This line of thinking brought forth an intriguing proposition: Could Forth, known for its interactive and intimate relationship with hardware, be an innovative foundation for cloud and serverless environments? Here are some focal points:
- Interactive System Access: Forth allows for direct memory inspection and modification, potentially streamlining debugging and profiling.
- Minimal Attack Surface: With its compact footprint (often <100KB), Forth’s attack surface is reduced, suggesting enhanced security.
- Parallel Execution Potential: By statically analyzing the Forth dictionary, one could assign specific words or tasks to individual CPU cores, reminiscent of the thread-per-core approach, and potentially bypass traditional thread management overheads.
Given these traits, might Forth be a suitable base for crafting highly efficient, secure, and parallelized systems for specialized cloud applications? Are there pitfalls or challenges I might be overlooking in this approach?
Mindful, this will be a new kind of Forth, one built for Big Iron servers, and where HW resource are prime real state, this could be a very interesting approach to hardness more of the potential on “bare metal”.
I’m eager to gather the community’s insights on this intriguing prospect.