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RODOS

RODOS (Real time Onboard Dependable Operating System) is a real-time operating system for embedded systems and was designed for application domains demanding high dependability.

The first directive of RODOS is "As simple as possible".
We target the "Irreducible Complexity" which is very difficult to reach. Our target is: every developer shall be able to understand the whole code. This is important to achieve a very low error number.

RODOS can run as "bare metal": directly on the hardware (it is self-contained) or on the top of other operating systems, like Linux, Posix derivates, RTEMS, FreeRTOS, etc. We have many ports to many different processors, but here only a few are published. In the future more will come.

An important aspect of RODOS is its integrated real-time middleware. Developing the control and payload software on the top of a middleware provides maximal modularity today. Applications/modules can be developed independently, and it is very simple to interchange modules later without worrying about side effects.

RODOS was implemented as a software framework in C++ with an object-oriented application programming interface (API). It is organized in layers: The lowest layer (1) is responsible for control of the embedded system hardware (HAL: Hardware abstraction layer). The next layer (2) kernel: administrates the local resources, threads and time. On top of the kernel we have the middleware (layer 3) which enables communication between building blocks (BB) using a publisher subscriber multicast protocol. And on the top of the middleware the user may implement his applications (layer 4) as a distributed software network of simple BBs. The Building Blocks API on the top of the middleware is a service-oriented interface. BBs interact by providing services to other BBs and using services from other BBs.

To get started asap and try out RODOS on your laptop please look at our fast intro.

For further tutorials take a look to the short introduction at

And take a look to all other README file in this directory and in each subdirectory in recommended read order:

File Purpose
README.md Project Description
README-fast-intro.md Installation and first Tests, points to Tutorials
README-set-tool-chains.md Installation Instructions of different Toolchains
README-how-to-begin.pdf Printable Installation and Test Instructions
doc/rodos-dokumentation.pdf Printable API Documentation
doc/* Coding Directives, Usage on STM32F4, Raspberry Pi
README-cmake.md Guide to build RODOS Projects with CMake

Any questions, suggestions or complaints? Please contact

Sergio Montenegro [email protected]

We want to improve it. We hear your suggestions!

Our Users

  Kamaro Engineering e.V. - Modular Field Robot Beteigeuze NOVA



  WüSpace e.V. - Aerospace association Würzburg





How to cite RODOS?

If you intend to cite RODOS in your work, please cite the following references:

  • @article{montenegro2009rodos, title={RODOS - real time kernel design for dependability}, author={Montenegro, Sergio and Dannemann, Frank}, journal={DASIA 2009 - DAta Systems in Aerospace}, volume={669}, pages={66}, year={2009} }

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"Fork" of RODOS (https://gitlab.com/rodos/rodos), to fuck around with it as we see fit.

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