Commit Graph

123 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nick Fitzgerald
090d1c2d32 cranelift: Port most of simple_preopt.rs over to the peepmatic DSL
This ports all of the identity, no-op, simplification, and canonicalization
related optimizations over from being hand-coded to the `peepmatic` DSL. This
does not handle the branch-to-branch optimizations or most of the
divide-by-constant optimizations.
2020-05-14 07:52:23 -07:00
Alex Crichton
962f057c8a Remove no-longer-needed C shims (#1686)
The published version of `libc` now has all that's necessary to natively
read these fields!
2020-05-12 16:01:13 -05:00
SlightlyOutOfPhase
5394b6c72e Update staticvec dependency from 0.8 to 0.9 (#1676)
* Update staticvec dependency from 0.8 to 0.9

* Update lockfile also
2020-05-11 09:22:06 -05:00
Julian Seward
94190d5724 cranelift/reader/src/parser.rs: fn parse_inst_resuts: produce the results as a
SmallVec<[Value; 1]>, not as a Vec<Value>.  This isn't a useful change for any
non-developer use of Cranelift, but it does significantly reduce the amount of
allocation "noise" seen when tuning the new backend pipeline as driven by
clif-util reading .clif files.  In one case the number of malloc calls
declined by about 20% with this change.
2020-05-11 12:27:15 +02:00
Andrew Brown
b65bd1c8a2 Add an interpret command to clif-util 2020-05-07 16:51:09 -07:00
Andrew Brown
b26ca3cbdd Add test interpret support to filetests 2020-05-07 16:51:09 -07:00
Andrew Brown
b4238229c2 Cast DataValues to and from native types
Also, returns a `Result` in the `RunCommand::run` helper.
2020-05-07 16:51:09 -07:00
Benjamin Bouvier
4f919c6460 machinst: bump regalloc to 0.0.23 and return a slice on the successor indexes, in block_succs; 2020-05-07 12:24:02 +02:00
Julian Seward
48521393ae Update to regalloc.rs version 0.22. 2020-05-06 20:16:31 +02:00
Alex Crichton
57fb1c69c5 Enable the multi-value proposal by default (#1667)
This was merged into the wasm spec upstream in WebAssembly/spec#1145, so
let's follow the spec and enable it by default here as well!
2020-05-06 12:37:29 -05:00
Alex Crichton
a7d90af19d Update wasmparser and wast dependencies (#1663)
Brings in updates to SIMD spec ops renumbering.
2020-05-05 16:13:14 -05:00
Andrew Brown
38dff29179 Add ability to call CLIF functions with arbitrary arguments in filetests
This resolves the work started in https://github.com/bytecodealliance/cranelift/pull/1231 and https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/pull/1436. Cranelift filetests currently have the ability to run CLIF functions with a signature like `() -> b*` and check that the result is true under the `test run` directive. This PR adds the ability to call functions with arbitrary arguments and non-boolean returns and either print the result or check against a list of expected results:
 - `run` commands look like `; run: %add(2, 2) == 4` or `; run: %add(2, 2) != 5` and verify that the executed CLIF function returns the expected value
 - `print` commands look like `; print: %add(2, 2)` and print the result of the function to stdout

To make this work, this PR compiles a single Cranelift `Function` into a `CompiledFunction` using a `SingleFunctionCompiler`. Because we will not know the signature of the function until runtime, we use a `Trampoline` to place the values in the appropriate location for the calling convention; this should look a lot like what @alexcrichton is doing with `VMTrampoline` in wasmtime (see 3b7cb6ee64/crates/api/src/func.rs (L510-L526), 3b7cb6ee64/crates/jit/src/compiler.rs (L260)). To avoid re-compiling `Trampoline`s for the same function signatures, `Trampoline`s are cached in the `SingleFunctionCompiler`.
2020-04-30 11:21:00 -07:00
Dan Gohman
864cf98c8d Update release notes, wasmtime 0.16, cranelift 0.63. 2020-04-29 17:30:25 -07:00
Jef
957677c6f5 Integrate Lightbeam with latest Wasmtime master (#1232)
* Implement trap info in Lightbeam

* Start using wasm-reader instead of wasmparser for parsing operators

* Update to use wasm-reader, some reductions in allocation, support source location tracking for traps, start to support multi-value

The only thing that still needs to be supported for multi-value is stack returns, but we need to make it compatible with Cranelift.

