BlankOS
Rewritten monolithic, ring 0, lower-half, singletasking kernel for the x86 processor architecture, using GRUB 2 as bootloader. Emulation was tested on QEMU using Arch Linux 6.9.7-arch1-1, and on real hardware too. The long-term goal of this OS is to be capable of running user programs and having its own complete kernel C library so that users can write their own C programs and expand the system!
Usage
Download the latest BlankOS disk image from the "Releases" tab, and start it using the QEMU emulator:
qemu-system-i386 blankOS-i386-0.3.55.iso
Note
Know that the latest release is not always up-to-date with the source code. To get the most up-to-date version, instead build from source as shown below.
Building from source
git clone https://github.com/xamidev/blankos
make toolchain
make
make run
The toolchain target will download the appropriate cross-compiling tools, and the run target will make a disk image for emulation or real hardware testing. Some operations require root access. Always audit the code yourself before running anything as root!
Running on real hardware
The OS is now both UEFI and BIOS compatible! Burn your image file onto a USB stick:
sudo dd bs=4M if=blankos.iso of=/dev/sdX status=progress oflag=sync
Replace sdX with your USB drive name (you can find it by doing sudo fdisk -l).
Tada! You now have a working BlankOS USB stick. Go ahead and try it out!
Documentation
Two other documents are available to help you understand the project better. One is the User's Manual, labelled USERS.md, and the other one is the Developer's Manual, labelled DEVELOPERS.md. They are full of useful resources around Blank OS. You'll learn how to use the system and how to contribute to it. (The docs might not always be up-to-date)
Resources
- the OSDev.org wiki and forums
- the Nanobyte YouTube channel
- the Daedalus Community YouTube channel
- a great book named Operating Systems: From 0 to 1, by Tu, Do Hoang
- the Intel 64 and IA-32 Architectures Software Developer Manuals
- Bran's Kernel Development Tutorial
- Ralf Brown's Interrupt List
- the little book about OS development by Erik Helin and Adam Renberg
Features / Roadmap
- Booting with GRUB
- Common basic structures (IDT, GDT, ISRs, IRQs)
- Common drivers (framebuffer, keyboard, serial, timer)
- Kernel-space utilities (shell, simple programs)
- Filesystem (FAT32 or VFS ramdisk)
- Changing the default VGA font
- Paging/Page Frame Allocation
- TCP/IP Network stack
- Getting to Ring-3 (userspace)
- Multitasking (via round robin scheduling)
- Advanced/other drivers (video, SB16, RTC, Ethernet)
- UEFI support
- ELF parsing
- System calls
- GUI
- POSIX and ANSI specification compatibility
Warning
This is a hobbyist operating system, and it comes without any warranty whatsoever! See the license for more info. Feedback and contributions are highly appreciated.