Both daemons previously produced no Info-level output on successful start, making it impossible to confirm from the boot log whether ps2d and inputd were actually alive. The kernel serial log shows no [INFO] ps2d: or [INFO] inputd: lines during normal boot, leading operators to assume the input stack was dead when in fact it was working. This adds two log::info!() calls: - ps2d main.rs: after daemon.ready(), log that ps2d has registered its ProducerHandle and is listening on serio/0 (keyboard) and serio/1 (mouse). - inputd main.rs: after setup_logging, log that inputd has registered scheme:input and is waiting for handles. These are emitted only on the successful startup path; existing .error!()/.warn!() calls continue to surface real failures. No behavior change; no functional effect on input handling.
Base
Repository containing various system daemons, that are considered fundamental for the OS.
You can see what each component does in the following list:
- audiod : Daemon used to process the sound drivers audio
- bootstrap : First code that the kernel executes, responsible for spawning the init daemon
- daemon : Redox daemon library
- drivers
- init : Daemon used to start most system components and programs
- initfs : Filesystem with the necessary system components to run RedoxFS
- ipcd : Daemon used for inter-process communication
- logd : Daemon used to log system components and daemons
- netstack : Daemon used for networking
- ptyd : Daemon used for pseudo-terminal
- ramfs : RAM filesystem
- randd : Daemon used for random number generation
- zerod : Daemon used to discard all writes and fill read buffers with zero
How To Contribute
To learn how to contribute you need to read the following document:
If you want to contribute to drivers read its README
Development
To learn how to do development with these system components inside the Redox build system you need to read the Build System and Coding and Building pages.
How To Build
It is recommended to build this system component via the Redox build system, you can learn how to do it on the Building Redox page.
To build and test outside the build system, install redoxer then use check.sh script to build or test:
./check.sh- Check build for x86_64./check.sh --arch=ARCH- Check build for specific ARCH (aarch64,i586,riscv64gc)./check.sh --all- Check build for all ARCH./check.sh --test- Check the base system boots up on x86_64
You can also use make install to inspect the content on ./sysroot, or make test-gui to test booting with orbital interactively.