Introduction¶
The Zephyr OS is based on a small-footprint kernel designed for use on resource-constrained and embedded systems: from simple embedded environmental sensors and LED wearables to sophisticated embedded controllers, smart watches, and IoT wireless applications.
- The Zephyr kernel supports multiple architectures, including:
ARC EM and HS
ARMv6-M, ARMv7-M, and ARMv8-M (Cortex-M)
ARMv7-A and ARMv8-A (Cortex-A, 32- and 64-bit)
ARMv7-R (Cortex-R)
Intel x86 (32- and 64-bit)
NIOS II Gen 2
RISC-V (32- and 64-bit)
SPARC V8
Tensilica Xtensa
The full list of supported boards based on these architectures can be found here.
Licensing¶
Zephyr is permissively licensed using the Apache 2.0 license
(as found in the LICENSE
file in the
project’s GitHub repo). There are some
imported or reused components of the Zephyr project that use other licensing,
as described in Licensing of Zephyr Project components.
Distinguishing Features¶
Zephyr offers a large and ever growing number of features including:
- Extensive suite of Kernel services
Zephyr offers a number of familiar services for development:
Multi-threading Services for cooperative, priority-based, non-preemptive, and preemptive threads with optional round robin time-slicing. Includes POSIX pthreads compatible API support.
Interrupt Services for compile-time registration of interrupt handlers.
Memory Allocation Services for dynamic allocation and freeing of fixed-size or variable-size memory blocks.
Inter-thread Synchronization Services for binary semaphores, counting semaphores, and mutex semaphores.
Inter-thread Data Passing Services for basic message queues, enhanced message queues, and byte streams.
Power Management Services such as tickless idle and an advanced idling infrastructure.
- Multiple Scheduling Algorithms
Zephyr provides a comprehensive set of thread scheduling choices:
Cooperative and Preemptive Scheduling
Earliest Deadline First (EDF)
Meta IRQ scheduling implementing “interrupt bottom half” or “tasklet” behavior
Timeslicing: Enables time slicing between preemptible threads of equal priority
Multiple queuing strategies:
Simple linked-list ready queue
Red/black tree ready queue
Traditional multi-queue ready queue
- Highly configurable / Modular for flexibility
Allows an application to incorporate only the capabilities it needs as it needs them, and to specify their quantity and size.
- Cross Architecture
Supports a wide variety of supported boards with different CPU architectures and developer tools. Contributions have added support for an increasing number of SoCs, platforms, and drivers.
- Memory Protection
Implements configurable architecture-specific stack-overflow protection, kernel object and device driver permission tracking, and thread isolation with thread-level memory protection on x86, ARC, and ARM architectures, userspace, and memory domains.
For platforms without MMU/MPU and memory constrained devices, supports combining application-specific code with a custom kernel to create a monolithic image that gets loaded and executed on a system’s hardware. Both the application code and kernel code execute in a single shared address space.
- Compile-time resource definition
Allows system resources to be defined at compile-time, which reduces code size and increases performance for resource-limited systems.
- Optimized Device Driver Model
Provides a consistent device model for configuring the drivers that are part of the platform/system and a consistent model for initializing all the drivers configured into the system and Allows the reuse of drivers across platforms that have common devices/IP blocks
- Devicetree Support
Use of devicetree to describe hardware. Information from devicetree is used to create the application image.
- Native Networking Stack supporting multiple protocols
Networking support is fully featured and optimized, including LwM2M and BSD sockets compatible support. OpenThread support (on Nordic chipsets) is also provided - a mesh network designed to securely and reliably connect hundreds of products around the home.
- Bluetooth Low Energy 5.0 support
Bluetooth 5.0 compliant (ESR10) and Bluetooth Low Energy Controller support (LE Link Layer). Includes BLE Mesh and a Bluetooth qualification-ready BLE controller.
Generic Access Profile (GAP) with all possible LE roles.
GATT (Generic Attribute Profile)
Pairing support, including the Secure Connections feature from Bluetooth 4.2
Clean HCI driver abstraction
Raw HCI interface to run Zephyr as a Controller instead of a full Host stack
Verified with multiple popular controllers
Highly configurable
Mesh Support:
Relay, Friend Node, Low-Power Node (LPN) and GATT Proxy features
Both Provisioning bearers supported (PB-ADV & PB-GATT)
Highly configurable, fitting in devices with at least 16k RAM
- Native Linux, macOS, and Windows Development
A command-line CMake build environment runs on popular developer OS systems. A native POSIX port, lets you build and run Zephyr as a native application on Linux and other OSes, aiding development and testing.
- Virtual File System Interface with LittleFS and FATFS Support
LittleFS and FATFS Support, FCB (Flash Circular Buffer) for memory constrained applications, and file system enhancements for logging and configuration.
- Powerful multi-backend logging Framework
Support for log filtering, object dumping, panic mode, multiple backends (memory, networking, filesystem, console, ..) and integration with the shell subsystem.
- User friendly and full-featured Shell interface
A multi-instance shell subsystem with user-friendly features such as autocompletion, wildcards, coloring, metakeys (arrows, backspace, ctrl+u, etc.) and history. Support for static commands and dynamic sub-commands.
- Settings on non-volatile storage
The settings subsystem gives modules a way to store persistent per-device configuration and runtime state. Settings items are stored as key-value pair strings.
- Non-volatile storage (NVS)
NVS allows storage of binary blobs, strings, integers, longs, and any combination of these.
- Native POSIX port
Supports running Zephyr as a Linux application with support for various subsystems and networking.
Getting Started¶
Welcome to Zephyr! See the Introduction to Zephyr for a high-level overview, and the documentation’s Getting Started Guide to start developing.
Community Support¶
Community support is provided via mailing lists and Slack; see the Resources below for details.
Resources¶
Here’s a quick summary of resources to help you find your way around:
Help: Asking for Help Tips
Documentation: http://docs.zephyrproject.org (Getting Started Guide)
Source Code: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr is the main repository; https://elixir.bootlin.com/zephyr/latest/source contains a searchable index
Releases: https://github.com/zephyrproject-rtos/zephyr/releases
Samples and example code: see Sample and Demo Code Examples
Mailing Lists: users@lists.zephyrproject.org and devel@lists.zephyrproject.org are the main user and developer mailing lists, respectively. You can join the developer’s list and search its archives at Zephyr Development mailing list. The other Zephyr mailing list subgroups have their own archives and sign-up pages.
Nightly CI Build Status: https://lists.zephyrproject.org/g/builds The builds@lists.zephyrproject.org mailing list archives the CI (buildkite) nightly build results.
Chat: Zephyr’s Slack workspace is https://zephyrproject.slack.com. Use this Slack Invite to register.
Contributing: see the Contribution Guide
Wiki: Zephyr GitHub wiki
Security Issues: Email vulnerabilities@zephyrproject.org to report security issues; also see our Security documentation. Security issues are tracked separately at https://zephyrprojectsec.atlassian.net.
Zephyr Project Website: https://zephyrproject.org