惯性聚合 高效追踪和阅读你感兴趣的博客、新闻、科技资讯
阅读原文 在惯性聚合中打开

推荐订阅源

C
Cisco Blogs
NISL@THU
NISL@THU
G
GRAHAM CLULEY
T
Threatpost
I
Intezer
D
Darknet – Hacking Tools, Hacker News & Cyber Security
P
Proofpoint News Feed
L
Lohrmann on Cybersecurity
Cisco Talos Blog
Cisco Talos Blog
P
Privacy & Cybersecurity Law Blog
Security Latest
Security Latest
P
Palo Alto Networks Blog
L
LINUX DO - 热门话题
Cyberwarzone
Cyberwarzone
AI
AI
Help Net Security
Help Net Security
Forbes - Security
Forbes - Security
T
The Exploit Database - CXSecurity.com
月光博客
月光博客
The GitHub Blog
The GitHub Blog
aimingoo的专栏
aimingoo的专栏
C
CERT Recently Published Vulnerability Notes
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
CTFtime.org: upcoming CTF events
N
News and Events Feed by Topic
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Recent Commits to openclaw:main
Scott Helme
Scott Helme
A
About on SuperTechFans
N
Netflix TechBlog - Medium
TaoSecurity Blog
TaoSecurity Blog
V
V2EX
MongoDB | Blog
MongoDB | Blog
AWS News Blog
AWS News Blog
Google DeepMind News
Google DeepMind News
Google Online Security Blog
Google Online Security Blog
O
OpenAI News
Y
Y Combinator Blog
S
Securelist
GbyAI
GbyAI
D
Docker
SecWiki News
SecWiki News
The Hacker News
The Hacker News
有赞技术团队
有赞技术团队
T
Tenable Blog
WordPress大学
WordPress大学
S
SegmentFault 最新的问题
P
Privacy International News Feed
S
Security Affairs
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
让小产品的独立变现更简单 - ezindie.com
Hacker News - Newest:
Hacker News - Newest: "LLM"
H
Hackread – Cybersecurity News, Data Breaches, AI and More

Lobsters

Lunacy | Red Vice CIFSwitch: a non-universal Linux local root vulnerability RIPE NCC session fixation: poaching logins with an Atlas probe GNOME 2.20 but its Web Components Agentic Search for Context Engineering – Leonie Monigatti Garnix is shutting down [not OC] akashina.tngl.sh/jjc Concerning Emacs (and Jazz) Nitpicking the shell history scene in ‘Tron: Legacy’ What's cooking on SourceHut? Q2 2026 The tenth OpenPGP email summit Package managers that package package managers Clojure on Fennel part three: parsing WordPress at 23 Finding Miscompiles for Fun, Not Profit GitHub - creusot-rs/creusot: Creusot helps you prove your Rust code is correct. Announcing Rust 1.96.0 | Rust Blog A Love Letter to Neovim sqlite AGENTS.md Am I a Bad Friend? CSS vs. JavaScript • Josh W. Comeau Erlang Ecosystem Foundation - Supporting the BEAM community A brief note about slot access cost in Common Lisp Keyboard latency probe Rethinking the GNOME clipboard issues Back to the Building Blocks’ Building Blocks Tech Notes: Theseus: translating win32 to wasm Fast is better than slow Content-addressed Rust builds (or, what kache actually caches) Intent to Prototype: Embedding API Canada’s Bill C-22 and the security cost of collecting more data 5 PostgreSQL locking behaviors that trip people up okmij.org Stop advertising in your commits! | AksDev GitHub - mplsllc/macsurf: A modern web browser for Classic Mac OS 9 PowerPC. Real CSS3, ES5 JavaScript, native HTTPS — built with CodeWarrior on the Carbon API. Introducing DoomBench - Can Your Data Stack Run DOOM? What are some of your favourite developer tools? Building a Scalable Ingestion Pipeline with Temporal (Part 1) Converting shallow Git bundles into normal repositories Are you a member of any professional associations? What is a harmonic? An interactive comic about additive synthesis How Virtual Tables Work in the Itanium C++ ABI Using SwiftUI to Build a Mac-assed App in 2026 ~jack/lambda-on-lambda - Serverless Haskell on AWS - sourcehut git Human proof for FOSS contributions Extremely simple internet radio controlled via IRC Announcing BABLR Splitting Konsole views from Helix to run tools | AksDev GitHub - yugr/rust-slides Serving files over HTTP three ways: synchronous, epoll, and io_uring update docs with information about building with build.py (#979) · astral-sh/python-build-standalone@c9c40c5 A Simple Makefile Tutorial On C extensions, portability, and alternative compilers Switching to Colemak | Pedro Alves Just How Bad Was The Intel IAPX432? Nix's Substituter List Is Not a Routing Table Accelerating copy_if using SIMD Lambda on Lambda: Serverless Haskell on AWS | Blog Announcing feed-repeat v1.0 Scaling Akvorado BMP RIB with sharding EYG news: A host of CLI improvements, new guides and new effects The social contract of writing JS Crossword C array types are weird; and related topics Flatpak will depend on systemd – OSnews Migrating from Go to Rust | corrode Rust Consulting A portentous reunion Vivado Licensing Options How my minimal, memory-safe Go rsync steers clear of vulnerabilities the entropy layer of a wavelet codec, on its own GitHub - nferhat/fht-compositor: A dynamic tiling Wayland compositor. Debian SE Linux and PinTheft Does bulk memmove speed up std::remove_if? (No.) 声明式部分更新 | Blog | Chrome for Developers Fully in-browser container builds Dianne Skoll's Web Site - Remind The Architecture of Open Source Applications (Volume 1)Berkeley DB Pardon MIE? - ironPeak Blog “Long-Term Support” doesn’t mean what you think Jira IS Turing-Complete May I recommend thinking of Emacs as your Fortress of Solitude hershey Floodgap Gopher-HTTP gateway gopher://thelambdalab.xyz/1cuneiforth/ HP QuickWeb, Singular And Pointless That one time I used Go panics for flow control A new suite of modern tools coming for editing and publishing RFCs From the Tabletop… The Digital Antiquarian Building a Host-Tuned GCC to Make GCC Compile Faster Are we self-sovereign PKI yet? Claw Patrol: an open-source security firewall for agents | Deno Revised^7 Report on Scheme, Large: Procedural Fascicle Draft is now public A Network Allow-List Won't Stop Exfiltration — André Graf From AFSK to Goertzel – µArt.cz Software For My New Home Server Introducing Neptune: Direct3D virtualization for QEMU AI Agent Bankrupted Their Operator While Trying to Scan DN42 - Lan Tian @ Blog mimalloc: A new, high-performance, scalable memory allocator for the modern era Making wl_shm fast The Soul of Maintaining a New Machine - Third Draft | Books in Progress What is Git made of?
Rust (and Slint) on a jailbroken Kindle.
2026-05-26 · via Lobsters

