• Beto@lemmy.studio
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    2 years ago

    To demonstrate the OS’s capability and relatively small size, in the late 1990s QNX released a demo image that included the POSIX-compliant QNX 4 OS, a full graphical user interface, graphical text editor, TCP/IP networking, web browser and web server that all fit on a bootable 1.44 MB floppy disk for the 386 PC. https://en.m.wikipedia.org/wiki/QNX

    • elint@programming.dev
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      2 years ago

      Every demoparty in the link you mentioned with a beginning date and a dash but no end date is still happening. The demoscene is still very much alive.

      • Marshell@feddit.de
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        2 years ago

        Oh yes! And I didn’t intend to say it is dead! I merely wanted to point to the fact that these guys did and do incredible things in the 64kb class.

    • alcasa@lemmy.sdf.org
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      2 years ago

      Is this supposed to be small or am I missing something? 400kb for hello world does not really sound small

  • TCB13@lemmy.world
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    2 years ago

    What do they mean by “fully self-contained natively compiled C#”? Some executable that depends on specific update Windows versions and 30 different .net frameworks installed on the system? :D

    • Joph@programming.dev
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      2 years ago

      I might be missing a joke? but they are referring to NativeAOT, aptly named as it compiles a .NET application into a native binary ahead of time (instead of using a JIT.) The benefit being no dependency on the .NET runtime, faster startup time (but slower runtime performance, due to lack of JIT), lower memory footprint, and any other advantage you’d find in Go.

      • TCB13@lemmy.world
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        2 years ago

        The question is, how good is NativeAOT comparable to a static binary from C++ or Go? As we both know Microsoft has a very poor track record when it comes to static builds / “self-contained” stuff. My question was mostly satire but I still would like to know how “self-containted” are those applications.

        Does it effectively output a single binary? Does it create some kind of clusterf*k and awkward packaging formats like other MS solutions such as UWP? Will it actually be deployable to a random fresh install of Debian 12 or Windows 10? What about compatibility with older systems?

        • Spyros@programming.dev
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          2 years ago

          Does it effectively output a single binary?

          Yes, that’s one of the points of NativeAOT, a self-contained single binary, exactly as Go does it.

          Does it create some kind of clusterf*k and awkward packaging formats like other MS solutions such as UWP?

          No, you can create .exe files.

          Will it actually be deployable to a random fresh install of Debian 12 or Windows 10?

          Yes, NativeAOT supports Windows, Linux and MacOS, x64 and Arm64.

          What about compatibility with older systems?

          Not sure about that, I suppose it depends on the targets each .NET version support. For example, .NET 8 will drop RHEL 7 and only RHEL 8 and later.

          And to play devil’s advocate: this won’t work for all existing .NET applications. If you use reflection (which is AOT unfriendly), chances are that you will have to rework a ton of stuff in order to get to a point where NativeAOT works. There’s a middle solution though, called ReadyToRun, which has some advantages compared to running fully with the JIT compiler.

          • TCB13@lemmy.world
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            2 years ago

            Thank you for the link, so --self-contained will results in “a folder that has our exe and everything that is required to run it (…) a little over 200 files” while /p:PublishSingleFile=true will result in a 70MB file for a simple hello world. This kind of confirms my cheap satire :D it is nice this is an option now but the mess and size is crazy. Statically built Qt programs for Windows, with a GUI, are usually around 10MB for a simple app.