* Error when running out of registers (although we'd hope it should be impossible) instead of panicking

* WIP: Update Lightbeam to work with latest Wasmtime

* WIP: Update Lightbeam to use current wasmtime

* WIP: Migrate to new system for builtin functions

* WIP: Update Lightbeam to work with latest Wasmtime

* Remove multi_mut

* Format

* Fix some bugs around arguments, add debuginfo offset tracking

* Complete integration with new Wasmtime

* Remove commented code

* Fix formatting

* Fix warnings, remove unused dependencies

* Fix `iter` if there are too many elements, fix compilation for latest wasmtime

* Fix float arguments on stack

* Remove wasm-reader and trap info work

* Allocate stack space _before_ passing arguments, fail if we can't zero a xmm reg

* Fix stack argument offset calculation

* Fix stack arguments in Lightbeam

* Re-add WASI because it somehow got removed during rebase

* Workaround for apparent `type_alias_impl_trait`-related bug in rustdoc

* Fix breakages caused by rebase, remove module offset info as it is unrelated to wasmtime integration PR and was broken by rebase

* Add TODO comment explaining `lightbeam::ModuleContext` trait
2020-04-29 16:26:40 -07:00
Chris Fallin
be6f060abf Use new regalloc.rs version with dense vreg->rreg maps.
This PR updates Cranelift to use the new version of regalloc.rs
(bytecodealliance/regalloc.rs#55) that provides dense vreg->rreg maps to
the `map_reg()` function for each instruction, rather than the earlier
hashmap-based approach.

In one test (regex-rs.wasm), this PR results in a 15% reduction in
memory allocations (1245MB -> 1060MB) as measured by DHAT on `clif-util
wasm` runs.
2020-04-29 10:42:25 -07:00
Benjamin Bouvier
983c2a0873 Bump regalloc.rs to 0.0.20; 2020-04-29 13:38:30 +02:00
Chris Fallin
b691770faa MachInst backend: pass through SourceLoc information.
This change adds SourceLoc information per instruction in a `VCode<Inst>`
container, and keeps this information up-to-date across register allocation
and branch reordering. The information is initially collected during
instruction lowering, eventually collected on the MachSection, and finally
provided to the environment that wraps the codegen crate for wasmtime.
2020-04-24 13:18:01 -07:00
Pat Hickey
25cbd8b591 wiggle-generate: paramaterize library on module path to runtime (#1574)
* wiggle-generate: paramaterize library on module path to runtime

This change makes no functional difference to users who only use the
wiggle crate.

Add a parameter to the `Names` constructor that determines the module
that runtime components (e.g. GuestPtr, GuestError etc) of wiggle come
from. For `wiggle` users this is just `quote!(wiggle)`, but other
libraries which consume wiggle-generate may wrap and re-export wiggle
under some other path, and not want their consumers to have to know
about the wiggle dependency, e.g. `quote!(my_crate::some_path::wiggle)`.

* wiggle-generate,macro: move more logic into macro

better for code reuse elsewhere
2020-04-22 09:16:21 -05:00
Alex Crichton
c9a0ba81a0 Implement interrupting wasm code, reimplement stack overflow (#1490)
* Implement interrupting wasm code, reimplement stack overflow

This commit is a relatively large change for wasmtime with two main
goals:

* Primarily this enables interrupting executing wasm code with a trap,
  preventing infinite loops in wasm code. Note that resumption of the
  wasm code is not a goal of this commit.