../rust-on-kindle

I recently jailbroke my 7th generation Kindle Paperwhite. While my motivation probably should have been "breaking free from Amazon's clammy and tightening grip", the truth is I wanted a way to use it as a clock on my nightstand. I found this project and figured I could just make some adjustments to the code. And that worked fine. But as I now had opened the door, I started thinking about if I could get Rust to work on the Kindle as well. Maybe I could do more useful stuff with it? As I have recently started to tinker with Home Assistant and smart devices again, the idea of a dashboard for some of the features could be a fun project. And while there are probably many perfectly fine projects out there, I haven't made any of those.

Telling a programmer there's already a library to do X is like telling a songwriter there's already a song about love.
-Pete Cordell

Cross compiling Rust for the Kindle

After some research I found out that I needed to target ARMv7 and musl libc. I have dabbled with Rust on ARM machines before, and know from painful experience that getting the Rust compilation toolchain to work on such low-powered devices is a non-starter. Luckily there are great tools for cross compilation. My go-to for cross compiling Rust is, rather ironically, cargo-zigbuild. The Zig compiler ships with musl libc sources and headers built in, for all supported architectures. It also has its own linker, so zig cc can act as a complete cross-compile toolchain for any musl target, on any host. Compiling for the Kindle becomes as easy as:

* Installing Zig 
* Installing cargo-zigbuild
* cargo zigbuild --release --target armv7-unknown-linux-musleabihf

Getting shell access on the Kindle

With my hello-world-app ready and built, I needed a way to get it on the kindle and run it. While I probably could have used KUAL which I installed during the jailbreaking process, I wanted to also be able to see stdout to verify my application actually works. After some digging I found the USBNetwork tool that allows for setting up SSH access to your device either via USB or Wifi. For convenience I added an entry in my sshconfig and copied over my public key. Note: ssh-copy-id did not work for me, I had to add my .pub file to /mnt/us/usbnet/etc/authorized_keys on the Kindle.

Hello, World! Now what?

With shell access in order I was able to confirm that my cross compilation toolchain did indeed work, "Hello, World!" showed up as expected. But a program that prints to stdout readable over SSH is not much help on a Kindle.

As Rust has matured, quite a few GUI libraries have sprung up. Personally, I only have experience with Slint, so that is what I reached for. Could I get it to work on the Kindle? From my experience with getting Slint to run on a Raspberry Pi I knew the ARMv7 platform was supported out of the box. The missing links would be output to the e-ink screen and input from the touch panel.

We have visual!

Slint supports various renderers and backends, including a handy and lightweight software renderer that works on basically anything. By supplying a LineBufferProvider that implements process_line() we are able to take one by one line of rasterized visual output, convert it to grayscale and write it to the framebuffer, that on my Kindle is just a file at /dev/fb0 that we have memory mapped. I love the linux philosophy of "everything is a file" sometimes. Now the only thing left to do is to notify the driver to refresh the display, which is how e-ink works. This is done via the libc crate with ioctl() (input/output control). We pass in the dirty region to be refreshed, handily provided by Slint internals.

Touch me here, touch me there

With pixels on the screen, the other half of the puzzle is getting the touch panel to talk to Slint. And again the "everything is a file" mantra comes to the rescue: the touch controller shows up as /dev/input/event1, and we can just read() from it. Each read gives us back a struct that the kernel has written directly into our buffer: a timestamp, an event type, a code, and a value. No parsing, no protocol, just a memory layout we have to match.

The Kindle uses the Linux kernel's multi-touch protocol type B, which means events arrive as a stream of "the X coordinate is now this", "the Y coordinate is now that", "the tracking ID is now this" and then a SYNC_REPORT event that says "okay, that batch is done, you can act on it now". So we accumulate the latest X, Y and tracking ID as events come in, and on each SYNC_REPORT we figure out what to dispatch to Slint. A tracking ID of -1 means the finger lifted, which becomes a PointerReleased. Otherwise, the first sync after a touch-down becomes a PointerPressed, and any subsequent ones become PointerMoved. Slint handles the rest.

It actually works!

After a lot of debugging of no visible output, screen not refreshing, double refresh flashes, touch input not registering, touch input registering twice and lots of more bugs I had a counter and a increment button.

Kindle paperwhite running a Slint app

With an seemingly working (at least for my specific device, it will probably need adjustments for other Kindle versions) kindle-backend for Slint, I extracted the relevant code into a separate crate and published it on crates.io.

With that in order, I just need to draw the rest of the owl (dashboard). That will be another time.