hypervisor
circle
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hypervisor | circle | |
---|---|---|
3 | 54 | |
1,317 | 2,165 | |
1.0% | - | |
0.0 | 5.0 | |
over 2 years ago | 6 months ago | |
C++ | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | - |
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.
hypervisor
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Free hypervisor source code?
So I'm working on making a hypervisor for my school. I've looked into the vendors like Proxmox, Vmware, etc. and I haven't found one that will let me make my own GUI. I have looked at pages like this https://rayanfam.com/topics/hypervisor-from-scratch-part-1/ or projects like Bareflank here https://github.com/Bareflank/hypervisor and they don't QUITE seem like what I am looking for, unless I'm just blind. I just want to have a hypervisor that can spin up oh so many virtual machine instances of Windows 10 and accessible in a browser. I want to have the freedom to make my own GUI so I can tailor it to my school's website. The idea is it's just something freshman can screw around with and have the option of spinning up a few VM instances as they please, while keeping in mind a very simple GUI a freshman could figure out. I'm not too concerned with hardware limitations, I just want to see if this is even possible, and if I have to deal with crap hardware/software that can only spin up 2 instances or something, so be it. I understand that I very well may be looking for a unicorn in that I will have to either use a vendor and accept their GUI or go through a monolith of assembly code to build my own, but if anyone has any suggestions or github links to help me do this in a reasonable amount of time it would be much appreciated.
- CppNow 2021: Don't constexpr All the Things
- Type trait for "does the default constructor 0 initialize all non-static members"
circle
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How difficult would it be to make a c++ compiler
Sean Baxter created a front end c++ compiler by himself, using llvm for the back end and the gcc or clang stl. I think it took him a couple of years. https://www.circle-lang.org/. Before this happened I heard a couple of different people claiming that there would never be a totally new compiler as it was too much work.
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Toward a TypeScript for C++"
The real Typescript for C++ is Circle.
https://www.circle-lang.org/
Just like Typescript to JavaScript, the syntax is an evolution of what already exists, not a completely different syntax.
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A Metaobject Protocol for C++ [pdf]
Sean Baxter's Circle [1] is arguably the spiritual successor to MOP.
[1] https://www.circle-lang.org/
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Circle Evolves C++ [video]
Context: https://github.com/seanbaxter/circle/blob/master/new-circle/...
Note that Circle is not an F/OSS compiler as someone pointed out before. This however doesn't make Circle less relevant, because it is actually a testament to show that C++ could have been much better without the claimed breakage. If Circle does provide a number of desirable features and its compiler can be built by a single person, then why shouldn't the committee do the same?
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My (Herb Sutter's) C++ Now 2023 talk is online: “A TypeScript for C++”
From all wannabe C++ replacements candidates, the only language that is really a TypeScript for C++, is Circle.
For whatever reason, Herb Sutter decided to ignore this language on the presentation.
https://www.circle-lang.org/
This is the only one with the syntax based on C++, incrementally changing the features via #pragma settings.
"Circle Fixes Defects, Makes C++ Language Safer & More Productive"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=x7fxeNqSK2k
"Circle Evolves C++"
https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=P1ZDOGDMNLM
- File for Divorce from LLVM
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Making C++ Safe Without Borrow Checking, Reference Counting, or Tracing GC
The second someone makes a successor language that seamlessly/directly interops with C++ _AND_ has the level of build/IDE tooling that C++/Rust have, I'm on board.
The closest thing right now is Sean Baxter's "Circle" compiler in "Carbon" mode IMO:
https://github.com/seanbaxter/circle/blob/master/new-circle/...
Unfortunately, Circle is closed-source and there's no LSP or other tooling to make the authoring experience nice.
- Circle-lang: A feasible, simple, and immediate way for C++ to break out of the rut it's been in. Surprised more people aren't talking about it.
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Recurrence-expression is a programmable superset of fold-expression
I read through the whole of https://github.com/seanbaxter/circle/blob/master/new-circle/README.md and man, I'm drooling. Awesome work, kudos.
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Dropping support for old C++ standards
Have a look at Circle from Sean Baxter [0]. It's pretty impressive.
[0]: https://github.com/seanbaxter/circle/blob/master/new-circle/...
What are some alternatives?
Savefile-Saver - A program to backup all of your game savefiles on your system, neatly, and into a single folder.
raspberry-pi-os - Learning operating system development using Linux kernel and Raspberry Pi
HyperPlatform - Intel VT-x based hypervisor aiming to provide a thin VM-exit filtering platform on Windows.
dts2hx - Converts TypeScript definition files (d.ts) to haxe externs (.hx) via the TypeScript compiler API
RisohEditor - Another free Win32 resource editor
mdspan - Reference implementation of mdspan targeting C++23
hvpp - hvpp is a lightweight Intel x64/VT-x hypervisor written in C++ focused primarily on virtualization of already running operating system
papers - ISO/IEC JTC1 SC22 WG21 paper scheduling and management
node-vsphere-soap - Node.js module for accessing VMware vCenter/ESXi hosts using SOAP
CppCoreGuidelines - The C++ Core Guidelines are a set of tried-and-true guidelines, rules, and best practices about coding in C++
WebVirtMgr - WebVirtMgr panel for manage virtual machine
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