* Additionally this commit reimplements how we handle stack overflow to
  ensure that host functions always have a reasonable amount of stack to
  run on. This fixes an issue where we might longjmp out of a host
  function, skipping destructors.

Lots of various odds and ends end up falling out in this commit once the
two goals above were implemented. The strategy for implementing this was
also lifted from Spidermonkey and existing functionality inside of
Cranelift. I've tried to write up thorough documentation of how this all
works in `crates/environ/src/cranelift.rs` where gnarly-ish bits are.

A brief summary of how this works is that each function and each loop
header now checks to see if they're interrupted. Interrupts and the
stack overflow check are actually folded into one now, where function
headers check to see if they've run out of stack and the sentinel value
used to indicate an interrupt, checked in loop headers, tricks functions
into thinking they're out of stack. An interrupt is basically just
writing a value to a location which is read by JIT code.

When interrupts are delivered and what triggers them has been left up to
embedders of the `wasmtime` crate. The `wasmtime::Store` type has a
method to acquire an `InterruptHandle`, where `InterruptHandle` is a
`Send` and `Sync` type which can travel to other threads (or perhaps
even a signal handler) to get notified from. It's intended that this
provides a good degree of flexibility when interrupting wasm code. Note
though that this does have a large caveat where interrupts don't work
when you're interrupting host code, so if you've got a host import
blocking for a long time an interrupt won't actually be received until
the wasm starts running again.

Some fallout included from this change is:

* Unix signal handlers are no longer registered with `SA_ONSTACK`.
  Instead they run on the native stack the thread was already using.
  This is possible since stack overflow isn't handled by hitting the
  guard page, but rather it's explicitly checked for in wasm now. Native
  stack overflow will continue to abort the process as usual.

* Unix sigaltstack management is now no longer necessary since we don't
  use it any more.

* Windows no longer has any need to reset guard pages since we no longer
  try to recover from faults on guard pages.

* On all targets probestack intrinsics are disabled since we use a
  different mechanism for catching stack overflow.

* The C API has been updated with interrupts handles. An example has
  also been added which shows off how to interrupt a module.

Closes #139
Closes #860
Closes #900

* Update comment about magical interrupt value

* Store stack limit as a global value, not a closure

* Run rustfmt

* Handle review comments

* Add a comment about SA_ONSTACK

* Use `usize` for type of `INTERRUPTED`

* Parse human-readable durations

* Bring back sigaltstack handling

Allows libstd to print out stack overflow on failure still.

* Add parsing and emission of stack limit-via-preamble

* Fix new example for new apis

* Fix host segfault test in release mode

* Fix new doc example
2020-04-21 11:03:28 -07:00
Alex Crichton
967827f4b5 Remove wasi-common's dependency on num (#1557)
This dependency was unfortunately causing rebuilds switching between
`cargo test` and `cargo build` since the `num` crate had different
features activated in testbuild mode. Instead of fixing this I went
ahead and just removed the small dependency on the `num` crate in the
`wasi-common` crate, opting for simple local definitions or using the
standard library's endian-switching methods.
2020-04-20 10:04:44 -05:00
Alex Crichton
a93604f797 Update some deps to cut down on rebuilds (#1551)
This updates a few dependencies to avoid rebuilding extraneously when
possible on CI. While this doesn't fix everything it should at least be
part of the solution!
2020-04-18 12:21:48 -05:00
Alex Crichton
4c82da440a Move most wasmtime tests into one test suite (#1544)
* Move most wasmtime tests into one test suite

This commit moves most wasmtime tests into a single test suite which
gets compiled into one executable instead of having lots of test
executables. The goal here is to reduce disk space on CI, and this
should be achieved by having fewer executables which means fewer copies
of `libwasmtime.rlib` linked across binaries on the system. More
importantly though this means that DWARF debug information should only
be in one executable rather than duplicated across many.

