Bluejay is a preemptive kernel for x86. It is inspired by modern day UNIX-like systems and 80's Lisp machines. The goal is to create a fully usable kernel and graphical Lisp environment.
While Bluejay is inspired by both UNIX and Lisp machines, it seeks to replicate neither. No attempt is made to conform to POSIX or even follow UNIX conventions. However, the "UNIX philosophy" of doing one thing and doing it well is certainly a consideration.
Photo by Erin Minuskin on Unsplash
Roadmap
- [x] Virtual memory
- [x] Higher-half kernel
- [x] Per-process memory
- [x] Placeholder physical allocator
- [x] Efficient kernel virtual allocator
- [ ] Preemptive multitasking
- [x] Multi-threading
- [ ] Multi-process support (waiting on FS)
- [ ] Device drivers
- [x] PCI
- [ ] USB
- [ ] Mouse + keyboard drivers
- [ ] Storage device drivers
- [x] ATA PIO (broken)
- [ ] SATA
- [ ] Filesystem
- [x] Virtual file system
- [x] Initial ramdisk
- [ ] Filesystem drivers
- [ ] EXT2 (in progress)
- [ ] FAT32
- [ ] System call API
- [ ] Filesystem API
- [ ] Memory management API (
sbrk
, mmap
, etc) - [ ] Process/thread API (
spawn_process
, spawn_thread
, etc)
- [ ] Lisp compiler
- [ ] JIT compiler using dynasm
- [x] Basic compilation
- [x] GC
- [ ] Lexical closures
- [ ] Standard library (in progress)
- [ ] Lisp integrated into kernel
- [ ] User-space driver API
- [ ] Graphical subsystem
- [ ] Graphical environment in Lisp
- [ ] Network stack in Lisp
- [ ] Ethernet driver
- [ ] IP
- [ ] TCP
- [ ] Graphical applications like browser, IRC client
- [ ] UDP
Documentation
The Bluejay manual contains up to date documentation.