I know, this is a lot slower than the old one, but it's a transition to
a new-new args parser that will use a hashmap... as soon as I get around
to writing a hashmap implementation.
* Works with different block sizes
* Works with different inode sizes
* Tested on a real EXT2 file system made with mkfs.ext2
* MBR reading is available
* You can specify a partition with hdd=0 or hdd=1 etc.
* If you make a "real" disk image, you can get GRUB installed in
its MBR, toss in a suitable config file, and boot right off the
disk rather than having to use QEMU to boot the kernel or using
some silly CDROM ramdisk nonsense.
This is in favor of bootloader-assisted mode switching. Grub has a
wonderful option we will exploit to set the video mode.
My laptop supports a couple of 32-bit video modes, which is nice,
because I'm not support 24-bit modes.
I'm not sure whether the super-sketchy video memory locator will work
in the real world, but we'll find out sometime soon.
* Also cleaning up some kernel logging options here.
* You can log in as local or root with passwords local and toor
* Graphical sessions are still buggy, so don't kill that terminal.
- Can now register a userspace file descriptor as the output for kernel
print statements through kprintf()
- Can set logging levels for debug print messages, which are separate
from kernel log events and meant to be more readily visible. Log
events are recorded in a buffer to be viewed later, though nothing
actually using logging at the moment.
- Serial output is disabled by default now. You can enable it yourself
by appending the logtoserial argument to the kernel on boot.
This is an automated system by which we boot qemu headless and use the
serial line to capture output from a testing application that is started
on bootup, running with the VGA terminal shell. This might be expanded
to boot to the graphical display within VNC and perform more advanced
tests with the Python shim using a VNC module for Python; we'll see.
Completely removes:
* The kernel terminal (both VGA and graphical)
* The kernel ANSI parser (obviously)
* kgets() function
* Dozens of other functions that were made useless
Adds:
* Userspace terminal that should work (relatively) well
* Keyboard device driver (implemented with a "pipe" object)
* Stabalized interrupt interface
* `clear` uses the c library
* All panic screens and kprintf() output goes to the serial line ONLY
* The kernel boots directly into /bin/terminal (no arguments, unless you
want to add them (such as -f))