* Share more build caches

Globally set `RUSTFLAGS` to `-Dwarnings` instead of individually so all
build steps share the same value.

* Allow some dead code in cranelift-codegen

Prevents having to fix all warnings for all possible feature
combinations, only the main ones which come up.

* Update some debug file paths
2020-04-17 17:22:12 -05:00
Peter Huene
f7e9f86ba9 Refactor unwind generation in Cranelift.
This commit makes the following changes to unwind information generation in
Cranelift:

* Remove frame layout change implementation in favor of processing the prologue
  and epilogue instructions when unwind information is requested.  This also
  means this work is no longer performed for Windows, which didn't utilize it.
  It also helps simplify the prologue and epilogue generation code.

* Remove the unwind sink implementation that required each unwind information
  to be represented in final form. For FDEs, this meant writing a
  complete frame table per function, which wastes 20 bytes or so for each
  function with duplicate CIEs.  This also enables Cranelift users to collect the
  unwind information and write it as a single frame table.

* For System V calling convention, the unwind information is no longer stored
  in code memory (it's only a requirement for Windows ABI to do so).  This allows
  for more compact code memory for modules with a lot of functions.

* Deletes some duplicate code relating to frame table generation.  Users can
  now simply use gimli to create a frame table from each function's unwind
  information.

Fixes #1181.
2020-04-16 11:15:32 -07:00
Chris Fallin
7da6101732 Merge pull request #1494 from cfallin/arm64-merge
Add new `MachInst` backend and ARM64 support.
2020-04-16 10:02:02 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c268704743 Trim some unused deps from wasmtime-environ (#1515)
Was poking around but looks like these are no longer needed
2020-04-16 10:50:32 -05:00
Alex Crichton
59a502c8de Update the wat/wast crates (#1511)
Pulls in a fix for a fuzz bug found recently where `br_on_null` might
not resolve indices and could cause a panic.
2020-04-15 11:08:22 -05:00
Alex Crichton
6dde222992 Add a spec test fuzzer for Config (#1509)
* Add a spec test fuzzer for Config

This commit adds a new fuzzer which is intended to run on oss-fuzz. This
fuzzer creates and arbitrary `Config` which *should* pass spec tests and
then asserts that it does so. The goal here is to weed out any
accidental bugs in global configuration which could cause
non-spec-compliant behavior.

* Move implementation to `fuzzing` crate
2020-04-15 08:29:12 -05:00
Alex Crichton
27bee2a1a8 Switch CI back to nightly channel (#1503)
Looks like `proptest` has been updated so we can move back to the
`nightly` channel rather than pinning.
2020-04-13 15:40:44 -05:00
Chris Fallin
402303f67a ARM64 backend, part 10 / 11: filetest support for VCode tests.
This patch adds support for filetests with the `vcode` type. This allows
test cases to feed CLIF into the new backend, produce VCode output with
machine instructions, and then perform matching against the
pretty-printed text representation of the VCode.

Tests for the new ARM64 backend using this infrastructure will come in a
followup patch.
2020-04-11 17:52:56 -07:00
Chris Fallin
d83574261c ARM64 backend, part 3 / 11: MachInst infrastructure.
This patch adds the MachInst, or Machine Instruction, infrastructure.
This is the machine-independent portion of the new backend design. It
contains the implementation of the "vcode" (virtual-registerized code)
container, the top-level lowering algorithm and compilation pipeline,
and the trait definitions that the machine backends will fill in.

This backend infrastructure is included in the compilation of the
`codegen` crate, but it is not yet tied into the public APIs; that patch
will come last, after all the other pieces are filled in.

This patch contains code written by Julian Seward <jseward@acm.org> and
Benjamin Bouvier <public@benj.me>, originally developed on a side-branch
before rebasing and condensing into this patch series. See the `arm64`
branch at `https://github.com/cfallin/wasmtime` for original development
history.

