1
2
3
4
5
6
7
8
9
10
11
12
13
14
15
16
17
18
19
20
21
22
23
24
25
26
27
28
29
30
31
32
33
34
35
36
37
38
39
40
41
42
43
44
45
46
47
48
49
50
51
52
53
54
55
56
57
58
59
60
61
62
63
64
65
66
67
68
69
70
71
72
73
74
75
76
77
78
79
80
81
82
83
84
85
86
87
88
89
90
91
92
93
94
95
96
97
98
99
100
101
102
103
104
105
106
107
108
109
110
111
112
113
114
115
116
117
118
119
120
121
122
123
124
125
126
127
128
129
130
131
132
133
134
135
136
137
138
139
140
141
142
143
144
145
146
147
148
149
150
151
152
153
154
155
156
157
158
159
160
161
162
163
164
165
166
167
168
169
170
171
172
173
174
175
176
177
178
179
180
181
182
183
184
185
186
187
188
189
190
191
192
193
194
195
196
197
198
199
200
201
202
203
204
205
206
207
208
209
210
211
212
213
214
215
216
217
218
219
220
221
222
223
224
225
226
227
228
229
230
|
Obtaining and installing a Midipix distribution
Last update: Sun, 24 Apr 2016 09:42:40 +0000
A Midipix distribution consists of the following:
a) the native Midipix toolchain, consisting of perk, gcc, its dependencies,
and binutils,
b) musl, a lightweight, fast, simple, and free libc[1] used by Midipix,
c) the Midipix runtime components that bridge the gap between the libc and the
executive subsystems of all Windows NT-derived Windows OS starting with and
including Windows XP, and
d) a steadily increasing number of 3rd party open source packages, as expected in
any modern POSIX-compliant *nix environment, including GNU coreutils, shells,
libraries such as ncurses, libressl, as well as Perl and Python.
Compressed Midipix distribution tarballs and, separately, source tarballs are,
at present, produced every four (4) hours UTC after each successful build and
subsequently signed. This process is fully automated by a portable Bourne shell
script; all of the above mentioned components are cross-compiled.
Thus, the most hassle-free way to get started with Midipix is to simply download
the most recent distribution tarball and follow the instructions below. It is,
however, recommended to anyone intending to use Midipix as a development platform
to familiarise themselves with the build process. Other reasons to prefer building
a Midipix distribution yourself include integrating new 3rd party software or local
runtime component patches. At present, a full build from scratch takes about 30
(thirty) minutes to finish on an 8-core host with eight simultaneous make jobs,
minus the generation of the tarballs. The build script can be obtained from the
following GitHub repository: <https://github.com/lalbornoz/midipix_build>.
If you obtained a Midipix distribution tarball, extract it into a directory and
drive of your choice, henceforth referred to as target directory; the drive can
be a network drive. Do _not_ use anything but a true UNIX environment tar(1), as
e.g. WinRAR or WinZip handle extracting hard links incorrectly.
If you built Midipix yourself, the target directory is equivalent to the ${PREFIX}
configured in build.vars, which defaults to ${HOME}/midipix.
At present, providing an interactive Midipix environment still requires the Cygwin
terminal emulator Mintty and a shell; this does not include pseudoterminals, which
are entirely handled by Midipix. Both can be installed via the 64-bit Cygwin setup
program at <https://www.cygwin.com/setup-x86_64.exe>.
Once installed, launching a Midipix shell is accomplished by the `midipix.sh' shell
script provided in the target directory from within a Cygwin shell prompt in Mintty
and the target directory. This may either simply be done manually each time, or
automated by a shortcut. As shortcuts cannot be distributed, it can be created by
either:
a) Opening (executing) the VBScript script in the target directory from within the
latter cscript.exe, providing the fully qualified pathname to Mintty, if it differs
from the default value of C:\cygwin64\bin\mintty.exe or
b) manually creating a shortcut to Mintty with `Start in:' set to the target directory
and the following command line:
[ ... ]\mintty.exe -i /Cygwin-Terminal.ico -e sh midipix.sh, or
References:
Sun, 24 Apr 2016 09:04:08 +0000 [1] musl FAQ <http://www.musl-libc.org/faq.html>
Linux distribution-related errata
Busybox based distributions need the gawk, gsed, and coreutils packages to build perl.
