mikewarot 21 hours ago

I haven't seen the "This is how you use it as a daily driver" video yet. Maybe it's lack of google-fu on my part?

If I can throw it on an inexpensive desktop, and the run Linux and Windows under it, and maybe do some Lazarus/Free pascal development, I'll be a happy camper.

  • iamnothere 20 hours ago

    > If I can throw it on an inexpensive desktop, and the run Linux and Windows under it, and maybe do some Lazarus/Free pascal development, I'll be a happy camper.

    It’s capable of this today. Be aware that VMs do have a noticeable performance impact, but on a powerful system they aren’t unusably slow.

  • LargoLasskhyfv 15 hours ago

    It runs perfectly on refurbished Lenovo M910q tinies, with Kaby Lake Core i5-7500t or Core i7-7700t, 32GB Ram. But so does everything else.

    Linux via their VirtualBox port works, usable with 32GB Ram. Didn't try Windows, though.

    Thinking about it, the same should apply for most N150-based mini-pcs, because everything is intel inside. May have bad firmware/bios, though.

  • mycall 15 hours ago

    Allow AI to create you new embedded operating system features. Since Genode is an OS framework, let some agents simplify your daily grind.

    • bastawhiz 14 hours ago

      How's that going for Microsoft on Windows 11?

bri3d a day ago

Appears on HN with some frequency, last time 4 months ago: https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=45384653

The “showcase” composition / implementation of Genode, Sculpt OS, is pretty fun to install and run.

cachius 18 hours ago

Reminds me of T2 SDE:

a highly customizable and portable build system for creating complete Linux distributions from source. It serves as a robust toolkit for building everything from embedded platforms to full desktop systems

https://t2linux.com/about.html

snvzz 9 hours ago

An active, long-running project, more than 20 years now, Genode is amazing outright.

They actually managed to make a general-purpose OS (Sculpt) with an architecture centered around capabilities, and they can run such a system with seL4 as the microkernel, which guarantees capabilities cannot be forged.

  • rurban 8 hours ago

    They can use most L4-based microkernels, mostly their own, or NOVA or Fiasco. Secure capabilities are a feature of all L4 kernels.

    • snvzz 4 hours ago

      >They can use most L4-based microkernels, mostly their own, or NOVA or Fiasco.

      Correct, Genode supports several kernels, including but not limited to those.

      >Secure capabilities are a feature of all L4 kernels.

      Not accurate. Liedtke's L4 does not do capabilities.

      It would be more accurate to say that most modern L4-like kernels do.

      The highlight is seL4, specifically because it offers those formal guarantees while also being the fastest.

      • rurban 3 hours ago

        Who cares about formal guarantees when the other kernels are much better and provide a much better infrastructure. The kernel itself is minimal. Fiasco can be real-time.

        • snvzz 2 hours ago

          >Who cares about formal guarantees

          Projection. You might not care, but extrapolating is a mistake.

          Public as well as private sector with high assurance needs have gathered around seL4 foundation due to its proofs and technical excellence.

          >are much better

          Subjective. What is your criteria?

          >Fiasco can be real-time.

          Depends on your definition of real-time.

          Hard realtime requires guarantees that the deadlines will always be met. The only non-toy kernel that offers proof of WCET is seL4.

          If soft realtime is all you need, then Linux with PREEMPT_RT suffices.

          • rurban 2 hours ago

            The private sector uses commercial L4 spinoffs, not an academic kernel.

wotsdat a day ago

I misread Genode as genocide

wonder if that's just me?

Western0 20 hours ago

interesting please compile me for luxFox linux hardware or raspberry pi 2350

  • MonkeyClub 18 hours ago

    Consider yourself compiled /s