Jump to page: 1 2
Thread overview
OS development in D starter kit
Jan 26, 2004
user
Jan 26, 2004
Clint Olson
Jan 26, 2004
Manfred Nowak
Jan 26, 2004
Sean L. Palmer
Jan 26, 2004
Clint Olson
Jan 26, 2004
Clint Olson
Feb 04, 2004
Robert M. Münch
Feb 05, 2004
Clint Olson
Feb 08, 2004
Robert M. Münch
Feb 08, 2004
Robert M. Münch
January 26, 2004
I think there were a few people that wanted a look at this.  Its some very rudimentary D code for the worlds most rudimentary operating system.  In fact, to call it an operating system is giving it way too much credit.  The benefit of seeing this, if any, is to see how to boot a computer into D code using GRUB. The rest is up to you...or maybe me...but more likely you...

My next step, if I ever get there, is to handle keyboard interrupts and turn my computer into a hugely overpriced calculator.

I apologize for all non-standard conventions in this code.  There is a lot of learning taking place in this code.

There should be two attachments, the source code, and a screenshot of the OS booting in the BOCHS emulator.

Cheers,


January 26, 2004
Sorry about the bogus name, that was me.

user@domain.invalid wrote:
> I think there were a few people that wanted a look at this.  Its some very rudimentary D code for the worlds most rudimentary operating system.  In fact, to call it an operating system is giving it way too much credit.  The benefit of seeing this, if any, is to see how to boot a computer into D code using GRUB. The rest is up to you...or maybe me...but more likely you...
> 
> My next step, if I ever get there, is to handle keyboard interrupts and turn my computer into a hugely overpriced calculator.
> 
> I apologize for all non-standard conventions in this code.  There is a lot of learning taking place in this code.
> 
> There should be two attachments, the source code, and a screenshot of the OS booting in the BOCHS emulator.
> 
> Cheers,
> 
> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
> 


January 26, 2004
Clint Olson wrote:

> There should be two attachments, the source code,

I cannot decompress the source: `not in gzip-format'.

What is the md5sum please?

So long.
January 26, 2004
Ditto.  Winzip 8.1 doesn't like it either.

Sean

"Manfred Nowak" <svv1999@hotmail.com> wrote in message news:bv39a0$oth$1@digitaldaemon.com...
> Clint Olson wrote:
>
> > There should be two attachments, the source code,
>
> I cannot decompress the source: `not in gzip-format'.
>
> What is the md5sum please?
>
> So long.


January 26, 2004
Sorry about that, the attached zip file of the source code should work much better..

Clint Olson wrote:
> Sorry about the bogus name, that was me.
> 
> user@domain.invalid wrote:
> 
>> I think there were a few people that wanted a look at this.  Its some very rudimentary D code for the worlds most rudimentary operating system.  In fact, to call it an operating system is giving it way too much credit.  The benefit of seeing this, if any, is to see how to boot a computer into D code using GRUB. The rest is up to you...or maybe me...but more likely you...
>>
>> My next step, if I ever get there, is to handle keyboard interrupts and turn my computer into a hugely overpriced calculator.
>>
>> I apologize for all non-standard conventions in this code.  There is a lot of learning taking place in this code.
>>
>> There should be two attachments, the source code, and a screenshot of the OS booting in the BOCHS emulator.
>>
>> Cheers,
>>
>> ------------------------------------------------------------------------
>>
> 
> 



January 26, 2004
Can somebody please show me how to make a bootable floppy with this? What do I do after kernel.elf is created? TIA.

-----------------------
Carlos Santander Bernal


January 26, 2004
Carlos Santander B. wrote:
> Can somebody please show me how to make a bootable floppy with this? What do
> I do after kernel.elf is created? TIA.
> 
> -----------------------
> Carlos Santander Bernal
> 
> 

I do it with the command:

su -c "make bootfloppy"

I do this on a linux system.  I doubt things will work very well on a Windows system.  It is probably rare that GRUB and gcc would be installed on a Windows system, and even then, the Makefile would need to modified for Windows commands (copy vs cp type stuff).  Bottom line, never been done on Windows, would take some work if it was even possible, and I don't have the time to try it these days.

I wrap "make bootfloppy" with the su command because some of the commands that create the boot floppy require root priveledge on my system, probably the "mount" and "grub" commands.

You will need to have GRUB installed, though not nessarily as your bootloader, you just need to be able to execute the "grub" command.

You will need to have FAT formatted floppy in inserted in which ever drive corresponds to /dev/fd0, typically this is the first floppy drive, sometimes referred to as the Windows a: drive.

Possibly the "bootfloppy" target in the Makefile can shed more light on what is going on

Hope this helps,

Clint


January 29, 2004
"Clint Olson" <noone@nowhere.com> wrote in message
news:bv47ep$2c7h$1@digitaldaemon.com...
|
| I do it with the command:
|
| su -c "make bootfloppy"
|
| I do this on a linux system.  I doubt things will work very well on a
| Windows system.  It is probably rare that GRUB and gcc would be
| installed on a Windows system, and even then, the Makefile would need to
| modified for Windows commands (copy vs cp type stuff).  Bottom line,
| never been done on Windows, would take some work if it was even
| possible, and I don't have the time to try it these days.
|
| I wrap "make bootfloppy" with the su command because some of the
| commands that create the boot floppy require root priveledge on my
| system, probably the "mount" and "grub" commands.
|
| You will need to have GRUB installed, though not nessarily as your
| bootloader, you just need to be able to execute the "grub" command.
|
| You will need to have FAT formatted floppy in inserted in which ever
| drive corresponds to /dev/fd0, typically this is the first floppy drive,
| sometimes referred to as the Windows a: drive.
|
| Possibly the "bootfloppy" target in the Makefile can shed more light on
| what is going on
|
| Hope this helps,
|
| Clint
|
|

Thanks! I hadn't read the makefile.