Midipix status report
Last update: Tue, 26 Apr 2016 10:16:16 +0000
The following build status codes are defined:
C -- Complete build w/ at least the default configuration,
B -- Broken, e.g. doesn't work at all or only minimally,
I -- Integrated (e.g. linked against) with other packages,
E -- Extensively tested and confirmed to work by multiple sources, possibly via a testsuite,
P -- Patches needed to build that haven't been committed upstream yet, and
U -- Update to latest stable version or HEAD pending.
Component type Name Version Status Comments
Host toolchain binutils 2.24.51 C--EPU
Host toolchain file 5.28 C-----
Host toolchain gcc 4.6.4 ---EPU Excludes libstdc++
Host toolchain musl 1.1.12 C-IEPU
Host toolchain perk HEAD C-IE--
Host toolchain pkgconf 0.28 C--E--
Host toolchain slibtool 0.5.7 C--E--
Native toolchain binutils 2.24.51 C--EPU
Native toolchain gcc 4.6.4 ---EPU Excludes libstdc++
Native toolchain gmp 5.1.3 C-IEPU
Native toolchain libelf 0.8.13 C-IEP-
Native toolchain mpc 1.0.1 C-IE-U
Native toolchain mpfr 3.1.2 C-IE-U
Native toolchain musl 1.1.12 C-IEPU
Native toolchain perk HEAD C-IE--
Native toolchain pkgconf 0.28 C-IE--
Runtime components dalist HEAD C-IE--
Runtime components ntapi HEAD C-IE--
Runtime components ntcon HEAD C-IE--
Runtime components ntctty HEAD C-IE--
Runtime components pemagine HEAD C-IE--
Runtime components psxscl HEAD C-IE-- Excludes clone(2) and dlopen(3)
Runtime components psxtypes HEAD C-IE--
Runtime components ptycon HEAD C-IE--
3rd party libraries bzip2 1.0.6 C-IE--
3rd party libraries curl 7.47.1 C---P-
3rd party libraries expat 2.2.0 C-----
3rd party libraries gdbm 1.12 C-I---
3rd party libraries glib 2.46.2 C-I-P- Shared object not built
3rd party libraries gzip 1.2.4 C-IE--
3rd party libraries inputproto 2.3.2 C-----
3rd party libraries kbproto 1.0.7 C-----
3rd party libraries libarchive 3.1.2 C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libassuan 2.4.3 C-I---
3rd party libraries libevent 2.0.22-stable C-I---
3rd party libraries libfetch 2.33 C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libffi 3.2.1 C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libfirm HEAD C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libgcrypt 1.7.3 C-I---
3rd party libraries libgpg_error 1.24 C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libICE 1.0.9 C-----
3rd party libraries libksba 1.3.5 C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libpipeline 1.4.1 C-I---
3rd party libraries libpthread-stubs 0.3 C-----
3rd party libraries libressl 2.2.6 C-I-P-
3rd party libraries libSM 1.2.2 C-----
3rd party libraries libX11 1.6.3 C-----
3rd party libraries libXau 1.0.8 C-----
3rd party libraries libXaw 1.0.13 C-----
3rd party libraries libXext 1.3.3 C-----
3rd party libraries libxkbfile 1.0.9 C-----
3rd party libraries libXmu 1.1.2 C-----
3rd party libraries libXpm 3.5.11 C-----
3rd party libraries libXt 1.1.5 C-----
3rd party libraries libz 1.2.8.2015.05.20 C-I---
3rd party libraries lua 5.3.3 C---P-
3rd party libraries ncurses 6.0 C-IEP- ncurses, ncursestw, and ncursesw built
3rd party libraries npth 1.2 C-I---
3rd party libraries pcre 8.39 C-I---
3rd party libraries renderproto 0.11.1 C-----
3rd party libraries xcb 1.12 C----- Needs pthreads / clone(2)
3rd party libraries xcb-proto 1.12 C-----
3rd party libraries xextproto 7.3.0 C-----
3rd party libraries xproto 7.0.29 C-----
3rd party libraries Xrender 0.9.9 C-----
3rd party libraries xtrans 1.1 C-----
3rd party libraries xz 5.2.2 C-IE--
3rd party packages apk_tools 2.6.6 C---P-
3rd party packages bash 4.3 C-I-P- Linked against ncursesw
3rd party packages coreutils 8.23 C---P- Needs extensive testing
