WebAssembly (WASM) is emerging as a powerful tool beyond its browser origins, enabling safer, more flexible, and more efficient execution across a wide range of enterprise applications.
In this session, we’ll take a hands-on look at real-world use cases, including:
Attendees will leave with a clearer understanding of WASM's growing role in the enterprise world and a set of practical techniques to overcome initial hiccups and doubts and start using the technology in their projects.
In this session, we’ll take a hands-on look at real-world use cases, including:
- When and why you might need WASM to bootstrap an ecosystem purely on the JVM -- JRuby
- How to make slow-starting interpreters practical for fast UDFs in databases by reducing startup overhead -- TrinoDB
- Running WASM sandboxes on the hot path while minimizing serialization overhead through lazy access to host memory -- Debezium
Attendees will leave with a clearer understanding of WASM's growing role in the enterprise world and a set of practical techniques to overcome initial hiccups and doubts and start using the technology in their projects.
Andrea Peruffo
IBM
Andrea Peruffo is a Principal Software Engineer at IBM(previously Red Hat), with nearly two decades of experience building developer tools, compilers, runtime infrastructure, and programming languages.
As the lead maintainer of Chicory, a pure‑Java, zero‑native‑dependency WebAssembly runtime, he empowers JVM applications with secure, portable, and extensible Wasm execution.
Andrea is a frequent speaker at conferences like QCon London and Wasm I/O, contributing regularly to open‑source innovation.
When he's not deep in code, you'll find him exploring new language paradigms or collaborating on open‑source projects, always eager to share insights and learn from others.
As the lead maintainer of Chicory, a pure‑Java, zero‑native‑dependency WebAssembly runtime, he empowers JVM applications with secure, portable, and extensible Wasm execution.
Andrea is a frequent speaker at conferences like QCon London and Wasm I/O, contributing regularly to open‑source innovation.
When he's not deep in code, you'll find him exploring new language paradigms or collaborating on open‑source projects, always eager to share insights and learn from others.