Yes it works quite well (of course with some constraints). Owl-base can
be compiled with MirageOS relatively easily (might require some very
minor tweaks). Owl-base is the pure ocaml part of Owl btw, if you want
more performant binary, compile it with owl-core with the same code.
MirageOS has always been important to us so we have devoted quite a lot
of efforts to making it easier to use owl+mirage. We are currently
re-writing the owl tutorial book and will dedicate one chapter to
owl+mirage in order to encourage people to build intelligent unikernel
applications.
Here is an example:
https://gist.github.com/jzstark/6bd378218091e383a6bb3e80b4ee8cbb
It is a very small neural network (prob. several KBs) which recognises
handwritten digits, pure ocaml code using owl-base can be compiled with
mirage.
liang
On 2019-09-14 11:52, Richard Mortier wrote:
On 13 Sep 2019, at 22:52, Romain Calascibetta
<[email protected]> wrote:
So it's may be interesting to start with Owl which is a project born
in OCamllabs and whose creator (to my knowledge) kept in his mind
MirageOS and its constraints.
Liang (CC’d) will know the current status better, but we had a student
do a project a couple of years ago that targeting enabling Owl to work
with Mirage (and js_of_ocaml). So I believe it should work, or at
least, not be too far away from working.
--
Richard Mortier
[email protected]
_______________________________________________
MirageOS-devel mailing list
[email protected]
https://lists.xenproject.org/mailman/listinfo/mirageos-devel