electrolysis
Rudra
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electrolysis | Rudra | |
---|---|---|
2 | 11 | |
322 | 1,293 | |
- | 2.1% | |
10.0 | 5.5 | |
about 7 years ago | about 1 month ago | |
Lean | Rust | |
GNU General Public License v3.0 or later | Apache License 2.0 |
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electrolysis
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What Vale Taught Me About Linear Types, Borrowing, and Memory Safety
How do you represent this?
However, this insight holds for relatively common forms of ownership, and you can see this exploited in electrolysis: https://github.com/Kha/electrolysis
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Magma, a project I hope will make provably correct software possible for everyone
In my opinion the best way of going about it is translating the Rust to Coq that has the same semantics (but different performance) as pioneered in https://github.com/Kha/electrolysis. Unfortunately that project isn't usable today as it requires an ancient version of Rust and Lean.
Rudra
- Rudra – static analyzer to detect common undefined behaviors in Rust programs
- Rudra: Finding Memory Safety Bugs in Rust at the Ecosystem Scale [pdf]
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Does Rust not need extra linting and sanitizing tools like C++?
If you’re writing unsafe Rust, you might consider cargo miri and Rudra as additional static analyzers which can find bugs rustc won’t
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Open Rust-related systems research problems suitable for PhD?
In my opinion, much of Rust-specific PhD research likely to be publishable and/or high impact either falls into verification (e.g Prusti, Cruesot) or bug-finding (e.g. Rudra, SyRust). Ralf Jung and his collaborators have done exceptional work in the verification space.
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Introducing Fortify: A simple and convenient way to bundle owned data with a borrowing type
Perhaps Rudra as well.
- Magma, a project I hope will make provably correct software possible for everyone
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Is There Anyway To Analyze Unsafe Rust Code For Vulnerabilities?
Haven't used it myself, but I remembered a tool called Rudra was recently posted about in the sub
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Scylla – Real-Time Big Data Database
Not sure proves your point, but maybe doesn't disprove your point strongly enough. I am not qualified to argue from experience about how Rust is ideally suited in the ways you think it is not. But from everything I have seen, it can do a whole lot of what C++ is also good at. Rust safety is not all or nothing and a codebase could definitely prioritize ergonomics over correctness.
Two things that I saw in the last couple weeks that might start to sway you.
https://github.com/sslab-gatech/Rudra#readme
GhostCell: Separating Permissions from Data in Rust
- Rudra, Rust Memory Safety and Undefined Behavior Detection
- Rudra: Rust Memory Safety and Undefined Behavior Detection
What are some alternatives?
line-combination-proofs
magmide - A dependently-typed proof language intended to make provably correct bare metal code possible for working software engineers.
fiat - Mostly Automated Synthesis of Correct-by-Construction Programs
prusti-dev - A static verifier for Rust, based on the Viper verification infrastructure.
project-safe-transmute - Project group working on the "safe transmute" feature
rust-verification-tools - RVT is a collection of tools/libraries to support both static and dynamic verification of Rust programs.
tectonic - A modernized, complete, self-contained TeX/LaTeX engine, powered by XeTeX and TeXLive.
rust - Rust for the xtensa architecture. Built in targets for the ESP32 and ESP8266
advisory-db - Security advisory database for Rust crates published through crates.io