- cross-posted to:
- linux@programming.dev
- cross-posted to:
- linux@programming.dev
This is a far cry from big news, considering they’ve got so much trouble even keeping the kernel stable enough to run for long periods of time if not on a very specific spec of hardware.
I’ll get excited to try it when they start refactoring , get a non-insane structure in place, and get a bigger list of supported hardware into the kernel. I’m still confused on why they’re working on a server version already without the above anyway. Cart before the horse.
I thought it’s a microkernel Os… that’s why making it a useable and stable os for everyday was a little challenging
I’ve been waiting for the redox project to be ready for usage for a very long time, did they finally fix the basics of an operational ready for everyday use os? Like it now supports USB, wifi, the basic drivers like amd and Intel GPU, etc…
This is the best summary I could come up with:
Jeremy Soller who is an engineer at System76 and manages a side hustle of leading development on the open-source, Rust-written Redox OS has shared the latest look at this open-source operating system with the System76 COSMIC desktop applications.
Redox OS down to its micro-kernel is leveraging Rust and thus the COSMIC apps – also leveraging Rust – are a great fit for this open-source OS.
Here’s a look at Redox OS from a few years ago when I last gave it a shot, rather basic:
Now here’s the latest look at Redox OS that Solley posted to X with the caption "This is Redox OS, a Rust and micro-kernel based operating system that I created, running three COSMIC DE apps (with only Rust dependencies) that I authored.
Jeremy in follow-up comments also added that they still need to port DRM kernel graphics drivers to make gaming more viable and self-hosting is “very close”.
Nice job to those that continue to be involved in this from-scratch Rust-written open-source OS.
The original article contains 184 words, the summary contains 168 words. Saved 9%. I’m a bot and I’m open source!
You are completely useless, my dear bot. The article has less words than your explanation.
Such an awesome project.
Right? They might even replace GNOME.