Lightweight operating system using Node.js as userspace.
NodeOS is an operating system built entirely in Javascript and managed by
npm. Any package in npm
is a NodeOS package, that means a selection of more than 400.000 packages. The goal of NodeOS is to provide just
enough to let npm
provide the rest. Since anyone can contribute to it, anyone
can create NodeOS packages.
This project won the Spanish 9th National Free Software Championship on the Systems category and was Honorable Mention of its 10th edition. It was also presented as the degree thesis of Jesús Leganes Combarro with a qualification of 10/10 with distinction.
- New Wiki (under work)
- pre-build releases images
- 1.0 Roadmap
- 2.0 Roadmap
- media files (logos, wallpapers...)
- discussion
NodeOS is a Node.js based operating system, built-off of the Linux kernel. The NodeOS Project is aiming to, and can already run on some of the following platforms:
- real hardware like desktops, laptops, or SoC's (Raspberry Pi)
- cloud providers like Joyent, Amazon or Rackspace
- virtual machines like QEmu, VirtualBox, VMWare and KVM
- PaaS providers like Heroku or Joyent's Manta
- container providers like Docker & Vagga
Core development is being done in layers. There could be some differences to adjust better to each target platform, but the general structure is:
- barebones custom Linux kernel with an initramfs that boots to a Node.js REPL
- initramfs Initram environment to mount the users partition & boot the system
- usersfs multi-user environment with the same behaviour of traditional OSes
All the layers are bootable, leading barebones to a raw naked Node.js REPL prompt as PID 1, while initramfs exec actual NodeOS code to mount the usersfs partition. In all the cases, it will be used an initramfs as root filesystem and all the changes will be lost when powered off.
If a usersfs partition is being set at boot time, it will be mounted and the
system will consider each one of its folders as the home folder for a valid
user on the system, and will execute a init
file in the root of each of them.
If found, the root
user will be the first to be considered and will have access
to all of the home directories, but by design it will not be possible to elevate
permissions once the system has finished booting.
If you are hacking on NodeOS for a somewhat production environment, you are
likely building usersfs images since each user is isolated of others, but you
can customize all layers. For example, you can modify
initramfs to login users and mount their home folders from a cloud service
or craft a system without global services (no root
user) or also dedicate a
full NodeOS instance to a single Node.js application.
Ready to use pre-build images are automatically generated after each commit in master branch that sucessfully pass the tests. To exec them, you'll need to have QEmu installed on your system.
The iso can be written to a CD-R or flashed to a USB pendrive, but will only
provide the read-only rootfs and the changes will be done in memory losing them
after reboot, so you'll manually need to set a read-write usersfs partition if
you want to persist them. On the other hand, if you want to flash it to a USB
pendrive, I recommended doing it by using bin/installUSB
command so it will
automatically create a read-write usersfs partition to fill the remaining space and your changes will be persistent.
-
Download the project source code:
git clone [email protected]:NodeOS/NodeOS.git cd NodeOS
-
Install the required build tools. On a Ubuntu based system you can do it by executing:
sudo bin/install-dependencies
-
Install NodeOS build dependencies:
npm install
-
Build NodeOS:
npm run build
By default it will generate some files that can be used with QEmu, compiled for your current machine architecture. You can configure the build process by passing some environment variables. For example, to force to build for 32 bits, use
PLATFORM=qemu_32 npm install
instead. -
Exec your freshly compiled NodeOS image:
npm start
It will automatically detect what CPU architecture will need to be used on QEmu and exec the correct emulation.
...profit! :-D
If you encounter an error when building NodeOS, take a look at the wiki or open an issue.
NodeOS fully officially supports Docker, but the images published to DockerHub are totally outdated (we're accepting PRs!). If you are interested in helping or testing, you can build them from source code.
Vagga support is fairly experimental, and help here will be greatly appreciated.
-
One Liner (outdated images)
sudo docker run -t -i nodeos/nodeos
or learn how to make a Custom Build
Warning: the build process is hairy, it probably won't work the first time. I'm working on that.
git clone https://github.com/NodeOS/NodeOS.git
cd NodeOS
PLATFORM=docker npm install
MIT
This software consists of voluntary contributions made by many individuals. For exact contribution history, see the revision history available at https://github.com/NodeOS/NodeOS