Co-authored-by: Julian Seward <jseward@acm.org>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Bouvier <public@benj.me>
2020-04-11 17:51:11 -07:00
Alex Crichton
63c97e365e Update some dependencies (#1496)
Update the `wast` crate to 13 and handle the new `QuoteModule` case as
well.
2020-04-10 17:11:23 -05:00
Jakub Konka
de919382b3 Make Handle a trait required for any WASI-compatible handle (#1443)
* Make Handle a trait required for any WASI-compatible handle

OK, so this PR is a bit of an experiment that came about somewhat itself
when I was looking at refactoring use of `Rc<RefCell<Descriptor>>` inside
`Entry` struct. I've noticed that since we've placed `VirtualFile` on the
same level as `OsHandle` and `Stdin` etc., we've ended up necessiitating
checks for different combinations such as "is a real OS resource being mixed
up with a virtual resource?", and if that was the case, we'd panic since
this was clearly not allowed (e.g., symlinking, or worse renaming).
Therefore, it seemed natural for virtual file to be on the same level
as _any_ OS handle (regardless of whether it's an actual file, socket,
or stdio handle). In other words, we should ideally envision the following
hierarchy:

```
\-- OsHandle \-- OsFile
              -- Stdio
\-- Virtual
```

This way, we can deal with the mix up at a level above which cleans up
our logic significantly.

On the other hand, when looking through the `virtfs`, the trait approach
to some type that's a valid `Handle` grew on me, and I think this
is the way to go. And this is what this PR is proposing, a trait
`Handle` which features enough functionality to make both virtual and
OS ops to work. Now, inside `Entry` we can safely store something like
`Rc<dyn Handle>` where `Handle` can downcast to either `VirtualFile` or
`VirtualDir`, or `OsHandle` if its an actual OS resource. Note that
I've left `Handle` as one massive trait, but I reckon we could split
it up into several smaller traits, each dealing with some bit of WASI
functionality. I'm hoping this would perhaps make it easier to figure
out polyfilling between snapshots and the new upcoming ephemeral
snapshot since a lot of boilerplate functionality is now done as part
of the `Handle` trait implementation.

Next, I've redone the original `OsHandle` to be an `OsFile` which
now stores a raw descriptor/handle (`RawFd`/`RawHandle`) inside a
`Cell` so that we can handle interior mutability in an easy (read,
non-panicky) way. In order not to lose the perks of derefercing to
`std::fs::File`, I've added a convenience trait `AsFile` which
will take `OsFile` by reference (or the stdio handles) and create
a non-owned `ManuallyDrop<File>` resource which can be passed around
and acted upon the way we'd normally do on `&File`. This change of
course implies that we now have to worry about properly closing all
OS resources stored as part of `OsFile`, thus this type now implements
`Drop` trait which essentially speaking moves the raw descriptor/handle
into a `File` and drops it.

Finally, I've redone setting time info on relative paths on *nix using
the same approach as advocated in the virtual fs. Namely, we do an
`openat` followed by `filestat_set_times` on the obtained descriptor.
This effectively removes the need for custom `filetime` module in
`yanix`. However, this does probably incur additional cost of at least
one additional syscall, and I haven't checked whether this approach
performs as expected on platforms such as NixOS which as far as I remember
had some weirdness todo with linking `utimensat` symbols, etc. Still,
this change is worth considering given that the implementation of
`path_filestat_set_times` cleans up a lot, albeit with some additional
cost.

* Fix tests on Windows

* Address comments plus minor consistency cleanup

* Address comments

* Fix formatting
2020-04-09 22:18:19 +02:00
Pat Hickey
415b19f2d1 bump witx dep to 0.8.5 2020-04-06 13:41:03 -07:00
Dan Gohman
fde5ddf159 Fixes for 0.15 (#1449)
* Wasmtime 0.15.0 and Cranelift 0.62.0. (#1398)

* Bump more ad-hoc versions.

* Add build.rs to wasi-common's Cargo.toml.

