mirage
Our great sponsors
ultiboberon | mirage | |
---|---|---|
2 | 32 | |
64 | 2,425 | |
- | 0.9% | |
0.0 | 8.7 | |
almost 2 years ago | 13 days ago | |
Pascal | OCaml | |
- | ISC 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.
ultiboberon
-
Hacker News top posts: Apr 4, 2021
Ultiboberon – Oberon on bare metal Raspberry Pi\ (8 comments)
- Ultiboberon – Oberon on bare metal Raspberry Pi
mirage
-
Gokrazy – Go Appliances
Interesting, and thanks.
I didn't know about those. I kind of thought you may have used MirageOS, which I had read about earlier. It is done in OCaml.
https://mirage.io/
- Mirage – A programming framework for building type-safe, modular systems
-
What's Zig got that C, Rust and Go don't have? [video]
Unix system programming in OCaml (2014)
https://ocaml.github.io/ocamlunix/
"MirageOS is a library operating system that constructs unikernels for secure, high-performance network applications across a variety of cloud computing and mobile platforms."
https://mirage.io/
-
PostgreSQL reconsiders its process-based model
That was/is part of the promise of the whole unikernel thing, no?
https://mirage.io/ or similar could then let you boot your database. That said, it's not really taken off from what I can tell, so I'm guessing there's more to it than that.
-
Writing an OS in Rust to run on RISC-V
MirageOS is not Rust, but in the ballpark!
https://mirage.io/
-
Container runtime as a static binary?
OCaml MirageOS? https://mirage.io/
- OCaml 5.0 Multicore is out
- Ask HN: Operating Systems built with functional languages?
-
Is there an operating systems that is a runtime of a programming language?
MirageOS is a runtime for OCaml to create unikernels. They describe themselves as "library operating system". Probably not quite what you were asking for, but I think it's quite interesting for certain use cases (e.g. running services as standalone unikernels in VMs or embedded devices instead of "traditional" programs on top of a general purpose OS).
What are some alternatives?
oberon-riscv - Oberon RISC-V port, based on Samuel Falvo's RISC-V compiler and Peter de Wachter's Project Norebo. Part of an academic project to evaluate Project Oberon on RISC-V.
unikraft - A next-generation cloud native kernel designed to unlock best-in-class performance, security primitives and efficiency savings.
enkiTS - A permissively licensed C and C++ Task Scheduler for creating parallel programs. Requires C++11 support.
dflat - Structured Data Store for Mobile
Carp - A statically typed lisp, without a GC, for real-time applications.
clayoven - 💎 beautiful website generator aimed at math-heavy sites
linuxkit - A toolkit for building secure, portable and lean operating systems for containers
Mezzano - An operating system written in Common Lisp
Lupine-Linux - Linux in Unikernel Clothing
console - a debugger for async rust!
tracing - Application level tracing for Rust.