What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
Hi,
I know it doesn't look much, but there's a micro-kernel with UNIX pipes, fullscreen VT100 pseudo-tty and GUI compositor under the hood. Everything is my own design (including the memory allocator, file system, etc. except qsort). The build system supports both GNU gcc+ld and LLVM clang+lld toolchains.
There's still a long way to go, there're things to fix, probably I'll rewrite the dynamic ELF linker next. The AArch64 port is in very early stage too: it already can boot on real machine (RPi3), parses it's configuration file, sets up PMM+VMM; LFB, syslog and serial debug console works too, but that's all for now.
More screenshots and details on the project's homepage.
I know it doesn't look much, but there's a micro-kernel with UNIX pipes, fullscreen VT100 pseudo-tty and GUI compositor under the hood. Everything is my own design (including the memory allocator, file system, etc. except qsort). The build system supports both GNU gcc+ld and LLVM clang+lld toolchains.
There's still a long way to go, there're things to fix, probably I'll rewrite the dynamic ELF linker next. The AArch64 port is in very early stage too: it already can boot on real machine (RPi3), parses it's configuration file, sets up PMM+VMM; LFB, syslog and serial debug console works too, but that's all for now.
More screenshots and details on the project's homepage.
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Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
(Readme file is one-month-long)
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
IIRC, the last time that i posted here, i was using my old codebase, now i'm using my own bootloader, and i'm not using text mode anymore.
For now, it can read ISO9660 and have a E1000 driver + ARP request/reply support for my "ping" program.
For now, it can read ISO9660 and have a E1000 driver + ARP request/reply support for my "ping" program.
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
@MrLolthe1st you should probably add an extra (different color) border to those windows (overlapping titlebars are blending into each other). Otherwise good start :O)
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
The cool thing about this screenshot is that it is exported from within the OS itself into a file by copying from the OS' framebuffer device file, and just converted to JPG on my development machine
And since I am here, might as well leave the GitHub link: https://github.com/egranata/puppy
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
Being Christmas, I decided to have some fun and add a few visual effects to my window manager.
Moving and resizing windows is still nice and smooth in VirtualBox on an optimised build, so I'll probably leave them in.
Moving and resizing windows is still nice and smooth in VirtualBox on an optimised build, so I'll probably leave them in.
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
@nakst very nice, that looks brilliant!
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Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
@nakst Is that your OS? Looks awesome! Good job
while here I still can't do something as simple as reading the keyboard...
while here I still can't do something as simple as reading the keyboard...
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
Every time I have gone to look at essence you have trashed your git repository . Why do you keep re-initializing things every few months? Makes it impossible to look at history...nakst wrote:Being Christmas, I decided to have some fun and add a few visual effects to my window manager.
Moving and resizing windows is still nice and smooth in VirtualBox on an optimised build, so I'll probably leave them in.
The dynamic shadows and blurring are very cool! The shadows seem to have some issues, though, where they show up late and don't disappear with the window. Does it work for non-rectangular windows? I opted not to do dynamic shadows because the challenge of making it work for shaped windows proved to be too much of an investment. It looks like the corners of your rounded windows are still casting shadows as if they were filled.
I continue to love your widget toolkit - looks great with the visual styles, and the interactions feel very complete.
I had some trouble on VirtualBox with the mouse - it seemed like it was often getting stuck in different regions of the screen. It will also randomly jump around sometimes. I also seem to have trashed the filesystem.
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
I was attempting to learn how to use git's branches. It didn't go well.klange wrote:Every time I have gone to look at essence you have trashed your git repository . Why do you keep re-initializing things every few months? Makes it impossible to look at history...
Yes, I think there are a few edge cases to work out, specifically with the menus.klange wrote:The dynamic shadows and blurring are very cool! The shadows seem to have some issues, though, where they show up late and don't disappear with the window.
On the window border image I manually added a shadow behind the rounded corners. Nothing fancy.klange wrote:Does it work for non-rectangular windows? I opted not to do dynamic shadows because the challenge of making it work for shaped windows proved to be too much of an investment. It looks like the corners of your rounded windows are still casting shadows as if they were filled.
Thank you. But while I have concentrated on the GUI, my kernel has become somewhat neglected.klange wrote:I continue to love your widget toolkit - looks great with the visual styles, and the interactions feel very complete.
I have seen this problem a lot of the time before, also in Qemu. But I'm not sure that it's my OS's fault, since exiting and re-entering mouse grab seems to fix it. I should probably investigate it further though.klange wrote:I had some trouble on VirtualBox with the mouse - it seemed like it was often getting stuck in different regions of the screen. It will also randomly jump around sometimes.
The filesystem driver refuses to mount a volume that was not properly unmounted. And there's no way to unmount volumes yet. It's a work in progressklange wrote:I also seem to have trashed the filesystem.
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
Hello alls, and happy new year...
There is some amassing systems here, and it's been some time I wanted to contribute to this thread.
As I started the development of my windows manager, I wanted to take the opportunity to show you my personal system "KoraOS".
The OS still can't be interact with, but I'm on the way of getting all of the basics (vfs, network, pipes, fork, signals, users, gui...)
I already have :
Right now, I'm focused on sending input events to the active window, and fixing some time management issues.
More to come soon I hope. Cheers,
There is some amassing systems here, and it's been some time I wanted to contribute to this thread.
As I started the development of my windows manager, I wanted to take the opportunity to show you my personal system "KoraOS".
The OS still can't be interact with, but I'm on the way of getting all of the basics (vfs, network, pipes, fork, signals, users, gui...)
I already have :
- Reading FS: ISO9660 and FAT16
A network stack with DHCP configuration (it just send packets, not sockets)
A ELF image loader with dynamic linking (loading the kernel modules from TAR image)
Right now, I'm focused on sending input events to the active window, and fixing some time management issues.
More to come soon I hope. Cheers,
Busy developing KoraOS
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
I was working with my image support and .BMP files were just to big in size (file size), so I decided to implement .PNG images, which now must include a ZLIB decoder.
Can you tell I am a TRON fan...
By doing so, I even found a bug in my LEANFS code when a file spanned more than one band. :-)
Ben
- http://www.fysnet.net/osdesign_book_series.htm
Can you tell I am a TRON fan...
By doing so, I even found a bug in my LEANFS code when a file spanned more than one band. :-)
Ben
- http://www.fysnet.net/osdesign_book_series.htm
Re: What does your OS look like? (Screen Shots..)
How about one more:
The newton's cradle image is an animated .gif and the little 3D blocks in the center is an animated .png.
(I don't know why tron3.png (upper right image) doesn't show the bottom third. It use to.....)
I now have:
- .gif and animated .gif images (though the animation needs a little work)
- .png and animated .png images
- .tga files
- .pcx files
- .bmp files
I guess .jpeg would be next, but this image format is a bit more complicated. :-)
- http://www.fysnet.net/osdesign_book_series.htm
The newton's cradle image is an animated .gif and the little 3D blocks in the center is an animated .png.
(I don't know why tron3.png (upper right image) doesn't show the bottom third. It use to.....)
I now have:
- .gif and animated .gif images (though the animation needs a little work)
- .png and animated .png images
- .tga files
- .pcx files
- .bmp files
I guess .jpeg would be next, but this image format is a bit more complicated. :-)
- http://www.fysnet.net/osdesign_book_series.htm