LLVM/MLIR Intermediate Representation with Machine Learning and Python/C++ Implementation - LLVM AI agent training included - Mecca-Research/Binary-Correspondence-Intermediate-Representation Read more ›
How Clef delivers memory safety and liveness integrity for multi-threaded and multi-process applications Read more ›
Browser tools for serial consoles, BPIO2 GPIO/I2C/SPI control, firmware flashing, programming and logic analysis. Read more ›
Proper TCP socket splicing reduces the load on userspace processes and enables more efficient data forwarding. We realized that Linux Kernel's SOCKMAP infrastructure can be reused for this purpose. Read more ›
Mathematicians manipulate sets with confidence almost every day, rarely making mistakes. Few of us, however, could accurately quote what are often referred to as "the" axioms of set theory. This suggests that we all carry around with us, perhaps subconsciously, a reliable body of operating principles for manipulating sets. What if we were to take some of those principles and adopt them as our axioms instead? The message of this article is that this can be done, in a simple, practical way (due... Read more ›
Overview The SignalRGB kernel driver, SignalIo.sys, contains two vulnerabilities involving improper access control and unsafe memory handling. The device object is created with an overly permissive Discretionary Access Control List (DACL) that allows user-mode processes to access privileged hardware operations through input/output control (IOCTL) commands. Additionally, several IOCTL handlers are susceptible to NULL pointer dereference conditions, which further enables low-privilege users to ... Read more ›
First, I want to tell you how exactly I got to this point and why I started researching different options for handling asynchronous I/O on Linux… Last year, my students and I built a reverse proxy server called TinyGate. It was super simple, worker-based, and it basically worked well. Of course, I didn’t expect it to be very fast, but it was an educational project, and since we’d made a real, kind of production-ready tool, I was really proud of it. But my students weren’t as happy as I was - ... Read more ›
The ESP32 Bus Pirate project has been renamed ESP32 Bit Pirate as part of its continued development as an ESP32-S3-based multi-protocol firmware platform. The open-source project, developed by Geo-tp, turns supported ESP32-S3 boards into debugging and experimentation tools for wired protocols, radio interfaces, scripting, and browser-based interaction. The project remains inspired by the original Bus Pirate, but it now extends… Read more ›
Greetings, Ladies and Gentlemen! In one of our previous publications entitled “The Tokio Runtime For Rust: Part I, WebSocket.”, Read more ›
Discover how migrating your WooCommerce or Magento store to UK-based NVMe bare metal servers directly increases your checkout conversion rate. Read more ›
Having , the context switch between code bases is starting to become a problem. Thinking about how we can improve this going forward. Ideally each major app or platform would have someone leading it. Read more ›
In May 2026, the Bun team did something the software industry has been whispering about for years: they rewrote their entire runtime from Zig to Rust. Not over the course of a year with a dedicated team. In six days. Using AI agents. At nearly a million lines of code, Read more ›
Power is the binding constraint on new GPU deployments. Operators who already hold energized space are looking to convert compute demand into revenue themselves. Colocation facilities and former bitcoin miners are moving up the stack into bare metal and GPU-as-a-Service. And colocation facilities can finance the climb on better terms than the new neoclouds they compete with. … [] Read more ›
Welcome to the six hundred and fiftieth issue of LLVM Weekly, a weekly newsletter (published every Monday) covering developments in LLVM, Clang, and related projects. LLVM Weekly is brought to you by Alex Bradbury. Subscribe to future issues at and pass it on to anyone else you think may be interested. Please send any tips or feedback via email: asb@asbradbury.org, or Mastodon: @llvmweekly@fosstodon.org / @asb@fosstodon.org, or Bluesky: @llvmweekly.org / @asbradbury.org. Read more ›
History of Science and Technology Research Directions in Number Theory in China from the 1950s to the 1970s 20 世纪 50-70 年代中国数论的研究方向 Wei Lei / Zou Dahai (1. Institute of Mathematics, Chinese Academy of Sciences, Beijing 100190; 2. Institute for … → Read more ›