Inside the BEAM: Björn Gustavsson on Maps, Records, and Runtime Design

Inside the BEAM: Björn Gustavsson on Maps, Records, and Runtime Design

From BEAM There, Done That by Plangora

May 22, 2026 · 55 min · Season 1 · Episode 12

About this episode

Björn Gustavsson discusses the evolution of the Erlang runtime and its new native data type, exploring the history and architectural decisions behind records and maps.

For the first time in over a decade, the Erlang runtime is gaining a new native data type — and on this episode of BEAM There, Done That, hosts Francesco Cesarini and Allan Wyma sit down with Björn Gustavsson, known by many as the “B” in BEAM. Björn takes listeners deep into the history of records, maps, tag bits, and the architectural trade-offs that shaped the Erlang runtime from the 1990s to today. The discussion explores why records were originally implemented as a hack, why maps never fully replaced them, and what finally made native records possible after nearly 30 years. Along the way, the episode becomes a rare tour through BEAM internals, compiler design, runtime tagging, and the practical realities of evolving a production VM used at massive scale. If you care about language design, runtime systems, or the history and future of Erlang/OTP, this is one of the deepest technical conversations the podcast has released.

People in this episode

Hosts: Francesco Cesarini, Allan Wyma

Guest: Björn Gustavsson

Topics covered

  • Erlang runtime
  • data types
  • maps
  • records
  • compiler design
  • runtime systems
  • language design

Keywords

  • Erlang
  • BEAM
  • data types
  • runtime design
  • maps
  • records
  • compiler
  • architecture
  • tag bits
  • VM

Mentioned in this episode

Organizations: Erlang, BEAM, Erlang/OTP

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