Rust-for-Linux
mrustc
Rust-for-Linux | mrustc | |
---|---|---|
84 | 75 | |
4,220 | 2,338 | |
0.7% | 0.8% | |
0.0 | 9.3 | |
7 days ago | 4 months ago | |
C | C++ | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | MIT License |
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Activity is a relative number indicating how actively a project is being developed. Recent commits have higher weight than older ones.
For example, an activity of 9.0 indicates that a project is amongst the top 10% of the most actively developed projects that we are tracking.
Rust-for-Linux
- Rewriting Rust
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Committing to Rust in the Kernel
You're welcome.
> Any concerns of the same kind of thing?
Here's the canonical list: https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/2
There's a lot, and I don't know the status of many of them, personally. But I don't see anything there that I know is not gonna work out, like for example, they aren't using specialization. Most of it feels like very nuts and bolts codegen options and similar things.
That said, back in August, the Rust Project announced their goals for the second half of this year: https://blog.rust-lang.org/2024/08/12/Project-goals.html
They say that they're committed to getting this stuff done, and in particular: https://rust-lang.github.io/rust-project-goals/2024h2/rfl_st...
> Closing these issues gets us within striking distance of being able to build the RFL codebase on stable Rust.
So, things sound good, in my mind.
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Deploying Rust in Existing Firmware Codebases
The goal of rust for linux isn't to wholesale translate linux into rust, but simply to be able to write pieces of linux (largely new ones) in rust. I think it's very unlikely anyone (including google) will take on a wholesale translation anytime soon. That said
> It's unlikely that Google has much sway here
Google has helped fund the rust for linux project pretty much from the start [1], they're one of three organizations mentioned on the homepage due to their sponorship [2]. They're actively involved in it, and have already ported their android "binder" driver into it with the intent to ship it in android. This strikes me as a very weird take.
[1] https://www.memorysafety.org/blog/supporting-miguel-ojeda-ru...
[2] https://rust-for-linux.com/
- Rust for Linux
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The Linux Kernel Prepares for Rust 1.77 Upgrade
Rust is backwards compatible when you stick to stable features, but the kernel uses unstable features that can and do incur breaking changes.
https://github.com/Rust-for-Linux/linux/issues/2
- Rust in Linux Kernel
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Mark Russinovich: “Working towards enabling Windows driver development in Rust”
> How would this work?
Don't know exactly what you're asking.
> And why would it be a better idea?
Poorly written device drivers are a significant attack vector. It's one of the reasons Linux is now exploring using Rust for its own device drivers.[0] You may be asking -- why Rust and not some other language? Rust has many of the performance and interoperability advantages of C and C++, but as noted, makes certain classes of memory safety issues impossible. Rust also has significant mindshare among systems programming communities.
[0]: https://rust-for-linux.com
- The Linux Kernel Module Programming Guide
- Teknisk karrierevej i Danmark som softwareudvikler
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The state of Flatpak security: major Projects are the worst?
Rust-for-Linux issue tracker
mrustc
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Why do lifetimes need to be leaky?
No, you don't. Existential proof: mrustc ignores lifetimes. Just flat out simply ignores. It changes some corner-cases related to HRBT, yet rustc compiled by mrustc works (that's BTW mrustc exist: to bootsrap the rustc compiler).
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I think C++ is still a desirable coding platform compared to Rust
Incidentally C++ is the only way to bootstrap rust without rust today.
https://github.com/thepowersgang/mrustc
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Rust – Faster compilation with the parallel front-end in nightly
Well, there is mrustc[0], a Rust compiler that doesn't include a borrow-checker, so it's possible to compile (at least some versions of) Rust without a borrow checker, though it might not result in the most optimized code.
AFAIK there are some optimization like the infamous `noalias` optimization (which took several tries to get turned on[1]) that uses information established during borrow checking.
I'm also not sure what the relation with NLL (non-lexical lifetimes) is, where I would assume you would need at least a primitive borrow-checker to establish some information that the backend might be interested in. Then again, mrustc compiles Rust versions that have NLL features without a borrow-checker, so it's again probably more on the optimization side than being essential.
[0]: https://github.com/thepowersgang/mrustc
[1]: https://stackoverflow.com/a/57259339
- Running the "Reflections on Trusting Trust" Compiler
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Forty years of GNU and the free software movement
> Maybe another memory safe language, but Rust has severe bootstrapping issues which is a hard sell for distros that care about source to binary transparency.
It is possible to bootstrap rustc from just GCC relatively easily, although it's a little bit time consuming.
You can use mrustc to bootstrap Rust 1.54: https://github.com/thepowersgang/mrustc
And from then you can go through each version all the way to the current 1.72. (Each new Rust version officially needs the previous one to compile.)
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Building rustc on sparcv9 Solaris
Have you tried this route : https://github.com/thepowersgang/mrustc ?
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GCC 13 and the state of gccrs
Mrustc supports Rust 1.54.0 today
- Any alternate Rust compilers?
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Stop Comparing Rust to Old C++
There are three. The official one, mrustc (no borrow checker, but can essentially compile the official rustc) and GCC (can't really compile anything substantial yet). Only rustc is production-ready though.
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Can I make it so that only the newest version of Rust gets installed?
That probably depends on what you mean by problematic. Having an ever increasing chain of dependencies isn’t the most desirable situation so there has been some work to trim the bootstrap chain. In 2018, when the blogpost I linked above was written, mrustc was used to bootstrap rust 1.19.0; now mrustc can bootstrap rust 1.54.0 so the chain to recent versions is much shorter than if all those intervening versions back through 1.19.0 needed to be built. https://github.com/thepowersgang/mrustc
What are some alternatives?
rustig - A tool to detect code paths leading to Rust's panic handler
gccrs - GCC Front-End for Rust
gccrs - GCC Front-End for Rust
rfcs - RFCs for changes to Rust
rust-ttapi