Commit graph

57 commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andreas Kling
a67e823838 LibHTML: Start working on a simple HTML library.
I'd like to have rich text, and we might as well use HTML for that. :^)
2019-06-15 18:55:47 +02:00
Andreas Kling
16f624421a Demos: Import Fire demo contributed by "pd". 2019-06-12 20:19:44 +02:00
Larkin Nickle
fa204aeb77 build-root-filesystem.sh: Create /dev/null, /dev/random, /dev/zero, and /dev/full with proper permissions. 2019-06-12 09:43:58 +02:00
Andreas Kling
d599544890 PaintBrush: Start working on a simple painting application. 2019-06-10 19:29:33 +02:00
Conrad Pankoff
8b1154f5f2 Kernel: Implement serial port driver
This implements a basic 8250 UART serial port driver. It does not
currently handle (or enable) interrupts, nor any runtime configuration.
2019-06-08 18:12:20 +02:00
Andreas Kling
1d7b89cd1c Base: Let's have "te" as a symlink alias for TextEditor for now. 2019-06-07 10:12:04 +02:00
Conrad Pankoff
e1c982e4db Build: Remove grub from default build process
This removes grub and all the loopback device business from the default
build process. Running grub takes about a second, and it turns out it's
inconsistently packaged in different distributions, which has led to
at least one confusing issue so far (grub-install vs grub2-install).
Removing it from the basic path will make it easier for people to try
Serenity out.

There are now two scripts that can be used to build a disk image:

1. `build-image-grub.sh` - this will build an image suitable for writing
   to the IDE hard drive of a physical machine, complete with a partition
   table and bootloader. This can be run in qemu with the `qgrub` target
   for the `run` script.
2. `build-image-qemu.sh` - this is a simpler script which creates a bare
   filesystem image rather than a full MBR disk.

Both of these call out to `build-root-filesystem.sh` to do most of the
work setting up... the root filesystem.

For completeness' sake, I've retained the `sync.sh` script as a simple
forwarding to `build-image-qemu.sh`.

This relies on the functionality from #194 and #195. #195 allows us to
use `/dev/hda` as the root device when nothing else is specified, and #194
works around a strange feature of qemu that appends a space to the kernel
command line.
2019-06-04 07:15:44 -07:00