Microsoft caused some very gentle breakages for Cosmopolitan. They removed the version information from the PEB which caused uname to report WINDOWS 0.0.0. We should have called GetVersionExW but that doesn't really exist anymore either. Windows policy is now to give whatever version we used in ape/ape.S. Windows8 has been EOL since 2023-01-10 so lets avoid our modern executables being relegated to legacy infrastructure. Requiring Windows 10+ going forward lets us remove runtime compatibility bloat from the codebase. Further note Cosmopolitan maintains a Windows Vista branch on GitHub, so anyone preferring the older versions, can still have a future with Cosmo. Another neat thing this fixes is UTF-8 support in the console. The changes Microsoft made broke the if statement that enabled UTF8 in terminals. This explains why bug reports had broken arrows. In the future this should be less of an issue, since the PEB code is gone which means we more strictly conform to only Microsoft's WIN32 API |
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.. | ||
calls | ||
crt | ||
dlopen | ||
elf | ||
fmt | ||
integral | ||
intrin | ||
irq | ||
isystem | ||
log | ||
mem | ||
nexgen32e | ||
nt | ||
proc | ||
runtime | ||
sock | ||
stdio | ||
str | ||
sysv | ||
testlib | ||
thread | ||
tinymath | ||
vga | ||
x | ||
ar.h | ||
assert.h | ||
atomic.h | ||
BUILD.mk | ||
complex.h | ||
cosmo.h | ||
cxxabi.h | ||
dce.h | ||
dos.internal.h | ||
empty.s | ||
errno.h | ||
imag.internal.h | ||
inttypes.h | ||
iso646.internal.h | ||
limits.h | ||
literal.h | ||
mach.internal.h | ||
macho.internal.h | ||
macros.internal.h | ||
math.h | ||
paths.h | ||
README.md | ||
serialize.h | ||
stdalign.internal.h | ||
stdbool.h | ||
stdckdint.h | ||
stdlib.h | ||
temp.h | ||
testlib-test.txt | ||
time.h | ||
type2str.h | ||
unistd.h | ||
utime.h | ||
zip.internal.h |
Cosmopolitan Standard Library
This directory defines static archives defining functions, like
printf()
, mmap()
, win32, etc. Please note that the Cosmopolitan
build configuration doesn't link any C/C++ library dependencies
by default, so you still have the flexibility to choose the one
provided by your system. If you'd prefer Cosmopolitan, just add
$(LIBC)
and $(CRT)
to your linker arguments.
Your library is compromised of many bite-sized static archives. We use the checkdeps tool to guarantee that the contents of the archives are organized in a logical way that's easy to use with or without our makefile infrastructure, since there's no cyclic dependencies.
The Cosmopolitan Library exports only the most stable canonical
system calls for all supported operating systems, regardless of
which platform is used for compilation. We polyfill many of the
APIs, e.g. read()
, write()
so they work consistently everywhere
while other apis, e.g. CreateWindowEx()
, might only work on one
platform, in which case they become no-op functions on others.
Cosmopolitan polyfill wrappers will usually use the dollar sign naming convention, so they may be bypassed when necessary. This same convention is used when multiple implementations of string library and other performance-critical function are provided to allow Cosmopolitan to go fast on both old and newer computers.
We take an approach to configuration that relies heavily on the
compiler's dead code elimination pass (libc/dce.h
). Most of the
code is written so that, for example, folks not wanting support
for OpenBSD can flip a bit in SUPPORT_VECTOR
and that code will
be omitted from the build. The same is true for builds that are
tuned using -march=native
which effectively asks the library to
not include runtime support hooks for x86 processors older than
what you use.
Please note that, unlike Cygwin or MinGW, Cosmopolitan does not achieve broad support by bolting on a POSIX emulation layer. We do nothing more than (in most cases) stateless API translations that get you 90% of the way there in a fast lightweight manner. We therefore can't address some of the subtle differences, such as the nuances of absolute paths on Windows. Our approach could be compared to something more along the lines of, "the Russians just used a pencil to write in space", versus spending millions researching a pen like NASA.