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The RISE RISC-V Runners: free, native RISC-V CI on GitHub

I’m a fan of this, although I’m concerned about the security/trust model: using a third-party CI orchestrator on top of GHA means trusting them with all of your secrets, potentially sensitive logs, etc. Those concerns are somewhat lessened in the context of public repos, but even public repos contain nontrivial workflows that use configured secrets.

an hour agowoodruffw

My experience with RISC-V so far is that the chips are not much faster than QEMU emulation. In other words, it's very slow.

an hour agostabbles

That has been the case so far but is changing this year.

The SpacemiT K3 is faster than QEMU. Much faster chips are expected to release over the next few months.

I mean things like the Milk-V Pioneer were already faster but expensive.

One thing that has been frustrating about RISC-V is that many companies close to releasing decent chips have been bought and then those chips never appear (Ventana, Rivos, etc). That and US sanctions (eg. Sophgo SG2380).

24 minutes agoLeFantome

Oftentimes slow is fine, when the work is parallel and the hardware is cheap

an hour agoOsrsNeedsf2P

Sadly still on quite old hardware, with no RVV. Hopefully scaleway will have some newer servers in the future and this can be simply updated to the new devices.

an hour agocamel-cdr

Very good move. Hopefully GitHub won't ruin this with their CI charging changes.

an hour agoIshKebab

..is this RVA23?

33 minutes agoboredatoms

Not yet

RV64GC (C910 cores)

23 minutes agoLeFantome

Perfect for snooping on other people’s projects. No one in their right mind would touch this. It’s cheaper to buy the board yourself.

2 hours agoWestern0

Yes, what a devious plan: give open source software projects a free CI service so you can... read their open source software code?

an hour agojubilanti

diabolical

an hour agodownrightmike

devious

9 minutes agothroawayonthe

It seems to be a Linux Foundation project, my trust is implicit higher than what you're claiming. Why wouldn't you trust them?

It's also aimed at open-source projects, for free, with the intent to improve RISC-V support.

2 hours agomhitza

people better not be snooping on my public open source projects!

2 hours agoctz

RISE is supported by many legit companies. Stealing is for sure not the intent.

The idea is to promote testing on RISC-V and to eliminate lack of hardware for being the reason not to. Obviously, low budget projects and Open Source are the primary targets. Commercial products can afford real RISC-V hardware.

This is who you are trusting: https://riseproject.dev/members/

an hour agoLeFantome

The target for this is open-source projects.