Aldipower 14 hours ago

"After a long break from working on my hobby operating system, I finally got back into it and finished a very important milestone"

This is a sign of great engineering. Code gets foreign code after some time of not being in it. If you easily can pick it up again, it is a sign that you've written maintainable and understandable code, also for others.

canyp 15 hours ago

Great website, massive rabbit hole I didn't know existed. There's a verified Ada/SPARK OS in there...

roetlich 19 hours ago

Very cool! Why was and the entire networking stack straight forward, but not HTTP (and TCP)? Could you take inspiration form other projects for things like DNS?

  • joexbayer 19 hours ago

    Up to TCP most protocols are very straight forward, atleast getting them to work semi reliable. But then TCP explodes in complexity with all the state management and possible paths a connection can take.

    HTTP is mostly annoying because of all the text parsing :D

    • sweetjuly 17 hours ago

      Yeah...HTTP/1 is one of those weird cases where the older protocol is considerably more difficult to implement correctly than the newer ""more complex"" standard. This is especially true if you want your server to work with they myriad of questionably compliant clients out in the world.

      HTTP/3 might have been easier, and using QUIC+HTTP/3 in your hobby OS is a fun flex :)

      • merb 16 hours ago

        I don’t think that http/3 is easier to implement than http/1.1 especially since h3 is stateful where http/1.1 is not. Especially not when everything should be working correctly and securely because the spec does not always tell about these things. Oh and multiplexing is quite a hard thing to do especially when you are also dealing with a state machine and each of your clients can be malicious.

        • codys 13 hours ago

          I can't speak to http/3 (I haven't tried to impl it), but I can say that a bare-bones http/2 is very easy to implement because it doesn't try to pretend to be prose.

yupyupyups 18 hours ago

You should add OpenAPI generation. So that basically the endpoint /openapi.json is auto-generated.

slurrpurr 16 hours ago

Can the OS run AI agents?