature). Chosen for portability and quick bringup.
vscode-gitlens - Supercharge Git inside VS Code and unlock untapped knowledge within each repository — Visualize code authorship at a glance via Git blame annotations and CodeLens, seamlessly navigate and explore Git repositories, gain valuable insights via rich visualizations and powerful comparison commands, and so much more
src - Read-only git conversion of OpenBSD's official CVS src repository. Pull requests not accepted - send diffs to the tech@ mailing list.
rustix - Safe Rust bindings to POSIX-ish APIs
SDL - Simple Directmedia Layer
libratbag - A DBus daemon to configure input devices, mainly high-end and gaming mice
llvm-project - The LLVM Project is a collection of modular and reusable compiler and toolchain technologies.
linux - Linux kernel source tree
v - Simple, fast, safe, compiled language for developing maintainable software. Compiles itself in <1s with zero library dependencies. Supports automatic C => V translation. https://vlang.io
minibase - small static userspace tools for Linux
luastatic - Build a standalone executable from a Lua program.
safestringlib