rustdocs!!

This commit is contained in:
Pat Hickey
2021-02-01 18:01:47 -08:00
parent e511dac9ec
commit 0ef691b74e
2 changed files with 77 additions and 0 deletions

View File

@@ -1,3 +1,55 @@
//! ## The `WasiFile` and `WasiDir` traits
//!
//! The WASI specification only defines one `handle` type, `fd`, on which all
//! operations on both files and directories (aka dirfds) are defined. We
//! believe this is a design mistake, and are architecting wasi-common to make
//! this straightforward to correct in future snapshots of WASI. Wasi-common
//! internally treats files and directories as two distinct resource types in
//! the table - `Box<dyn WasiFile>` and `Box<dyn WasiDir>`. The snapshot 0 and
//! 1 interfaces via `fd` will attempt to downcast a table element to one or
//! both of these interfaces depending on what is appropriate - e.g.
//! `fd_close` operates on both files and directories, `fd_read` only operates
//! on files, and `fd_readdir` only operates on directories.
//! The `WasiFile` and `WasiDir` traits are defined by `wasi-common` in terms
//! of types defined directly in the crate's source code (I decided it should
//! NOT those generated by the `wiggle` proc macros, see snapshot architecture
//! below), as well as the `cap_std::time` family of types. And, importantly,
//! `wasi-common` itself provides no implementation of `WasiDir`, and only two
//! trivial implementations of `WasiFile` on the `crate::pipe::{ReadPipe,
//! WritePipe}` types, which in turn just delegate to `std::io::{Read,
//! Write}`. In order for `wasi-common` to access the local filesystem at all,
//! you need to provide `WasiFile` and `WasiDir` impls through either the new
//! `wasi-cap-std-sync` crate found at `crates/wasi-common/cap-std-sync` - see
//! the section on that crate below - or by providing your own implementation
//! from elsewhere.
//!
//! This design makes it possible for `wasi-common` embedders to statically
//! reason about access to the local filesystem by examining what impls are
//! linked into an application. We found that this separation of concerns also
//! makes it pretty enjoyable to write alternative implementations, e.g. a
//! virtual filesystem (which will land in a future PR).
//!
//! ## Traits for the rest of WASI's features
//!
//! Other aspects of a WASI implementation are not yet considered resources
//! and accessed by `handle`. We plan to correct this design deficiency in
//! WASI in the future, but for now we have designed the following traits to
//! provide embedders with the same sort of implementation flexibility they
//! get with WasiFile/WasiDir:
//!
//! * Timekeeping: `WasiSystemClock` and `WasiMonotonicClock` provide the two
//! interfaces for a clock. `WasiSystemClock` represents time as a
//! `cap_std::time::SystemTime`, and `WasiMonotonicClock` represents time as
//! `cap_std::time::Instant`. * Randomness: we re-use the `cap_rand::RngCore`
//! trait to represent a randomness source. A trivial `Deterministic` impl is
//! provided. * Scheduling: The `WasiSched` trait abstracts over the
//! `sched_yield` and `poll_oneoff` functions.
//!
//! Users can provide implementations of each of these interfaces to the
//! `WasiCtx::builder(...)` function. The
//! `wasi_cap_std_sync::WasiCtxBuilder::new()` function uses this public
//! interface to plug in its own implementations of each of these resources.
pub mod clocks;
mod ctx;
pub mod dir;

View File

@@ -1,2 +1,27 @@
//! One goal of `wasi-common` is for multiple WASI snapshots to provide an
//! interface to the same underlying `crate::WasiCtx`. This provides us a path
//! to evolve WASI by allowing the same WASI Command to import functions from
//! different snapshots - e.g. the user could use Rust's `std` which imports
//! snapshot 1, but also depend directly on the `wasi` crate which imports
//! some future snapshot 2. Right now, this amounts to supporting snapshot 1
//! and "snapshot 0" aka wasi_unstable at once.
//!
//! The architectural rules for snapshots are:
//!
//! * Snapshots are arranged into modules under `crate::snapshots::`.
//!
//! * Each snapshot should invoke `wiggle::from_witx!` with `ctx:
//! crate::WasiCtx` in its module, and impl all of the required traits.
//!
//!* Snapshots can be implemented in terms of other snapshots. For example,
//! snapshot 0 is mostly implemented by calling the snapshot 1 implementation,
//! and converting its own types back and forth with the snapshot 1 types. In a
//! few cases, that is not feasible, so snapshot 0 carries its own
//! implementations in terms of the `WasiFile` and `WasiSched` traits.
//!
//! * Snapshots can be implemented in terms of the `Wasi*` traits given by
//! `WasiCtx`. No further downcasting via the `as_any` escape hatch is
//! permitted.
pub mod preview_0;
pub mod preview_1;