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LiteOS

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Lite OS
DeveloperHuawei Technologies Co., Ltd.
Written inC, assembly language, Shell
OS familyReal-time operating system
Working stateDiscontinued
Source modelOpen source
Initial releaseMay 20, 2015; 9 years ago (2015-05-20)
Latest releaseV5.0 / December 2020; 3 years ago (2020-12)
RepositoryGitee.com/LiteOS/LiteOS
Marketing targetInternet Of Things, Smartwatches
Influenced byUnix, FreeRTOS, Unix-like, Integrity, VxWorks (POSIX)
LicenseBSD 3-clause
Succeeded byOpenHarmony
Official websitelanterns.eecs.utk.edu/software/liteos/,%20https://www.huaweicloud.com/product/liteos.html

Huawei Lite OS is a discontinued lightweight real-time operating system (RTOS) developed by Huawei.[1] It is an open source, POSIX compliant operating system for Internet of things (IoT) devices, released under a three-clause BSD license.[2] Microcontrollers of different architectures such as ARM (M0/3/4/7, A7/17/53, ARM9/11), x86, and RISC-V are supported by the project. Huawei LiteOS is part of Huawei's '1+8+N' Internet of Things solution, and has been featured in a number of open source development kits and industry offerings.[3]

Smartwatches by Huawei and its former Honor brand run LiteOS.[4][5] LiteOS variants of kernels has since been incorporated into the IoT-oriented HarmonyOS with open source OpenHarmony.

History

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On 20 May 2015, at the Huawei Network Conference, Huawei proposed the '1+2+1' Internet of Things solution and release the IoT operating system named Huawei LiteOS. It has been reported development of the real-time operating system goes back as far as 2012.[2][1]

Key features

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  • Lightweight, small kernel; <10 kilobytes (kB)[2][1]
  • Energy efficient
  • Fast startup within milliseconds
  • Support NB-IoT, Wi-Fi, Ethernet, BLE, Zigbee, and other different IoT protocols
  • Support access to different cloud platforms

Supported architectures

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  • ADI
    • ADuCM4050
  • Atmel
    • Atmel SAM D21 Xplained Pro
    • ATSAM4S-XPRO
    • ARDUINO ZERO PRO
  • GigaDevice[6]
    • GD32F450I-EVAL
    • GD32F190R-EVAL
    • GD32F103C-EVAL
    • GD32F150R-EVAL
    • GD32F207C-EVAL
    • GD32VF103
  • Huawei
    • Hi3518
    • Kirin A1
  • MediaTek
    • LINKIT7687HDK
  • Microchip
    • ATSAME70Q21
  • MindMotion
    • MM32F103_MINI
    • MM32L373
    • MM32L073PF
  • Nuvoton
  • Nordic Semi
    • NRF52840-PDK
    • NRF52-DK
  • NXP
    • LPC824_LITE
    • LPC54110_BOARD
    • FRDM-KW41Z
    • FRDM-KL25Z
  • Silicon Labs
    • EFM32 GIANT GECKO STARTER KIT EFM32GG-STK3700
    • EFM32 PEARL GECKO STARTER KIT SLSTK3401A
    • EFM32 HAPPY GECKO STARTER KIT SLSTK3400A
  • STMicroelectronics
    • STM32F411RE-NUCLEO
    • STM32F412ZG-NUCLEO
    • STM32F429I_DISCO
    • STM32L476RG_NUCLEO
    • STM32F746ZG_NUCLEO
    • STM32F103RB-NUCLEO
  • TI
    • LAUNCHXL-CC3220SF

See also

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References

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  1. ^ a b c "Huawei LiteOS: Concept and Value". Developer.Huawei.com. Huawei Technologies Co., Ltd. Archived from the original on 12 September 2018. Retrieved 12 September 2018.
  2. ^ a b c "Huawei's LiteOS Internet of Things operating system is a minuscule 10KB". BetaNews.com. BetaNews, Inc. 20 May 2015. Archived from the original on 25 November 2020. Retrieved 12 February 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: bot: original URL status unknown (link)
  3. ^ July 2020, Naushad K. Cherrayil 09. "Huawei's "1+8+N" strategy will be a big success in China as it has no competitors". TechRadar. Archived from the original on 24 June 2021. Retrieved 17 June 2021.{{cite web}}: CS1 maint: numeric names: authors list (link)
  4. ^ Ricker, Thomas (19 September 2019). "Huawei Watch GT 2 runs LiteOS and lasts up to two weeks". www.TheVerge.com. The Verge. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  5. ^ "The Honor Magic Watch 2 is a great wearable, but LiteOS is too light". www.XDA-Developers.com. XDA Developers. 17 December 2019. Retrieved 3 February 2021.
  6. ^ "GigaDevice unveils the GD32V series with RISC-V core, in a brand new 32bit general purpose microcontroller". www.GigaDevice.com. GigaDevice. 22 August 2019. Archived from the original on 29 August 2019. Retrieved 12 February 2021.