Hi folks, I hope this announcement might be of interest to some of you as being related to and in some respects complementary to Kaffe. I've just released the first (very experimental) version of VX32, a new x86-based application-level virtual environment. Unlike most x86-based virtual machines such as QEMU and plex86, however, VX32 is more comparable in function to Kaffe and other Java or CLR virtual machines. VX32 only implements the user-mode portion of the x86 architecture rather than emulating a whole machine including devices, and is intended for use by applications to create lightweight, highly controllable execution environments for safe application plug-ins and the like, rather than for running whole operating systems. VX32 might be especially appropriate for safely running Unix filter-like applications such as compressors, decompressors, crypto software, or transcoders, where the legacy code bases you often want to re-use are already written in C or other non-typesafe languages. VX32 could also potentially provide the basis for a "safe native method" facility for Kaffe and other Java VMs, if there is interest. VX32 uses dynamic code rewriting techniques to sandbox guest code efficiently on x86 host processors, typically costing less than 15% slowdown versus native x86-32 execution. I'm also working on instruction set emulation and binary translation to make the environment portable to other host architectures, but of course I don't expect it to perform as well in such situations. The VX32 home page, including the first source release, is here: http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/~baford/vm/ The home page for VXA (Virtual eXecutable Archives), a related project that uses VX32 to turn ZIP files into "active archvies", is here: http://pdos.csail.mit.edu/~baford/vxa/ Finally, a paper that discusses both VX32 and VXA can be found here: http://www.brynosaurus.com/pub/os/vxa.pdf I would appreciate any comments and feedback. Thanks for your time! Bryan
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