Tier: 3
The Hermit unikernel target allows compiling your applications into self-contained, specialized unikernel images that can be run in small virtual machines.
Target triplets available so far:
x86_64-unknown-hermit
aarch64-unknown-hermit
riscv64gc-unknown-hermit
- Stefan Lankes (@stlankes)
- Martin Kröning (@mkroening)
These targets only support cross-compilation. The targets do support std.
When building binaries for this target, the Hermit unikernel is built from scratch. The application developer themselves specializes the target and sets corresponding expectations.
The Hermit targets follow Linux's extern "C"
calling convention.
Hermit binaries have the ELF format.
You can build Rust with support for the targets by adding it to the target
list in config.toml
.
To run the Hermit build scripts, you also have to enable your host target.
The build scripts rely on llvm-tools
and binaries are linked using rust-lld
, so those have to be enabled as well.
[build]
build-stage = 1
target = [
"<HOST_TARGET>",
"x86_64-unknown-hermit",
"aarch64-unknown-hermit",
"riscv64gc-unknown-hermit",
]
[rust]
lld = true
llvm-tools = true
Rust does not yet ship pre-compiled artifacts for these targets.
To compile for these targets, you will either need to build Rust with the targets enabled
(see “Building the targets” above), or build your own copy of core
by using build-std
or similar.
As all Hermit programs are unikernels, building a Rust program also requires including the operating system code. A guide for doing so is provided in our starter hermit-rs-template.
The targets support running binaries in the form of self-contained unikernel images. These images can be chainloaded by Hermit's loader or hypervisor (Uhyve). QEMU can be used to boot Hermit binaries using the loader on any architecture. The targets do not support running the Rust test suite.
The targets do not yet support C code and Rust code at the same time.