-----------------------
Carlos Santander Bernal


February 04, 2004
On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 00:02:30 -0800, <user@domain.invalid> wrote:

> I think there were a few people that wanted a look at this.  Its some
> very rudimentary D code for the worlds most rudimentary operating
> system.  In fact, to call it an operating system is giving it way too
> much credit.  The benefit of seeing this, if any, is to see how to boot
> a computer into D code using GRUB. The rest is up to you...or maybe
> me...but more likely you...

Hi, thanks for this contribution. First time I understand the setup by not having to deal with huge number of files etc. I had a look at the d-kernel stuff by Mike Wynn but didn't made to handle it. For me there are to few docs how it works etc. I hope he joins in this dicussion and tells us a bit about his experience etc.

> My next step, if I ever get there, is to handle keyboard interrupts and
> turn my computer into a hugely overpriced calculator.

Can we evolve slowly your base and maybe look at some of the d-kernel stuff for step-by-step integration? Your code, as I understand it, doesn't use any D standard provided stuff (Phobos) of course. As I understood Mike's effort, he has changed some parts of phobos to be OS independent (raw-mode, without any dependency to an existing OS) to have some standard D modules available.

I'm far from being an expert on OS development but IIRC the "libgc" project provides a standard C library in raw-mode, which can be ported to other platforms so you can use GCC to compile code. Is this right?

WRT the current discussion about a Phobos design group, how about settingup a Phobos raw-mode group in parallel? IMO having phobos in a raw-mode version would be very interesting for embedded developers. At the moment we will only support x86 but IMO that's OK and is used in embedded projects quite often too.

Just some thoughts...

-- 
Robert M. Münch
Management & IT Freelancer
http://www.robertmuench.de
February 05, 2004
In article <opr2t6hqisum5vd8@news.digitalmars.com>, =?iso-8859-1?Q?=22Robert_M._M=FCnch=22?= says...
>
>On Mon, 26 Jan 2004 00:02:30 -0800, <user@domain.invalid> wrote:
>
>> I think there were a few people that wanted a look at this.  Its some very rudimentary D code for the worlds most rudimentary operating system.  In fact, to call it an operating system is giving it way too much credit.  The benefit of seeing this, if any, is to see how to boot a computer into D code using GRUB. The rest is up to you...or maybe me...but more likely you...
>
>Hi, thanks for this contribution. First time I understand the setup by not having to deal with huge number of files etc. I had a look at the d-kernel stuff by Mike Wynn but didn't made to handle it. For me there are to few docs how it works etc. I hope he joins in this dicussion and tells us a bit about his experience etc.
>

I'm glad to hear it was of some interest/use to someone.

>> My next step, if I ever get there, is to handle keyboard interrupts and turn my computer into a hugely overpriced calculator.
>
>Can we evolve slowly your base and maybe look at some of the d-kernel stuff for step-by-step integration? Your code, as I understand it, doesn't use any D standard provided stuff (Phobos) of course. As I understood Mike's effort, he has changed some parts of phobos to be OS independent (raw-mode, without any dependency to an existing OS) to have some standard D modules available.
>

Believe me, my base will evolve slowly :)  This is purely a recreational endeavor for me. I barely find time to work on it these days.  Most of the work I put into it was based on using C/C++ over a year ago.  A proof of concept port to D was quite simple and is what I posted on this forum.

Your observation of both my effort and Mike's sounds correct.  I actually tried to reach Mike by email at sereral email addresses, including the one listed on his d-kernel pages.  They were returned as "undeliverable".

>I'm far from being an expert on OS development but IIRC the "libgc" project provides a standard C library in raw-mode, which can be ported to other platforms so you can use GCC to compile code. Is this right?
>

In a race to see which of us is less of an expert in this field, I have a feeling I would win.  I can't really answer your question athoritatively but it sounds feasible.

>WRT the current discussion about a Phobos design group, how about settingup a Phobos raw-mode group in parallel? IMO having phobos in a raw-mode version would be very interesting for embedded developers. At the moment we will only support x86 but IMO that's OK and is used in embedded projects quite often too.
>

If a group can be formed, great!  My concern is that it might be a group of one, you.  I'm unlikely to contribute much, for two reasons, the first being available time, the second being subject matter knowledge.

Booting my "simple" kernel was mostly a matter of reasearching how to use GRUB. Now I'm going to have to start learning about programming the intel hardware... (I'm a Java progammer, very little system/embedded programming).

Not to mention the fact that I'm still learning D and also like D as an application development language.  Hence, even less time available for my/our OS/PhobosEM effort.

>Just some thoughts...
>

Thanks, I appreciate them, even though I don't have a lot of constructive responses.


« First   ‹ Prev
1 2