This README reads like a blog post.
Is this intended for some kind of professional purpose? Because I could see this being amusing for hobby purposes but I have no idea what I'd do with it at work.
Was reading the comments, was able to learn more. So I assume it provides a command line interface.
Question: Can it run binaries compiled for the platform/OS?
This has been a limitation since forever on ESP microcontrollers because they basically have the power of computers and yet the flashing limitation of calculators. Would be good to finally be able to launch arbitrary binaries without flashing. (I know there are tricks right now, just looking for a proper OS-approach).
How it is implemented varies by platform. On the 8-bit micros it takes advantage of bank-switching memory hardware if there is any. On the MMUless 68K a flat single address space can be used with position-independent code for the processes. On platforms with paging or relocation hardware that is used. Most of the host platforms do not have hardware memory protection, but there's room in the design to support it.
It has been ported to the Raspberry Pi Pico [1] (ARM Cortex-m0+ based) and could be ported to other microcontrollers which have enough RAM.
Toolchain is the biggest problem. It's hard to get a good cross toolchain that works. FUZIX's creator has been writing a portable C compiler but it's not done yet. The code does compile with Clang and GCC but a working toolchain is a steep knowledge cliff to climb.
I have got the kernel to build and link for a riscv32i target. Just need some real riscv32 hardware to test it on. And free time.
https://github.com/EtchedPixels/FUZIX#what-does-fuzix-have-o...
To be honest, I still have no idea what I'm looking at.
Fuzix is a very simple UNIX clone (and a for of UZI) started by Alan Cox, an ex-Linux kernel developer) as his retirement project.
It aims to run on old CPUs like Z80 and on microcontrollers. I found it when searching what OS can I run on the $4 Raspberry Pi Pico.
« Oh, and don't be fooled by the archived status - it moved to
Seriously, it's not that hard for the maintainer to write one sentence describing what the project does.
That doesn't tell me what it is in a concrete sense. Must be hundreds of OS that run on similar hardware - what makes this one different?
https://codeberg.org/EtchedPixels/FUZIX last updated 4 days ago
Alan's currently putting most of his energy into the compiler. It's a C compiler in C which can compile itself, and compile FUZIX, for 8080 and Z80 targets. The goal is to make it compile itself on all the platforms it can run on eventually. :)