Singularity (operating system)

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Singularity Project
Singularity v1.png
Singularity after boot-up
DeveloperMicrosoft Corporation
Written inAssembly language, C, C++, C#,
OS familyLanguage-based systems
Working stateDiscontinued
Source modelSource-available (through Shared Source Initiative)
Initial release2007; 14 years ago (2007)
Final release2.0 / November 14, 2008; 13 years ago (2008-11-14)
Available inEnglish
Platformsx86
Kernel typeMicrokernel language-based
Default
user interface
Command-line interface
License
Official websiteresearch.microsoft.com/en-us/projects/singularity

Singularity is an experimental operating system (OS) which was built by Microsoft Research between 2003 and 2010.[1] It was designed as a high dependability OS in which the kernel, device drivers, and application software were all written in managed code. Internal security uses type safety instead of hardware memory protection.

Operation[]

The lowest-level x86 interrupt dispatch code is written in assembly language and C. Once this code has done its job, it invokes the kernel, which runtime system and garbage collector are written in (an extended version of , itself an extension of C#) and runs in unprotected mode. The hardware abstraction layer is written in C++ and runs in protected mode. There is also some C code to handle debugging. The computer's basic input/output system (BIOS) is invoked during the 16-bit real mode bootstrap stage; once in 32-bit mode, Singularity never invokes the BIOS again, but invokes device drivers written in . During installation, Common Intermediate Language (CIL) opcodes are compiled into x86 opcodes using the Bartok compiler.

Security design[]

Singularity is a microkernel operating system. Unlike most historic microkernels, its components execute in the same address space (process), which contains software-isolated processes (SIPs). Each SIP has its own data and code layout, and is independent from other SIPs. These SIPs behave like normal processes, but avoid the cost of task-switches.

Protection in this system is provided by a set of rules called invariants that are verified by static program analysis. For example, in the memory-invariant states there must be no cross-references (or memory pointers) between two SIPs; communication between SIPs occurs via higher-order communication channels managed by the operating system. Invariants are checked during installation of the application. (In Singularity, installation is managed by the operating system.)

Most of the invariants rely on the use of safer memory-managed languages, such as Sing#, which have a garbage collector, allow no arbitrary pointers, and allow code to be verified to meet a given computer security policy.

Project status[]

Singularity 1.0 was completed in 2007. A Singularity Research Development Kit (RDK) was released under a shared source license allowing academic non-commercial use, and is available from CodePlex.[2] Version 1.1 was released in March 2007 and version 2.0 was released on November 14, 2008.

Similar projects[]

  • Inferno, first created in 1995, based on Plan 9 from Bell Labs; programs are run in a virtual machine and written in Limbo instead of C# with CIL
  • JavaOS, a legacy OS based on the same concept as Singularity
  • JNode, an OS similar in concept to Singularity, but with Java instead of C# with CIL
  • JX, a Java OS that, like Singularity, uses type safety instead of computer hardware memory protection
  • Phantom OS, a managed OS
  • SharpOS, a former effort to write an operating system using C#; open-source software
  • MOSA, a .NET Framework compiler and operating system using C#
  • Cosmos, a building blocks toolkit for developing an OS using C#; open-source software
  • TempleOS, a ring-0 operating system with JIT compiler; open-source software

See also[]

  • Language-based system, general kernel design using language-based protection instead of hardware protection.
  • , programming language derived from C# by adding Eiffel-like design by contract.
  • , programming language derived from Spec# by adding channels and low-level constructs; used to build Singularity.
  • Midori, a Microsoft-developed microkernel-based operating system mooted as a possible successor to Microsoft Windows by some members of the information technology (IT) press. Based on and related to Singularity.

References[]

  1. ^ Source code history on CodePlex
  2. ^ "Singularity RDK - Home". Retrieved 2016-06-08.

External links[]

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