georgios

Hobby Operating System

OTHER License

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Georgios

Georgios (Greek version of the name George, said like GORE-GEE-OS) is an operating system I'm making for fun which currently targets i386/IA-32. The purpose of this project is to serve as a learning experience.

Work in progress graphics mode:

https://user-images.githubusercontent.com/5941194/180702578-91270793-c91c-4f24-b7e1-f86bc2b48c53.mp4

Features

Working on at least some minimal level

  • Kernel console that supports UTF-8 (specifically the subset needed for
    Code page 437 subset) and some
    basic ANSI escape codes
  • Support for multiple mounted filesystems:
    • Ext2 accessed using an ATA Driver (read only)
    • In-memory filesystem mounted at boot (read/write)
  • Basic preemptive multitasking between processes that can be loaded from ELF
    files
  • ACPI shutdown using ACPICA

Started on, but not really working yet

  • A graphics mode using VESA BIOS Extensions (VBE)
    • This will use libx86emu to
      invoke the BIOS code required to switch to VBE graphics modes. This doesn't
      really work yet though.
    • This can be bypassed with make multiboot_vbe=true, which has GRUB set a
      fixed VBE graphics mode. This is how the demo above was ran. This is not
      the default for a number of reasons:
      • The major reason is the graphics are slow. This can be seen in the
        demo, especially when the Apollo earthrise picture takes a moment to
        get drawn on the screen.
      • It's a fixed graphics mode when the kernel starts and so nothing gets
        printed to the screen until the graphical console is ready. So an error
        before this wouldn't get printed, which is a problem when running on
        real hardware.
      • The graphical console is mostly done but missing things like the cursor
        and text rendering is a bit off.
  • USB 2.0 stack
  • Porting real applications written in Zig and C
    • The applications currently written in Zig are "real" as in they are
      compiled and ran separately from the kernel, are running in x86 ring3, and
      can't take the whole system down (for the most part). The issue is they are
      compiled using the freestanding target. To be able to use a Zig or C hello
      world program without any modification, the standard libraries would have to be
      ported and toolchains would have to be modified to target Georgios properly.
  • Freeing the OS from the need of a boot CD
  • PS/2 Mouse support
    • Can be tried out by building with make mouse=true and running
      test-mouse. This isn't enabled by default becuase currently the keyboard
      and mouse cross talk when being used at the same time.

Building

Building Georgios requires a Unix-like environment with:

  • Zig 0.9.1
  • Python 3
  • Bridle
    • Is a submodule, but it needs to be installed using
      pip install --user scripts/codegen/bridle.
  • GRUB2
    • Requires i686 Support (grub-pc-bin package on Ubuntu)
  • xorriso (xorriso package on Ubuntu)

Georgios can be built as a bootable ISO (called georgios.iso) by running make. If installed, QEMU and Bochs can be run by running make qemu or make bochs respectively. On Ubuntu, Bochs requires apt-get install bochs bochsbios bochs-sdl bochs-x vgabios.

For the moment it assumes the existence of an IDE disk with certain files on it.

Resources Used