Search icon CANCEL
Subscription
0
Cart icon
Your Cart (0 item)
Close icon
You have no products in your basket yet
Arrow left icon
Explore Products
Best Sellers
New Releases
Books
Videos
Audiobooks
Learning Hub
Conferences
Free Learning
Arrow right icon

Introducing Life: A cross-platform WebAssembly VM for decentralized Apps written in Go

Save for later
  • 2 min read
  • 06 Aug 2018

article-image
Perlin Networks, a scalable DAG-based distributed ledger protocol, introduced a new cross-platform WebAssembly VM named Life. This WebAssembly VM is secure, fast, written in Go and is built specifically for decentralized applications.

WebAssembly is a high-level instruction set which enables developers to easily design computationally heavy programs that can securely run on web browsers at an improved speed. Apart from designing programs for the browsers, this instruction set can also be used to train ML models, host databases, or even host blogs/online retail stores 24/7. This is the reason why Perlin networks used it in their project, Life.

Projects can easily run WebAssembly code anywhere by simply integrating the Life tool into their applications.

Features of Life

Life is Fast


It uses a wide range of optimization techniques and is faster than all other WebAssembly implementations tested (go-interpreter/wagon, paritytech/wasmi).

Life is Correct


It implements WebAssembly execution semantics and passes most of the official test suite.

Life is Secure


User code executed is fully sandboxed. A WebAssembly module's access to resources (instruction cycles, memory usage) may easily be controlled to the very finest detail.

Unlock access to the largest independent learning library in Tech for FREE!
Get unlimited access to 7500+ expert-authored eBooks and video courses covering every tech area you can think of.
Renews at €18.99/month. Cancel anytime

Life is Pure


This VM does not rely on any native dependencies, and may easily be cross-compiled for running WebAssembly modules on practically any platform such as Windows, Linux, Mac, Android, iOS, and so on.

Life is Practical


One can make full use of the minimal nature of WebAssembly to write code once and run anywhere. With Life, one can completely customize how WebAssembly module imports are resolved and integrated. A complete control over the execution lifecycle of the WebAssembly modules is also possible.

To know more about the WebAssembly based Life VM, visit its GitHub page.

Grain: A new functional programming language that compiles to Webassembly

WebAssembly comes to Qt. Now you can deploy your next Qt app in browser