09-28, 15:30–16:00 (UTC), Kuppel
To bring cool ideas to life, the Linux kernel and user space need to work together. The core kernel is a stable ABI base, a common denominator for everything that builds on top. In contrast, BPF is a specific know-how, a secret sauce of the cool idea. The Linux kernel needs BPF to stay relevant, and BPF has to become friendlier to programmers. This talk explores the steps taken towards this long-term goal, from recently introduced BPF-to-BPF functions and type information to bounded loops, memory allocation, and beyond.
A self-taught software engineer. Interested in low-level and embedded programming. Working at Red Hat Common Logging team. Founder of the DIGImend project. Born in Russia, living in Finland.