* Update the env var name in more places.

* Remove a redundant echo.
2020-04-03 13:13:37 -07:00
Johnnie Birch
dff789c7c6 Adds JIT profiling support for VTune (#819)
This patch adds initial support for ittapi which is an open
source profiling api for instrumentation and tracing and profiling
of jitted code. Result files can be read by VTune for analysis

Build:
    cargo build --features=vtune
Profile: // Using amplxe-cl from VTune
    amplxe-cl -v -collect hostpost target/debug/wasmtime --vtune test.wasm
2020-04-02 09:04:08 -05:00
Alex Crichton
1a0325014f Remove the wasmtime Python extension from this repo (#1457)
* Remove the wasmtime Python extension from this repo

This commit removes the `crates/misc/py` folder and all associated
doo-dads like CI. This module has been rewritten to use the C API
natively and now lives at
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime-py as discussed on #1390
2020-04-01 13:52:59 -05:00
Alex Crichton
6ef09359b0 Refactor and fill out wasmtime's C API (#1415)
* Refactor and improve safety of C API

This commit is intended to be a relatively large refactoring of the C
API which is targeted at improving the safety of our C API definitions.
Not all of the APIs have been updated yet but this is intended to be the
start.

The goal here is to make as many functions safe as we can, expressing
inputs/outputs as native Rust types rather than raw pointers wherever
possible. For example instead of `*const wasm_foo_t` we'd take
`&wasm_foo_t`. Instead of returning `*mut wasm_foo_t` we'd return
`Box<wasm_foo_t>`. No ABI/API changes are intended from this commit,
it's supposed to only change how we define all these functions
internally.

This commit also additionally implements a few more API bindings for
exposed vector types by unifying everything into one macro.

Finally, this commit moves many internal caches in the C API to the
`OnceCell` type which provides a safe interface for one-time
initialization.

* Split apart monolithic C API `lib.rs`

This commit splits the monolithic `src/lib.rs` in the C API crate into
lots of smaller files. The goal here is to make this a bit more readable
and digestable. Each module now contains only API bindings for a
particular type, roughly organized around the grouping in the wasm.h
header file already.

A few more extensions were added, such as filling out `*_as_*`
conversions with both const and non-const versions. Additionally many
APIs were made safer in the same style as the previous commit, generally
preferring Rust types rather than raw pointer types.

Overall no functional change is intended here, it should be mostly just
code movement and minor refactorings!

* Make a few wasi C bindings safer

Use safe Rust types where we can and touch up a few APIs here and there.

* Implement `wasm_*type_as_externtype*` APIs

This commit restructures `wasm_externtype_t` to be similar to
`wasm_extern_t` so type conversion between the `*_extern_*` variants to
the concrete variants are all simple casts. (checked in the case of
general to concrete, of course).

* Consistently imlpement host info functions in the API

This commit adds a small macro crate which is then used to consistently
define the various host-info-related functions in the C API. The goal
here is to try to mirror what the `wasm.h` header provides to provide a
full implementation of the header.
2020-03-27 09:50:32 -05:00
Dan Gohman
092538cc54 Test 0.14 (#1417)
* Bump Wasmtime to 0.14.0.

* Update the publish script for the wiggle crate wiggle.

* More fixes.

* Fix lightbeam depenency version.

* cargo update

* Cargo update wasi-tests too.

And add cargo update to the version-bump scripts.
2020-03-26 21:53:42 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a628dc315e Shuffle around the wiggle crates (#1414)
* Shuffle around the wiggle crates

This commit reorganizes the wiggle crates slightly by performing the
following transforms:

* The `crates/wiggle` crate, previously named `wiggle`, was moved to
  `crates/wiggle/crates/macro` and is renamed to `wiggle-macro`.

* The `crates/wiggle/crates/runtime` crate, previously named
  `wiggle-runtime`, was moved to `crates/wiggle` and is renamed to
  `wiggle`.

