All Articles

Ordered by Date Published : Year: "2021" Month: "04" Day: "14" Hour: "23"
Page: 1 (of 0)

Total Articles in this collection: 1

Navigation Help at the bottom of the page
Article: Rust in the Linux kernel - published about 3 years ago.
Content: Posted by Wedson Almeida Filho, Android Team In our previous post, we announced that Android now supports the Rust programming language for developing the OS itself. Related to this, we are also participating in the effort to evaluate the use of Rust as a supported language for developing the Linux kernel. In this post, we discuss some technical aspects of ...
http://security.googleblog.com/2021/04/rust-in-linux-kernel.html   
Published: 2021 04 14 23:27:00
Received: 2021 06 06 09:04:48
Feed: Google Online Security Blog
Source: Google Online Security Blog
Category: Cyber Security
Topic: Cyber Security
Article: Rust in the Linux kernel - published about 3 years ago.
Content: Posted by Wedson Almeida Filho, Android Team In our previous post, we announced that Android now supports the Rust programming language for developing the OS itself. Related to this, we are also participating in the effort to evaluate the use of Rust as a supported language for developing the Linux kernel. In this post, we discuss some technical aspects of ...
http://security.googleblog.com/2021/04/rust-in-linux-kernel.html   
Published: 2021 04 14 23:27:00
Received: 2021 06 06 09:04:48
Feed: Google Online Security Blog
Source: Google Online Security Blog
Category: Cyber Security
Topic: Cyber Security

All Articles

Ordered by Date Published : Year: "2021" Month: "04" Day: "14" Hour: "23"
Page: 1 (of 0)

Total Articles in this collection: 1


  • "All Articles" links back to the front page, effectivly the Planet "Home Page"; shows all articles, with no selections, or groupings.
  • Default date ordering is by "Received Date" (due to not all RSS feeds having a "Published Date").
  • Only Published Date selections use the articles Published Date.
  • The first page always shows fifty items plus from zero to up to a remaining forty-nine items, before they are commited permently to the next page.
  • All subsequent pages show fifty items.
  • Pagination is in reverse ordering (so that pages are permamenent links, aka "permalinks", to their content).
  • "<<" moves you to the first page (aka newest articles)
  • ">>" moves you to the last page (aka oldest articles)
  • "<" moves you to the previous page (aka newer articles)
  • ">" moves you to the next page (aka older articles)
  • Return to the top of this page Go Now

Custom HTML Block

Click to Open Code Editor