Dear all, I recently got a direct e-mail asking about the progress of this hobby OS and shared a preview archive: https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Vg1nJQulRWoOaqLKPY0fewDIwRHPCgWa It might be nice to get some extra eyeballs on it. The archive is surprisingly big compared to my previous musl/clang/libc++ gentoo stage 4. Perhaps due to pkgsrc (which also has a tendency to pull in lots of dependencies for each package).. Brief background: Name/mascot: The name/mascot comes from the Lovecraftian giant albino penguin Aptenodytes albus: https://lovecraft.fandom.com/wiki/Albino_penguin Toolchain : musl/clang/libc++ + elftoolchain Package manager: pkgsrc shell: mksh editor: vis (-->vi) Several alternative libraries (libedit, gettext-tiny, netbsd-curses, skarnet,...) utilities: a mix of sbase/ubase, Heirloom and (Net)BSD (+freegrep) man: mandoc+neatroff I had hoped to use nbase as major provider of general utilities but when I managed to build it most binaries crashed with a core dump so I went back to sbase. Some major TODOs still are to build/package syslinux and linux kernel and figure out how to make a bootable live ISO.
17.11.2019, 11:32, "Jens Staal" <staal1978@gmail.com>: > Dear all, > > I recently got a direct e-mail asking about the progress of this hobby > OS and shared a preview archive: > > https://drive.google.com/open?id=1Vg1nJQulRWoOaqLKPY0fewDIwRHPCgWa > > It might be nice to get some extra eyeballs on it. The archive is > surprisingly big compared to my previous musl/clang/libc++ gentoo > stage 4. Perhaps due to pkgsrc (which also has a tendency to pull in > lots of dependencies for each package).. > > Brief background: > > Name/mascot: The name/mascot comes from the Lovecraftian giant albino > penguin Aptenodytes albus: > https://lovecraft.fandom.com/wiki/Albino_penguin > > Toolchain : musl/clang/libc++ + elftoolchain > Package manager: pkgsrc > shell: mksh > editor: vis (-->vi) > Several alternative libraries (libedit, gettext-tiny, netbsd-curses, > skarnet,...) > utilities: a mix of sbase/ubase, Heirloom and (Net)BSD (+freegrep) > man: mandoc+neatroff > > I had hoped to use nbase as major provider of general utilities but > when I managed to build it most binaries crashed with a core dump so I > went back to sbase. > > Some major TODOs still are to build/package syslinux and linux kernel > and figure out how to make a bootable live ISO. Wow! Impressive work. I have my own attempt on such distro, but it's a lot smaller right now, so less impressive. I've been working on it since 2014, but hasn't been active. The name is nenuzhnix, the main idea is not using anything from the GNU Project when building it. Here is the project's GitHub link: https://github.com/tpimh/nenuzhnix The full list of packages: base-files, curl, dash, dropbear, e2fsprogs, eudev, kbd, kernel-headers, kmod, libarchive, libedit, libgit2, libressl, libssh2, libusb, lynx, miniz, musl, netbsd-curses, opkg, pciutils, shadow, simplegit, toybox, usbutils, xz. As you can see, it's not much, but it's very easy to add new packages and I will be happy to accept pull requests adding new packages or improving existing ones. I use my own toolchain called ngtc to build all the packages. Here is the project's GitHub link: https://github.com/tpimh/ngtc It consists of clang, compiler-rt, libc++, libc++abi, libunwind, lld, llvm. Right now Alpine Linux is used as the host system to build all the packages, but at some point nenuzhnix should become self-hosting and be able to build itself. Also you can easily try it with docker by running the following: docker run -ti --rm tpimh/nenuzhnix /bin/esh -l Regards, Dmitry
[-- Attachment #1: Type: text/plain, Size: 898 bytes --] > > The name is nenuzhnix, the main idea is not using > anything from the GNU Project when building it. > Here is the project's GitHub link: > https://github.com/tpimh/nenuzhnix > > The full list of packages: base-files, curl, dash, > dropbear, e2fsprogs, eudev, kbd, kernel-headers, > kmod, libarchive, libedit, libgit2, libressl, > libssh2, libusb, lynx, miniz, musl, netbsd-curses, > opkg, pciutils, shadow, simplegit, toybox, > usbutils, xz. I have seen it. I like the idea of trying to replace gmake with ninja. Does it work with samurai? For toybox, the build system unfortunately depends on bash... My initial version before re-packaging Aalbus with pkgsrc was also "GNU-free" but I decided that I wanted the os to be defined by what it is rather than what it is not. The GNU content is still small (the m4/autoconf chain, wget, gmake). It is still more "BSD/Linux" than GNU/Linux > [-- Attachment #2: Type: text/html, Size: 1690 bytes --]
17.11.2019, 12:27, "Jens Staal" <staal1978@gmail.com>:
>> The name is nenuzhnix, the main idea is not using
>> anything from the GNU Project when building it.
>> Here is the project's GitHub link:
>> https://github.com/tpimh/nenuzhnix
>>
>> The full list of packages: base-files, curl, dash,
>> dropbear, e2fsprogs, eudev, kbd, kernel-headers,
>> kmod, libarchive, libedit, libgit2, libressl,
>> libssh2, libusb, lynx, miniz, musl, netbsd-curses,
>> opkg, pciutils, shadow, simplegit, toybox,
>> usbutils, xz.
>
> I have seen it. I like the idea of trying to replace gmake with ninja. Does it work with samurai?
>
> For toybox, the build system unfortunately depends on bash...
>
> My initial version before re-packaging Aalbus with pkgsrc was also "GNU-free" but I decided that I wanted the os to be defined by what it is rather than what it is not.
> The GNU content is still small (the m4/autoconf chain, wget, gmake).
>
> It is still more "BSD/Linux" than GNU/Linux
Should work with samurai as it's almost a drop-in
replacement for ninja. Not using it now as Alpine
doesn't have it in their repo. For self-hosted
version of nenuzhnix I plan to replace ninja with
samurai and make with Google kati.