d44ff6ce1f
- Implement openpty() - Add `--assimilate` flag to APE bootloader - Restore Linux vDSO clock_gettime() support - Use `$(APE_NO_MODIFY_SELF)` on more programs |
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.github | ||
.vscode | ||
ape | ||
build | ||
dsp | ||
examples | ||
libc | ||
net | ||
test | ||
third_party | ||
tool | ||
usr/share | ||
.clang-format | ||
.gitattributes | ||
.gitignore | ||
.travis.yml | ||
CONTRIBUTING.md | ||
LICENSE | ||
Makefile | ||
README.md |
Cosmopolitan
Cosmopolitan Libc makes C a build-once run-anywhere language, like Java, except it doesn't need an interpreter or virtual machine. Instead, it reconfigures stock GCC and Clang to output a POSIX-approved polyglot format that runs natively on Linux + Mac + Windows + FreeBSD + OpenBSD + NetBSD + BIOS with the best possible performance and the tiniest footprint imaginable.
Background
For an introduction to this project, please read the αcτµαlly pδrταblε εxεcµταblε blog post and cosmopolitan libc website. We also have API documentation.
Getting Started
If you're doing your development work on Linux or BSD then you need just five files to get started. Here's what you do on Linux:
wget https://justine.lol/cosmopolitan/cosmopolitan.zip
unzip cosmopolitan.zip
printf 'main() { printf("hello world\\n"); }\n' >hello.c
gcc -g -Os -static -nostdlib -nostdinc -fno-pie -no-pie -mno-red-zone \
-fno-omit-frame-pointer -pg -mnop-mcount \
-o hello.com.dbg hello.c -fuse-ld=bfd -Wl,-T,ape.lds \
-include cosmopolitan.h crt.o ape-no-modify-self.o cosmopolitan.a
objcopy -S -O binary hello.com.dbg hello.com
You now have a portable program.
./hello.com
bash -c './hello.com' # zsh/fish workaround (we patched them in 2021)
Since we used the ape-no-modify-self.o
bootloader (rather than
ape.o
) your executable will not modify itself when it's run. What
it'll instead do, is extract a 4kb program to ${TMPDIR:-/tmp}
that
maps your program into memory without needing to copy it. It's possible
to install the APE loader systemwide as follows.
# (1) linux systems that want binfmt_misc
ape/apeinstall.sh
# (2) for linux/freebsd/netbsd/openbsd systems
cp build/bootstrap/ape.elf /usr/bin/ape
# (3) for mac os x systems
cp build/bootstrap/ape.macho /usr/bin/ape
If you followed steps (2) and (3) then there's going to be a slight constant-time startup latency each time you run an APE binary. Your system might also prevent your APE program from being installed to a system directory as a setuid binary or a script interpreter. To solve that, you can use the following flag to turn your binary into the platform local format (ELF or Mach-O):
./hello.com --assimilate
There's also some other useful flags that get baked into your binary by default:
./hello.com --strace
./hello.com --ftrace
If you want your hello.com
program to be much tinier, more on the
order of 16kb rather than 60kb, then all you have to do is use
https://justine.lol/cosmopolitan/cosmopolitan-tiny.zip instead. See
https://justine.lol/cosmopolitan/download.html.
MacOS
If you're developing on MacOS you can install the GNU compiler collection for x86_64-elf via homebrew:
brew install x86_64-elf-gcc
Then in the above scripts just replace gcc
and objcopy
with
x86_64-elf-gcc
and x86_64-elf-objcopy
to compile your APE binary.
Windows
If you're developing on Windows then you need to download an x86_64-pc-linux-gnu toolchain beforehand. See the Compiling on Windows tutorial. It's needed because the ELF object format is what makes universal binaries possible.
Source Builds
Cosmopolitan can be compiled from source on any Linux distro. GNU make needs to be installed beforehand. This is a freestanding hermetic repository that bootstraps using a vendored static gcc9 executable. No further dependencies are required.
wget https://justine.lol/cosmopolitan/cosmopolitan.tar.gz
tar xf cosmopolitan.tar.gz # see releases page
cd cosmopolitan
make -j16
o//examples/hello.com
find o -name \*.com | xargs ls -rShal | less
GDB
Here's the recommended ~/.gdbinit
config:
set host-charset UTF-8
set target-charset UTF-8
set target-wide-charset UTF-8
set osabi none
set complaints 0
set confirm off
set history save on
set history filename ~/.gdb_history
define asm
layout asm
layout reg
end
define src
layout src
layout reg
end
src
You normally run the .com.dbg
file under gdb. If you need to debug the
.com
file itself, then you can load the debug symbols independently as
gdb foo.com -ex 'add-symbol-file foo.com.dbg 0x401000'
Support Vector
Platform | Min Version | Circa |
---|---|---|
AMD | K8 Venus | 2005 |
Intel | Core | 2006 |
New Technology | Vista | 2006 |
GNU/Systemd | 2.6.18 | 2007 |
XNU's Not UNIX! | 15.6 | 2018 |
FreeBSD | 12 | 2018 |
OpenBSD | 6.4 | 2018 |
NetBSD | 9.1 | 2020 |
GNU Make | 4.0 | 2015 |