Programs use the errno value to check which error exactly occured.
It is mandatory for non-blocking I/O, e.g. connect() gets the current
state of the connection by looking at the returned errno values.
Fixes#337.
There are certain programs which need the information that is stored in
'struct passwd'. This commit introduces configurable user information
support to NOUX.
One can set the user information via <user> in NOUX config:
! <config>
! <user name="baron" uid="1" gid="1">
! <shell name="/bin/bash" />
! <home name="/home" />
! </user>
! [...]
! </config>
When <user> is not specified default values are used. Currently these
are 'root', 0, 0, '/bin/bash', '/'.
Note: this is just a single user implementation because each Noux instance
has only one user or rather one identity and there will be no complete
multi-user support in Noux. If you need different users, just start new
Noux instances for each of them.
This patch adds a new "terminal" file system type to Noux, which allows to
create a "character device" file that is connected to a Genode 'Terminal'
service.
The 'Terminal' session created by the file system has the label
"noux(terminal_fs)" to distinguish it from the 'Terminal' session
created by Noux itself.
Fixes#244.
Noux/net adds network functionality to noux. Currently most basic
network related system calls including 'accept', 'bind', 'connect',
'listen', 'recv', 'send', 'shutdown', and 'socket' are implemented by
wrapping lwip's network functions.
At the moment noux/net is rarely usable, though it is possible to
use netcat to send a message to a netcat server which listen on a
given port in noux/net.
This patch introduces support for stacked file systems alongside new
glue for accessing file-system implementations provided via Genode's
new file-system-session interface.
Using stacked file systems, an arbitrary number of file systems (such
as tar archives or file systems implemented as separate Genode
components) can be composed to form one merged virtual file system.
An example is given via the 'ports/run/noux_bash.run' script. This run
script creates a virtual file system out of multiple tar archives each
containing the content of a particular GNU package. In addition, one
'ram_fs' is mounted, which enables Noux to perform write operations.
This way, the shell output can be redirected to a file, or files can
be saved in VIM.
Fixes#103.