x86 PC emulator and x86-to-wasm JIT, running in the browser https://copy.sh/v86/
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Fabian b96f984963 Use softfloat f80 for x87 fpu
This fixes several long-standing issues with x87 float emulation, in particular:

- 80 bit precision floats, fixing Haiku after its switch to musl libc (hrev53728)
- the precision bit in the x87 control word
- fucom and fucomi (unordered comparisons)
- aliasing of x87 and mmx registers
- rounding during conversion to integers

Operations that are not implemented in softfloat were implemented by
converting to f64 (sine, pow, ln, etc.) and thus operate with lower
precision.

Softfloat has been combined into a single file using a script [0] and checked into the repository.

[0] 57df21e2eb/contrib/single_file_libs/combine.sh
2020-12-31 19:14:32 -06:00
.cargo minor fixes 2020-08-30 19:27:07 -05:00
bios Update seabios (clean build), include bios configs and build script 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00
docker Simplify docker debian image build 2020-12-31 19:14:31 -06:00
docs Docs: Overview of SSE shifts 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00
examples Add path to wasm module to examples 2020-12-31 19:14:30 -06:00
gen jit cmpxchg8b 2020-12-31 19:14:32 -06:00
lib Use softfloat f80 for x87 fpu 2020-12-31 19:14:32 -06:00
src Use softfloat f80 for x87 fpu 2020-12-31 19:14:32 -06:00
tests Use softfloat f80 for x87 fpu 2020-12-31 19:14:32 -06:00
tools Remove indirect function table patching 2020-12-31 19:14:30 -06:00
.gitignore Remove npm 2020-12-31 19:14:31 -06:00
.jshint.json Upgrade jshint 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00
.rustfmt.toml Update rustfmt 2020-12-31 19:14:30 -06:00
Cargo.toml Explicitly request opt-level=3 2020-12-31 19:14:30 -06:00
debug.html Commit some testing OSes 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00
index.html New version of Oberon that boots more reliably 2020-12-31 19:14:31 -06:00
LICENSE Fix license 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00
loader.js Experimental xterm.js support (#172, #227) 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00
Makefile Use softfloat f80 for x87 fpu 2020-12-31 19:14:32 -06:00
Readme.md Update readme 2020-08-30 19:36:45 -05:00
v86.css Experimental xterm.js support (#172, #227) 2020-12-31 19:14:29 -06:00

Building

See docker/test-image/Dockerfile for a full setup on Debian.

You need:

  • java
  • gcc, make, libc-i386
  • nasm, gdb and qemu (for running tests)
  • rust-nightly with the wasm32-unknown-unknown target
  • nodejs (a latest version is required, 10.11.0 is known to be working)

Run make all-debug to build the debug build (at debug.html). Run make all to build the optimized build (at index.html).

Testing

Run all tests: make jshint rustfmt kvm-unit-test nasmtests nasmtests-force-jit expect-tests jitpagingtests qemutests rust-test tests

Creating a Linux image for use in v86

See docker/debian-full/Readme.md.

Below is the readme of the open-source version of v86 (not everything applies)

API examples

Using v86 for your own purposes is as easy as:

var emulator = new V86Starter({
    screen_container: document.getElementById("screen_container"),
    bios: {
        url: "../../bios/seabios.bin",
    },
    vga_bios: {
        url: "../../bios/vgabios.bin",
    },
    cdrom: {
        url: "../../images/linux.iso",
    },
    autostart: true,
});

See API.

How does it work?

v86 emulates an x86-compatible CPU and hardware. Here's a list of emulated hardware:

  • An x86 compatible CPU. The instruction set is around Pentium 1 level. Some features are missing, more specifically:
    • Task gates, far calls in protected mode
    • 16 bit protected mode features
    • Single stepping
    • MMX, SSE
    • A bunch of FPU instructions
    • Some exceptions
  • A floating point unit (FPU). Calculations are done with JavaScript's double precision numbers (64 bit), so they are not as precise as calculations on a real FPU (80 bit).
  • A floppy disk controller (8272A).
  • An 8042 Keyboard Controller, PS2. With mouse support.
  • An 8254 Programmable Interval Timer (PIT).
  • An 8259 Programmable Interrupt Controller (PIC).
  • A CMOS Real Time Clock (RTC).
  • A VGA controller with SVGA support and Bochs VBE Extensions.
  • A PCI bus. This one is partly incomplete and not used by every device.
  • An IDE disk controller.
  • An NE2000 (8390) PCI network card.
  • A virtio filesystem.

Testing

The disk images are not included in this repository. You can download them directly from the website using:

wget -P images/ https://copy.sh/v86/images/{linux.iso,linux3.iso,kolibri.img,windows101.img,os8.dsk,freedos722.img,openbsd.img}.

A testsuite is available in tests/full/. Run it using node tests/full/run.js.

How to build, run and embed?

  • Building is only necessary for releases, open debug.html and everything should load out of the box
  • If you want a compressed and fast (i.e. with debug code removed) version, you need Closure Compiler. Download it as shown below and run make build/v86_all.js.
  • ROM and disk images are loaded via XHR, so if you want to try out index.html locally, make sure to serve it from a local webserver. You can use make run to serve the files using Python's SimpleHTTPServer.
  • If you only want to embed v86 in a webpage you can use libv86.js. For usage, check out the API and examples.
  • A couple of disk images are provided for testing. You can check them out using wget -P images/ https://copy.sh/v86/images/{linux.iso,linux3.iso,kolibri.img,windows101.img,os8.dsk,freedos722.img,openbsd.img}.

Short summary:

# grab the main repo
git clone https://github.com/copy/v86.git && cd v86

# grab the disk images
wget -P images/ https://copy.sh/v86/images/{linux.iso,linux3.iso,kolibri.img,windows101.img,os8.dsk,freedos722.img,openbsd.img}

# grab closure compiler
wget -P closure-compiler https://dl.google.com/closure-compiler/compiler-latest.zip
unzip -d closure-compiler closure-compiler/compiler-latest.zip *.jar

# build the library
make build/libv86.js

# run the tests
./tests/full/run.js

Compatibility

Here's an overview of the operating systems supported in v86:

  • Linux works pretty well. Graphical boot fails in many versions, but you mostly get a shell. The mouse is often not detected automatically.
    • Damn Small Linux (2.4 Kernel): Works, takes circa 10 minutes to boot.
    • Tinycore (3.0 kernel): udev and X fail, but you get a terminal.
    • Nanolinux works.
    • Archlinux works with some caveats. See archlinux.md.
  • ReactOS works
  • FreeDOS, Windows 1.01 and MS-DOS run very well.
  • KolibriOS works. A few applications need SSE.
  • Haiku boots, but takes very long (around 30 minutes).
  • No Android version seems to work, you still get a shell.
  • Windows 1, 95 and 98 work. Other versions currently don't.
  • Many hobby operating systems work.
  • FreeBSD works

You can get some infos on the disk images here: https://github.com/copy/images.

How can I contribute?

  • Add new features (hardware devices, fill holes in the CPU), fix bugs. Check out the issues section and contact me if you need help.
  • Report bugs.
  • If you want to donate, let me know.

License

Simplified BSD License, see LICENSE, unless otherwise noted.

Credits

More questions?

Shoot me an email to copy@copy.sh. Please don't tell about bugs via mail, create a bug report on GitHub instead.

Author

Fabian Hemmer (http://copy.sh/, copy@copy.sh)