code: 9ferno

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.TH INTRO 1
.SH NAME
intro \- introduction to Inferno
.SH DESCRIPTION
Inferno is a virtualised operating system that can
run natively across a wide range of processor architectures
or hosted on a wide range of operating systems.
The principal components of the system are:
.IP •
The Inferno kernel which can run both native and `hosted' on a range of platforms
and which presents the same interface to programs in both cases.
.IP •
The Dis virtual machine.
.IP •
Styx - the tiny broad-spectrum file service protocol.
.IP •
Limbo - a new simple, modular, concurrent programming language.
.IP •
Tk and Prefab - graphical user interface (`GUI') primitives without a lot of goo.
.IP •
The portable cross-development suites that allow any native Inferno platform
to be cross-compiled on any hosted system.
.SS Manual conventions
Throughout this volume, manual entries are cross referenced
by a notation of the form
.IR entry ( n ),
where
.I entry
is the name of the page (in italics) and
.I n
is the manual section holding the page.
The same name may be found in more than one section.
For example, the environment variable inspection command
documented in
.IR env (1),
is quite distinct from the module interface to environment variables
which is documented in
.IR env (2),
which in turn is distinct from the component documented by
.IR env (3),
which describes the underlying device that implements environment variables.
.PP
Pathnames are understood to exist in the file system space visible from
Inferno. The root of this space when viewed from the host operating
system is the Inferno installation directory, sometimes called the
Inferno root directory. Unless otherwise enabled, the result of
changes made by Inferno programs to files in the file system space
is generally restricted to this portion of the host file system.
.SS Name spaces
One of the great strengths of Inferno is the
.I name space
interface to the resources available to a process,
a hierarchical structure
which looks very similar to a conventional file system.
Resources look like files and directories that can be read
and written, created and deleted in a way familiar to
most programmers.
.PP
While this interface
.I is
used to provide programs with access to conventional
disk-based filestore, it is also used to control devices
and user level programs
.I mounted
in a process's name space.
Once a program or a device has been attached to a process's
name space, the program or device interprets any access
to the attachment point;
it can synthesise on demand the names of new files or directories,
create their contents on the fly as the process reads from them,
and interpret written data as commands or data as appropriate
(See
.IR bind (1)
and
.IR sys-bind (2)).
.PP
Each new Inferno process inherits its parent's name space,
but it can divorce its own name space from that of its parent (see
.IR sys-pctl (2)),
giving programs the capability to attach
resources to their own name space without making them globally
visible. This per-process name space is potent
but potentially confusing, so, to help programs that might be
confused,
.IR namespace (4)
gives some conventions that should be adhered to if programs
are to work properly. (That page also gives a general overview
of the Inferno source tree.)
.SS Start up
See ``Installation of the Inferno Software'' in Volume 2
for details of how to start up Inferno.
.SS Window/development environment
Inferno provides a powerful development environment in which to write, compile,
execute and debug programs written in the Limbo language.
It gives the developer a clean platform from which he can utilise
an operating system which contains
many new and innovative ideas and some, carefully chosen,
older concepts that have survived the test of time and are likely to be
familiar to most Plan 9 or Unix users.
.PP
Superficially, the Inferno shell
.IR sh (1)
looks and behaves much like
its Plan 9 or Unix contemporaries but, at heart, it is quite different.
The shell takes advantage of the dynamic module loading
services that Inferno provides to allow it to be dynamically extended
in appropriate and interesting ways. For example, by loading the
.IR sh-tk (1)
builtin module, a shell script can provide all the programming logic
required to manage a
.I Tk
window with full
.I Tk
functionality in, surprisingly, few lines of code; by loading the
.IR sh-file2chan (1)
builtin module, a shell script can create a file in the name space
whose properties are completely under the control of the script.
.PP
The Inferno window
manager
.IR wm (1)
allows the user to manage the order and position of a dynamic collection of application
windows in which to perform various tasks.
.IR Acme (1)
is targeted at programmers. It is an editor, a shell and window system all rolled
into one, which through thoughtful and consistent application of simple principles
results in a rich and productive programming environment with a user interface
that feels right.
.I Acme
requires a three-button mouse and
attaches distinct functions to the three mouse buttons and, indeed, to chords of buttons to
maximise the productivity of the programmer's mouse. For more details of the
.I Acme
user interface see the paper
"Acme: A User Interface for Programmers" in Volume 2.
.PP
Limbo programs are compiled with
.IR limbo (1). 
This compiles Limbo source into a machine-independent format (Dis) for
execution by the Inferno Dis virtual machine. The virtual machine is designed to provide 
safe execution of programs even on machines without memory protection.
Debugging is made straightforward by use of either
.IR stack (1)
, to display the execution stack of a process
or, if a finer inspection is required,
.IR deb (1),
a novel window based debugger that allows the user to identify the exact location of
problems, set break points and walk the data structures of any module loaded by the program. See "Program Development in Inferno" in Volume 2 for details on how to use the
development tools that Inferno provides.
.SH SEE ALSO
.nf
Section (1) (this section) for the commonly-used commands.
Section (2) for Limbo modules, including Inferno's system calls.
Section (3) for kernel devices (accessed by `bind').
Section (4) for file services (accessed by `mount').
Section (5) for the Styx file service protocol.
Section (6) for file formats and system conventions.
Section (7) for databases and database access modules.
Section (8) for administrative modules and system services.
Section (9) for the reference for Inferno's Tk variant, Limbo/Tk.
Section (10) for the build environment and device driver implementation.
.PP
Volume 2 contains papers and other documentation about Inferno.
.PP
The back of this volume contains a permuted index.
.SH DIAGNOSTICS
On successful execution, a process can simply exit.
Programs (modules) that wish to return error status to
the command interpreters
.IR sh (1)
and
.IR mash (1)
do so by raising a special exception (eg, using the
.B raise
statement in Limbo).
The exception's value is a string
beginning with the text
.RB ` fail: '.
.SH SEE ALSO
.IR intro (2),
.IR intro (3),
.IR intro (4),
.IR intro (5),
.IR intro (6),
.IR intro (7),
.IR intro (8),
.IR intro (9),
.IR intro (10)