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_This is an in-progress draft of the release notes for ToaruOS 2.0. Some functionality described may be unimplemented, and all information is subject to change as development progresses._
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# ToaruOS 2.0
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_Screenshots here, like in the 1.0 announcement._
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ToaruOS is a complete hobby operating system, including a kernel and userspace with many graphical applications. These release represents the culmination of five years of development effort since version 1.0. ToaruOS 2.0 brings many improvements over previous releases, including a brand new x86-64 kernel with support for symmetric multiprocessing.
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## History
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ToaruOS has been in development for over ten years, and the goals of the project have changed through out its life time.
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When it was initiated in December 2010, the OS was a personal project, and its focus was on the individual learning of its author.
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With time, ToaruOS's relatively advanced graphical interface and other features have inspired new hobby OSes, and the goals of the project shifted towards providing a reliable learning resource.
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From its initial release through the middle of 2018, ToaruOS's userspace was built on top of the Newlib C standard library implementation as well as various third-party libraries such as Cairo and Freetype.
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Since the release of 1.6.x, all third-pary runtime dependencies have been removed or replaced, and ToaruOS has been entirely "in-house".
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With the release of ToaruOS 2.0 comes a brand new, portable kernel initially targeted at x86-64 PCs, with support for symmetric multiprocessing.
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## What's new in ToaruOS 2.0
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### Backwards-incompatible changes
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Generally, source compatibility remains high with previous releases using the in-house libc. However, with the new kernel, some necessary API changes have been introduced and this opportunity has been taken to clean up some library interfaces:
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- There is no binary compatibility with previous releases. 32-bit ELF binaries are not supported.
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- Support for 32-bit x86 has been dropped, and there are no plans to backport the new kernel to 32-bit systems.
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- The SDF font rasterizing library has been removed; applications should be migrated to the TrueType rasterizer.
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- The `/dev/net` virtual filesystem for obtaining sockets has been removed. Applications should be migrated to the traditional BSD sockets API.
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### Changes since 1.14.1
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- Misaka, the newly rewritten portable kernel, brings x86-64 and SMP support. As this is a new kernel, the number of changes to device drivers is too great to cover in separate bullet points.
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- Several improvements to the graphics library, including the addition of affine transformations.
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- Several improvements to the window compositing framework.
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- A new TrueType text renderer.
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- The BIOS CD loader has been improved and should support a wider range of hardware configurations.
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- A new text formatting mechanism has been added.
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- The panel has been redesigned, and widgets have been improved with better dynamic sizing and new popovers.
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