JSLinux Now Supports x86_64

(bellard.org)

103 points | by TechTechTech 3 hours ago

8 comments

  • simonw
    31 minutes ago
    The thing I most want to use this (or some other WASM Linux engine) for is running a coding agent against a virtual operating system directly in my browser.

    Claude Code / Codex CLI / etc are all great because they know how to drive Bash and other Linux tools.

    The browser is probably the best sandbox we have. Being able to run an agent loop against a WebAssembly Linux would be a very cool trick.

    I had a play with v86 a few months ago but didn't quite get to the point where I hooked up the agent to it - here's my WIP: https://tools.simonwillison.net/v86 - it has a text input you can use to send commands to the Linux machine, which is pretty much what you'd need to wire in an agent too.

    In that demo try running "cat test.lua" and then "lua test.lua".

  • blackhaz
    49 minutes ago
    Sorry for the off-topic, but what a bliss to see Windows 2000 interface. And what an absolute abomination from hell pretty much all the modern UIs are.
  • maxloh
    1 hour ago
    Unfortunately, he didn't attach the source code for the 64-bit x86 emulation layer, or the config used to compile the hosted image.

    For a more open-source version, check out container2wasm (which supports x86_64, riscv64, and AArch64 architectures): https://github.com/container2wasm/container2wasm

  • wolttam
    1 hour ago
    I can launch this thing and start making arbitrary connections out to port 25 on the internet from some random IP? Hmm.
    • maxloh
      1 hour ago
      From the "Technical notes" page:

      > Access to Internet is possible inside the emulator. It uses the websocket VPN offered by Benjamin Burns (see his blog). The bandwidth is capped to 40 kB/s and at most two connections are allowed per public IP address. Please don't abuse the service.

      https://bellard.org/jslinux/tech.html

  • notorandit
    1 hour ago
    Incredible guy!
  • petcat
    1 hour ago
    I've always been fascinated by this, but I have never known what it would be useful for. Does anyone know of any practical use cases?
    • toast0
      1 hour ago
      I use a similar emulator (v86) as a way to share my hobby OS. Approximately zero people, even my friends, are going to boot my hobby OS on real hardware; I did manage to convince some of them to run it in qemu, but it's difficult. A browser environment shows the thing quite well; and easy networking is cool too.

      My hobby OS itself is not very useful, but it's fun if you're in the right mood.

    • redleader55
      53 minutes ago
      Agentic workloads create and then run code. You don't want to just run that code in a "normal" environment like a container, or even a very well protected VM. There are other options, ofc - eg. gvisor, crossvm, firecracker, etc, but this one is uncommon enough to have a small number of attackers trying to hack it.
      • srdjanr
        13 minutes ago
        What's wrong with a well protected VM? Especially compared to something where the security selling point is "no one uses it" (according to your argument; I don't know how secure this actually is)
    • omoikane
      1 hour ago
      I use bellard.org/jslinux to test compilation of strange code sometimes[1], since it came with compilers that are different versions from what I have installed locally, and it's easier to open up a browser than starting a VM.

      [1] For example:

      https://www.ioccc.org/2020/yang/index.html#:~:text=tcc%200.9...

      https://www.ioccc.org/2018/yang/index.html#:~:text=tcc%200.9...

    • s-macke
      1 hour ago
      Most such emulators have Internet access on the IP level. Therefore, this is a very cheap way to test anything on the Internet.

          apk add nmap
          nmap your.domain.com
      
      However, the speed is heavily throttled. You can even use ssh and login to your own server.

      It can also be used as a very cheap way to provide a complete build environment on a single website, for example to teach C/C++. Or to learn the shell. You don't have to install anything.

    • varun_ch
      1 hour ago
      Maybe if you’ve got some ancient software that’s missing source code and only runs with X Y and Z conditions, you could continue to offer it on the web and build around it like that? Not sure if that would be practical at all, but could be interesting
    • maxloh
      1 hour ago
      My college professor used it to teach us the Linux command line

      We have Windows PCs in the classroom.

  • westurner
    53 minutes ago
    UBY: touchscreen: How to scroll the scrollback
  • westurner
    58 minutes ago
    How do TinyEmu and JSLinux compare to linux-wasm?

    From "Show HN: Amla Sandbox – WASM bash shell sandbox for AI agents" (2026) https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46825119 :

    >>> How to run vscode-container-wasm-gcc-example with c2w, with joelseverin/linux-wasm?

    >> linux-wasm is apparently faster than c2w

    From "Ghostty compiled to WASM with xterm.js API compatibility" https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46118267 :

    > From joelseverin/linux-wasm: https://github.com/joelseverin/linux-wasm :

    >> Hint: Wasm lacks an MMU, meaning that Linux needs to be built in a NOMMU configuration

    From https://news.ycombinator.com/item?id=46229385 :

    >> There's a pypi:SystemdUnitParser.