The Linux Foundation has announced a free online course aimed at engineers working with RISC-V platforms. Titled 'Porting Software to RISC-V (LFD114)', it focuses on adapting software for these systems. Developers can enroll immediately to learn essential porting techniques.
The Linux Foundation, a prominent organization in open-source software, released details of its new educational offering on February 27, 2026. The course, "Porting Software to RISC-V (LFD114)", targets engineers who need to understand the nuances of RISC-V architecture, particularly what aspects change and remain consistent during software adaptation.
RISC-V, an open-standard instruction set architecture, is gaining traction in embedded and production systems. This free course is designed for developers porting C/C++ code, assembly, SIMD-optimized applications, operating system components, and firmware to RISC-V environments. It emphasizes practical skills for low-level engineering and systems programming.
"RISC-V platforms need engineers who understand what changes and what doesn't," the announcement states, highlighting the course's focus on real-world applicability. Enrollment is available at no cost via the provided link, making it accessible to professionals in fields like embedded systems and open hardware.
The initiative aligns with broader efforts to support RISC-V adoption, often compared to Arm architecture in terms of versatility. Hashtags associated with the post include #RISC-V, #ArmArchitecture, #LowLevelEngineering, #SystemsProgramming, #EmbeddedSystems, and #OpenHardware, underscoring its relevance to these communities.