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I am planning to study about operating systems. I met with 2 doubts. Why we should not use library functions while creating an operating system? What is the drawback in it?

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    Because there is no library.
    – user253751
    Mar 1, 2015 at 4:35
  • The library will be binded with the final final executable file right? Mar 1, 2015 at 4:40

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Why we should not use library functions while creating an operating system? What is the drawback in it?

It depends on what you mean by "library functions".

You absolutely should try to use someone else's version of the functions from <string.h>, for example. If you're writing an OS, you've got plenty to do, why re-invent the wheel with something simple like strcpy?

You should use whatever open-source code you can that has no dependencies. I mean simple "leaf" functions like strcpy that have no dependencies. If you look at the Linux kernel source code, you will certainly see standard library functions like memcpy, and strlen, etc. But you'll also see things like strncpy_from_user which are adapted to particular uses in the kernel (in this case copying a string from user-space to kernel-space).

What you shouldn't try to use (if it isn't obvious already) are things like fopen. fopen is a wrapper around some code that makes a system call to the kernel to handle the actual opening of a file. Well clearly, if you are the kernel, you can't use this in your kernel.

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  • And depending on the library implementation, it might be difficult to separate things like fopen from things like strcpy (did you know that strtok might rely on thread-local variables?), so the safest approach here is to not use anything.
    – user253751
    Mar 1, 2015 at 5:06
  • @immibis To an extent, yes. Clearly if you're writing a kernel, you should pay attention to the code you're copying in - there's not that much in <string.h>. But in no case can I see strcpy being inseparable from fopen. Best (most common) case, it's just a C file you don't copy. Worst case, you don't copy/paste it into your project. Mar 1, 2015 at 5:08

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