6 comments

  • Tony_Delco 2 days ago

    This is amazing work. Most people don’t realize how much effort and depth there is behind writing a TCP/IP stack and plugging it into xv6 with virtio-net and sockets. Huge respect for making it public. Projects like this are gold for those of us who love low-level systems.

    • pandax381 1 day ago

      Thank you so much for the kind words! It really means a lot, especially from someone who understands the effort involved. I'm thrilled that it's resonating with fellow low-level systems fans.

    • dancek 2 days ago

      Awesome work! Thank you for showing it to the world!

      I've considered writing a network stack myself. It's much more complex than most people can imagine. We have great tooling for TCP and that makes people believe it's simple technology. It's not.

      • pandax381 1 day ago

        Thank you! I completely agree, the complexity is definitely hidden by modern tools and abstractions. It's a challenging but rewarding project. You should give it a try, it's a fantastic way to learn!

      • AbbeFaria 2 days ago

        Well done. I am actually solving the labs rn. I am on mmap, trying to get fork to work :)

        • pandax381 1 day ago

          Thank you! And good luck with the labs, they're a great learning experience.

        • lesser-shadow 2 days ago

          Are you using any RISC-V extensions? If so, which? I couldn't find this information on the xv6 project page. It would be cool if you could run this project in bare metal.

          • pandax381 1 day ago

            Thanks for asking! It's compiled with -march=rv64g, so it uses the standard general-purpose extensions (IMAFD) and doesn't rely on anything exotic. Running it on bare metal is definitely a challenge I'd like to try someday! For now, the virtio-net driver is tightly coupled with QEMU, so a different network driver would be needed for specific hardware.

          • theosp 2 days ago

            Well done! Thank you for sharing

          • The readme implies that UDP is included. Is that true?

            • pandax381 1 day ago

              Yes, that's correct! Both TCP and UDP are implemented. There's a udpecho server included as a sample application you can use to test it out.