3rd party packages cparser HEAD C-I-P-
3rd party packages cron HEAD C---P-
3rd party packages dash 0.5.8 C----- Provides /bin/sh
3rd party packages diffutils 3.3 C-----
3rd party packages dos2unix 7.3.4 C-----
3rd party packages ed 1.13 C-----
3rd party packages file 5.28 C-----
3rd party packages findutils 4.5.14 C---P-
3rd party packages gawk 4.1.3 C-----
3rd party packages git 2.7.1 C----- Needs clone(2)
3rd party packages gnupg 2.1.15 C----- Needs /dev/[u]random, extensive testing
3rd party packages grep 2.22 C-----
3rd party packages hexcurse 1.60.0 C-I-P- Linked against ncursesw
3rd party packages htop 2.0.1 C-I-P- Linked against ncursesw
3rd party packages inetutils 1.9.4 C-----
3rd party packages infounzip 6.0 C-----
3rd party packages infozip 3.0 C-----
3rd party packages irssi 0.8.18 CB--P- DNS and /EXEC require clone(2) due to pthreads (see psxscl;) no Perl support
3rd party packages john 1.8.0 C---P-
3rd party packages less 481 C-I--- Linked against ncursesw
3rd party packages lynx 2.8.8rel2 C-----
3rd party packages make 3.81 C-----
3rd party packages man_db 2.7.5 C-----
3rd party packages mc 4.8.17 C-----
3rd party packages mksh R52c C-----
3rd party packages nano 2.5.3 C-I--- Linked against ncursesw
3rd party packages netcat 110 C---P-
3rd party packages openssh 7.1p2 C-I--- Linked against libressl
3rd party packages p7zip HEAD C-----
3rd party packages pacman 5.0.1 C---P-
3rd party packages patch 2.7 C-----
3rd party packages perl 5.22.1 ------ No dlopen(3) (see psxscl,) modules missing
3rd party packages procps-ng 3.3.12 C-----
3rd party packages python 3.5.1 -B--P- No dlopen(3) (see psxscl,) modules missing
3rd party packages rsync 3.1.2 C-----
3rd party packages rxvt-unicode 9.22 C-I--- No Perl support
3rd party packages sed 4.2.2 C-----
3rd party packages tar 1.28 C-----
3rd party packages tcsh 6.19.00 C-I-P-
3rd party packages the silver searcher 0.32.0 C-----
3rd party packages tmux 2.2 C---P-
3rd party packages util_linux 2.27.1 C----- Needs extensive testing
3rd party packages vim 7.4.1952 C----- Provides /bin/vi
3rd party packages weechat 1.6 C-----
3rd party packages which 2.21 C-----
3rd party packages whois 5.2.12 C-----
3rd party packages xeyes 1.1.1 C-I---
3rd party packages xwd 1.0.6 C-I---
3rd party packages zsh 5.2 C-I--- Linked against ncursesw
Midipix roadmap/TODO list
Last update: Fri, 03 Jun 2016 12:47:13 +0000
midipix alpha release: the final stretch
========================================
my.own.tasks@midipix.org
------------------------
* ofd tables: additional bucket allocation as needed.
* `ls -R //c`: check for the cause of individual failures.
(might be related to the above ofd bucket allocation).
* integrate clone and the initial ldso implementation.
* integrate the signal queue, check signal implementation for
semantic completion, especially in the context of multi-threaded
applications.
* implement /dev/random and /dev/urandom, as well as other virtual
folders needed by core applications.
* implement the scheduler functions.
* implement (possibly as stubs) missing system calls, fix existing
system calls as needed by the core applications.
* toolchain: provided the few interfaces missing for C++ support.
* porting of mintty.
porting and other release-related tasks
---------------------------------------
* testing of ncurses.
* testing of bash and dash when built with ncurses.
* testing of all of the coreutils, seeing which ones fail due to
a missing virtual file or folder, which ones fail due to a missing
system call (crash), and which ones fail due to an incomplete or
incorrect system call.
* porting of gdb.
vim:expandtab sw=8 ts=8 tw=0 nowrap
|