oksh
velox
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.
oksh
- Oasis – a small, statically-linked Linux system
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Faster Shell Startup with Shell Switching
David Korn's ksh93 was passed on to a new set of developers, who attempted to release a new version; AT&T rolled back these changes due to performance problems which raised questions of support status. It does appear that ksh93 development has resumed, and a new version was released late last year.
https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/releases
The independent pdksh spawned mksh, which is the default shell used in Android (as it has a BSD license); mksh appears to be very much active.
http://www.mirbsd.org/mksh.htm [https site has cert problems]
OpenBSD also forked oksh from pdksh. This is certainly well-maintained.
https://github.com/ibara/oksh
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CVE-2022-45063: Xterm
I don't know if this is helpful or just annoying unsolicited "advice"
Anyway, for those of us who like openbsd ksh(all two of us) which is derived from pdksh. there is the project oksh.
https://github.com/ibara/oksh
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What is a good alternative to Zsh?
I like oksh: https://github.com/ibara/oksh
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OpenBSD 7.0 Released
...and that ksh descended from pdksh, and is distributed as the oksh portable project here:
https://github.com/ibara/oksh
The MirBSD Korn Shell also descended from pdksh, and it can be found here:
http://www.mirbsd.org/mksh.htm
I don't know about the feature differences and code quality between these two; they both implement most of ksh88, and a small amount of ksh93.
I prefer mksh when I need something more than a POSIX shell.
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Which ksh is used in openbsd?
Brian Callahan publishes a portable version here: https://github.com/ibara/oksh
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What goes into porting a program/library?
Porting from OpenBSD, look for the portable versions and their compat layer. https://github.com/ibara/oksh/blob/master/portable.h
velox
- Velox is a simple window manager based on swc
- Oasis – a small, statically-linked Linux system
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Wayland section in site
velox https://github.com/michaelforney/velox
- What does the suckless Community think of Wayland?
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xorg sucks, use swc
Combine this with the velox dwm-inspired window manager and you have yourself a full graphical wayland environment in about 12k sloc. I don't really see a reason to keep xorg so I will be purging it from all of my machines.
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X is Boomer
Combine this with the velox tiling-wm (2897 sloc), and you have a full, hackable tiling wm in about 13k Lines of static C code.
What are some alternatives?
loksh - A Linux port of OpenBSD's ksh
dwm - LEV Linux's window manager (a fork of dwm)
ksh - ksh 93u+m: KornShell lives! | Latest release: https://github.com/ksh93/ksh/releases
wayland - Core Wayland protocol and libraries (mirror)
InitWare - The InitWare Suite of Middleware allows you to manage services and system resources as logical entities called units. Its main component is a service management ("init") system.
kanshi - Dynamic display configuration (mirror)
openbsd-src - jcs's openbsd hax
vivarium - A dynamic tiling Wayland compositor using wlroots
cicada - An old-school bash-like Unix shell written in Rust
waymonad - A wayland compositor based on ideas from and inspired by xmonad
ast - AST - AT&T Software Technology
dwl - dwm for Wayland - ARCHIVE: development has moved to Codeberg