X-Git-Url: https://git.ralfj.de/web.git/blobdiff_plain/e033d6a32a2432def813fc091dc7b397bf664597..fc39cbcd52936052ef53bbffe642f9fe09f4d0b4:/research/index.html diff --git a/research/index.html b/research/index.html index 2616ea6..02f636d 100644 --- a/research/index.html +++ b/research/index.html @@ -2,20 +2,29 @@ title: Ralf Jung --- -
+ -I am a post-doctoral researcher in the PDOS group at MIT CSAIL under the supervision of Frans Kaashoek and Nickolai Zeldovich.
-Previously, I completed my PhD at MPI-SWS and Saarland University in Saarbrücken, Germany; my advisor was Derek Dreyer.
I am assistant professor at ETH Zürich, leading the Programming Language Foundations Lab. +We are part of the Institute for Programming Languages and Systems. +Previously, I completed my PhD at MPI-SWS and Saarland University in Saarbrücken, Germany; my advisor was Derek Dreyer. +I also did a post-doc in the PDOS group at MIT CSAIL. +
-I will start my position as assistant professor at ETH Zürich on November 1st. -If you are interested in doing a PhD or post-doc working on programming language foundations, and in particular formal foundations for Rust, or if you are an ETH student interested in a Master Thesis in that area -- please [reach out](https://research.ralfj.de/contact.html)!
+My two main lines of work are about Rust and Iris.
-On the Rust side, I am working (also in collaboration with the Rust language team) towards a solid formal foundation for the language, including in particular the unsafe parts.
-One key result here is our type safety proof, which also describes a methodology for establishing type safety of well-encapsulated unsafe code.
-My goal is to make unsafe Rust just as safe as safe Rust by means of formal verification.
-On the Iris side, besides continuing development of its logical foundations, I am interested in applying Iris to new problem domains; recently I started working on modular verification of fault-tolerant distributed system components.
-For some more information, check out my research blog, my CV, and my research statement.
In my free time, I like to run internet services myself and work on free software. This goes hand-in-hand with my pursuit of defending our privacy rights and our freedom in the digital world.