Abstract
The work details efforts to port a syscall interception library to RISC-V, addressing limitations to support a functional RISC-V ecosystem.
The European Union technological sovereignty strategy centers around the RISC-V Instruction Set Architecture, with the European Processor Initiative leading efforts to build production-ready processors. Focusing on realizing a functional RISC-V ecosystem, the BZL initiative (www.bzl.es) is making an effort to create a software stack along with the hardware. In this work, we detail the efforts made in porting a widely used syscall interception library, mainly used on AdHocFS (i.e., DAOS, GekkoFS), to RISC-V and how we overcame some of the limitations encountered.
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