Subdirectories of EROS:
Categories related to Computers: Software: Operating Systems: Realtime: EROS: Computers: Software: Operating Systems: Capability (4) Computers: Software: Operating Systems: Microkernel (137) Computers: Software: Operating Systems: Open Source (16) Computers: Software: Operating Systems: Persistent (4) Computers: Software: Operating Systems: Realtime: Open Source (13) Websites on EROS: CapROS Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia. CapROS Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia. Coyotos Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia. Coyotos Secure Operating System Direct EROS research successor; builds on those ideas and experiences; much code developed for EROS will migrate directly to Coyotos. EROS: A Fast Capability System This capability-based OS for commodity processors uses a one level storage model; store persistence is transparent to applications. Surprisingly, performance of this very high security system matches normal OSs. [ResearchIndex] EROS-OS.org Extremely Reliable OS; home site. Small, secure, real-time microkernel with orthogonal persistence: pull the plug and restart with no losses. Related to, and working with, ERights.org on E programming language. [Open source, GPL] Extremely Reliable Operating System Growing article, with links to many related topics. Wikipedia. Verifying Operating System Security A confined program is one unable to leak information to an unauthorized party or modify unauthorized resources, an essential feature of any secure component based system. A proof of correctness of EROS architecture for confinement. [ResearchIndex] EROS: A Principle-Driven Operating System from the Ground Up Abstract of article by Jonathan S. Shapiro, Norm Hardy; published by IEEE Computer Society. [IEEE Software] (February, 2002) The EROS Alternative Shapiro interview in 'Open-Source Security' issue. Of open source OSs, most people think only Linux and OpenBSD. But another open-source OS's architecture may be more secure than either of them. [Information Security Magazine] (February, 2000)
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