5d361b602d
- The original code was just incrementing the reference counts (RefCounts) of the device objects or the device/file handles, without decrementing them when closing the handles. This is now fixed. Notice the following: * When opening a file on a device (disk), the device's (and its handle's) RefCount is incremented, and the file handle's RefCount is incremented as well. * When closing a file, the file handle's RefCount is decremented (and the file closed if the RefCount reaches zero), and the file's parent device handle is also closed, recursively. This has the effect of decrementing the parent device handle's RefCount, and the device's own RefCount is decremented as well. IMPORTANT NOTE: The usefulness of handle-level RefCount is still under question, and might be (consistently) removed in the future. - Fix opening a device (disk) in direct access, when this device is already opened. Indeed, we previously allowed direct access only if the device was opened as such for the very first time (its RefCount = 0 originally); no filesystem mounting was attempted as well. Then for any later open-operations on this device (while keeping an already-opened handle to it), filesystem access was assumed. Thus, this problem would show up in two ways: * Either the device is first opened for direct access, this succeeded and no filesystem was mounted. Then, for any other open-operations, the filesystem was NOT mounted, and opening files on it would fail. Direct accesses would succeed but would create an unnecessary second file handle. * Or, the device is first opened for file-access: a filesystem was mounted and file opening would succeed. Any other file opening operation would succeed as well (if the file exists). But, a direct access open-operation would fail, because now any open-operations on the device would be assumed to be a file opening. This is now correctly fixed. If direct-open is requested, just do it. If this is a file opening, we open the device, then try to mount a filesystem on it (if not already done), then we try to open the file. If file opening fails, derereference the device. - Pass the file path to the filesystem-specific Open() functions without truncating the leading path separator, if any. This has to be handled by the filesystem routines themselves. |
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Quick Links
Website • Official chat • Wiki • Forum • Community Discord • JIRA Bug Tracker • ReactOS Git mirror • Testman
What is ReactOS?
ReactOS™ is an Open Source effort to develop a quality operating system that is compatible with applications and drivers written for the Microsoft® Windows™ NT family of operating systems (NT4, 2000, XP, 2003, Vista, 7).
The ReactOS project, although currently focused on Windows Server 2003 compatibility, is always keeping an eye toward compatibility with Windows Vista and future Windows NT releases.
The code of ReactOS is licensed under GNU GPL 2.0.
Product quality warning
ReactOS is currently an Alpha quality operating system. This means that ReactOS is under heavy development and you have to be ready to encounter some problems. Different things may not work well and it can corrupt the data present on your hard disk. It is HIGHLY recommended to test ReactOS on a virtual machine or on a computer with no sensitive or critical data!
Building
To build the system it is strongly advised to use the ReactOS Build Environment (RosBE). Up-to-date versions for Windows and for Unix/GNU-Linux are available from our download page at: "Build Environment".
Alternatively one can use Microsoft Visual C++ (MSVC) version 2019+. Building with MSVC is covered here: "Visual Studio or Microsoft Visual C++".
See "Building ReactOS" article for more details.
Binaries
To build ReactOS you must run the configure
script in the directory you want to have your build files. Choose configure.cmd
or configure.sh
depending on your system. Then run ninja <modulename>
to build a module you want or just ninja
to build all modules.
Bootable images
To build a bootable CD image run ninja bootcd
from the build directory. This will create a CD image with a filename bootcd.iso
.
You can always download fresh binary builds of bootable images from the "Daily builds" page.
Installing
By default, ReactOS currently can only be installed on a machine that has a FAT16 or FAT32 partition as the active (bootable) partition. The partition on which ReactOS is to be installed (which may or may not be the bootable partition) must also be formatted as FAT16 or FAT32. ReactOS Setup can format the partitions if needed.
Starting with 0.4.10, ReactOS can be installed using the BtrFS file system. But consider this as an experimental feature and thus regressions not triggered on FAT setup may be observed.
To install ReactOS from the bootable CD distribution, extract the archive contents. Then burn the CD image, boot from it, and follow the instructions.
See "Installing ReactOS" Wiki page or INSTALL for more details.
Testing
If you discover a bug in ReactOS search on JIRA first - it might be reported already. If not report the bug providing logs and as much information as possible.
See "File Bugs" for a guide.
NOTE: The bug tracker is not for discussions. Please use our official chat or our forum.
Contributing
We are always looking for developers! Check how to contribute if you are willing to participate.
Legal notice: If you have seen proprietary Microsoft Windows source code (including but not limited to the leaked Windows NT 3.5, NT 4, 2000 source code and the Windows Research Kernel), your contribution won't be accepted because of potential copyright violation.
Try out cloud-based ReactOS development using Gitpod and Docker:
You can also support ReactOS by donating! We rely on our backers to maintain our servers and accelerate development by hiring full-time devs.
More information
ReactOS is a Free and Open Source operating system based on the Windows architecture, providing support for existing applications and drivers, and an alternative to the current dominant consumer operating system.
It is not another wrapper built on Linux, like WINE. It does not attempt or plan to compete with WINE; in fact, the user-mode part of ReactOS is almost entirely WINE-based and our two teams have cooperated closely in the past.
ReactOS is also not "yet another OS". It does not attempt to be a third player like any other alternative OS out there. People are not meant to uninstall Linux and use ReactOS instead; ReactOS is a replacement for Windows users who want a Windows replacement that behaves just like Windows.
More information is available at: reactos.org.
Also see the media/doc subdirectory for some sparse notes.
Who is responsible
Active devs are listed as members of GitHub organization. See also the CREDITS file for others.
Code mirrors
The main development is done on GitHub. We have an alternative mirror in case GitHub is down.
There is also an obsolete SVN archive repository that is kept for historical purposes.