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Consider collecting proposals for 2024H2 Rust Project Goals #775
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I'd maybe possibly like to add a Project Goal around preserving the ability to use global mutable statics? I know this is controversial, but my personal opinion is that making them effectively unusable because of increasingly fancy memory models is not a great way forward for the Project, especially for the embedded folks. We'd have to work out the specifics of what we wanted, but things like breaking the ability to take a mutable reference to a global static in unsafe code seem especially vexing to me. Thoughts? |
@BartMassey not sure if this is the right venue to discuss this either, but I can leave some quick notes, and happy to follow up in chat or somewhere else.
To be clear, it's not like there is a fully specified memory model for items like this, and folks are proposing a new one that breaks things. The "current state" is that a lot of these details are entirely underspecified (for all of C, C++, and Rust!), and the fact that they happen to work is leaning on implementation details of different compilers and optimizers, that are allowed to break and change at any time! I feel very strongly that:
We generally never should have been doing some of the things that we were doing with |
At work (NXP), we’re currently evaluating Rust to program some of our firmwares. The platform I’m currently working on is based on a Cortex-M33 with a TrustZone-M, and I’ve come to discover that even the base for the TrustZone-M support (cmse_nonsecure_entry and abi_c_cmse_nonsecure_call) are still unstable features. I’ve seen that the |
@jamesmunns Absolutely agree with your points. The specific use case that finally set me off 🙃 was this: in one of the Discovery Book examples we have a couple of global |
@BartMassey (this is my last response here, let's take the discussion elsewhere): The primary driver for removing |
Maybe #774 is worth considering here. |
To note here, two of my colleagues have been making PRs for this. I wanted to write that they're still open, but apparently they've just been merged! Tracking issues: (Seems like there's not much left) |
I'd like to amend my previous proposal around mutable statics to be way more general as a Project Goal: "Stabilize and clearly document Rust memory semantics." This is important for everybody, not just embedded, but it really matters a lot to us. Mara's book is a fantastic start, but I feel like we don't even have a fully-specified model yet, or if we do I don't think I understand it at this point, and I'm not sure a huge number of other people do either. Recent discussions I've been part of are I think not promising in this regard, but maybe it's just me. I'm kind of surprised this isn't already a Project Goal. I'm not sure we can own it, since there's folks on the compiler team who are doing most of the work, but we could at least raise it as an "orphaned" goal. Thoughts? |
Perhaps we could define a more specific goal, focused on requirements of embedded rust. Something like "Soundness requirements for embedded targets should be documented." There are a lot of questions that (to my knowledge) are not really answered by any official rust documentation:
Even if we can't answer all of these questions without the compiler team, we could at least make suggestions, stating what we'd like the answers to be and what the consequences for embedded rust would be if the answers were different. |
RFC3614 introduced "Project Goals" which are intended to steer the focus and "big picture" of work in the project. The initial batch of goals, "2024H2", have already been selected.
Some external teams, like Rust for Linux, have articulated their desires for the project, and have been included on the "accepted" list.
As a WG, we could consider enumerating any goals we would like to propose to be added for the next selection process, "2025H1", which will begin discussions in October 2024, and will be selected in December 2024.
I'd like to recommend we consider whether there are any coherent goals we can propose to be part of the next project, to support any stumbling blocks in the embedded ecosystem, or to better position Rust as a preferrable choice for embedded development.
Originally posted by @jamesmunns in #773 (comment)
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