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Rust: from POPL to practice (keynote)

Published:01 January 2017Publication History
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Abstract

In 2015, a language based fundamentally on substructural typing–Rust–hit its 1.0 release, and less than a year later it has been put into production use in a number of tech companies, including some household names. The language has started a trend, with several other mainstream languages, including C++ and Swift, in the early stages of incorporating ideas about ownership. How did this come about?

Rust’s core focus is safe systems programming. It does not require a runtime system or garbage collector, but guarantees memory safety. It does not stipulate any particular style of concurrent programming, but instead provides the tools needed to guarantee data race freedom even when doing low-level shared-state concurrency. It allows you to build up high-level abstractions without paying a tax; its compilation model ensures that the abstractions boil away.

These benefits derive from two core aspects of Rust: its ownership system (based on substructural typing) and its trait system (a descendant of Haskell’s typeclasses). The talk will cover these two pillars of Rust design, with particular attention to the key innovations that make the language usable at scale. It will highlight the implications for concurrency, where Rust provides a unique perspective. It will also touch on aspects of Rust’s development that tend to get less attention within the POPL community: Rust’s governance and open development process, and design considerations around language and library evolution. Finally, it will mention a few of the myriad open research questions around Rust.

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  1. Rust: from POPL to practice (keynote)

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    • Published in

      cover image ACM SIGPLAN Notices
      ACM SIGPLAN Notices  Volume 52, Issue 1
      POPL '17
      January 2017
      901 pages
      ISSN:0362-1340
      EISSN:1558-1160
      DOI:10.1145/3093333
      Issue’s Table of Contents
      • cover image ACM Conferences
        POPL '17: Proceedings of the 44th ACM SIGPLAN Symposium on Principles of Programming Languages
        January 2017
        901 pages
        ISBN:9781450346603
        DOI:10.1145/3009837

      Copyright © 2017 Owner/Author

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      Association for Computing Machinery

      New York, NY, United States

      Publication History

      • Published: 1 January 2017

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