Posted Mon, 23 Dec 2019 18:00:00 +0000

In the first of our mini-interviews from RustFest 2019, we talk to Oliver Scherer about Miri, an interpreter for rustc’s internal bytecode, its use in const -evaluation, and its potential as an external tool for sanitizing unsafe code.

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[@01:15] - What is const -evaluation and what can you do with it?

-evaluation and what can you do with it? [@03:23] - What is Miri and how long has it been in development?

[@07:05] - What does the future hold for Miri?

[@07:54] - How long have you been working on rustc and Miri?

[@12:22] - How much of Miri does rustc use today?

[@13:33] - How does Miri help people detect undefined behavior in unsafe code?

code? [@16:46] - How would a user begin using Miri directly to test their unsafe code?

code? [@19:15] - What happens if you try to const -evaluate unsafe code?

-evaluate code? [@20:33] - What’s next for const -evaluation in rustc?

-evaluation in rustc? [@21:58] - Who else is helping to develop Miri?

Credits

Intro Theme: Aerocity

Audio Editing: alphastrata

Hosting Infrastructure: Jon Gjengset

Show Notes: Ben Striegel

Hosts: Ben Striegel