* The new `wiggle` crate depends on `wiggle-macro` and reexports the macro.

The goal here is that consumers only deal with the `wiggle` crate
itself. No more crates depend on `wiggle-runtime` and all dependencies
are entirely on just the `wiggle` crate.

* Remove the `crates/wiggle/crates` directory

Move everything into `crates/wiggle` directly, like `wasi-common`

* Add wiggle-macro to test-all script

* Fixup a test
2020-03-26 18:34:50 -05:00
Dan Gohman
6fa9be7767 Wasmtime 0.13.0 and Cranelift 0.61.0. (#1398)
This also updates the publishing scripts to work with newly added
and reorganized crates.
2020-03-26 13:19:02 -07:00
Pat Hickey
bc1a11435e wiggle: emit a metadata module containing witx document (#1387)
* wiggle: emit a metadata module containing witx document

* wiggle: put metadata module behind a wiggle_metadata feature

* wasi-common: add wiggle_metadata feature and optional witx dep

* refactor according to alex's advice

* wasi-common: make snapshots pub

* wasi-common: i do need a wiggle_metadata feature to be available

* Tweak features and such

* wiggle: fix tests by passing metadata flag to wiggle-runtime

* wiggle: need to move wiggle-runtime to a non-dev dependency

so that the feature resolves for external users of the crates

Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
2020-03-25 14:57:44 -05:00
Alex Crichton
0d4bde4ab3 Add a wasmtime::Linker type (#1384)
* Add a `wasmtime::Linker` type

This commit adds a new type to the `wasmtime` crate, a `Linker`. This
linker is intended to vastly simplify calling `Instance::new` by easily
performing name resolution and incrementally defining state over time.
The goal here is to start down a path of making linking wasm modules in
`wasmtime` a first-class and ergonomic operation. This is highly likely
to evolve over time and get tweaked through releases as we iterate
towards a design well-suited for `wasmtime`, but this is intended to at
least be the initial foundation for such functionality.

This commit additionally also adds a C API for the linker and switches
the existing linking examples to using this linker in both Rust and C.

One piece of future work I'd like to tackle next is to integrate WASI
into the `wasmtime` crate in a more first-class manner. This [`Linker`]
type provides a great location to hook into the instantiation process to
easily instantiate modules with WASI imports. That's a relatively large
refactoring for now though and I figured it'd be best left for a
different time.

Closes #727
2020-03-23 21:02:31 -05:00
bjorn3
d54611dac8 Update object to 0.18 (#1381) 2020-03-23 08:56:51 -05:00
Alex Crichton
e245e6dd9c Add examples of linking and WASI (#1369)
* Add examples of linking and WASI

This commit adds two example programs, one for linking two modules
together and one for instantiating WASI. The linkage example
additionally uses WASI to get some meaningful output at this time.

cc #1272

* Add examples to the book as well

* More links!

* Ignore examples from rustdoc testsing

* More example updates

* More ignored
2020-03-20 18:10:53 -05:00
Jakub Konka
32595faba5 It's wiggle time! (#1202)
* Use wiggle in place of wig in wasi-common

This is a rather massive commit that introduces `wiggle` into the
picture. We still use `wig`'s macro in `old` snapshot and to generate
`wasmtime-wasi` glue, but everything else is now autogenerated by `wiggle`.
In summary, thanks to `wiggle`, we no longer need to worry about
serialising and deserialising to and from the guest memory, and
all guest (WASI) types are now proper idiomatic Rust types.

While we're here, in preparation for the ephemeral snapshot, I went
ahead and reorganised the internal structure of the crate. Instead of
modules like `hostcalls_impl` or `hostcalls_impl::fs`, the structure
now resembles that in ephemeral with modules like `path`, `fd`, etc.
Now, I'm not requiring we leave it like this, but I reckon it looks
cleaner this way after all.

* Fix wig to use new first-class access to caller's mem

* Ignore warning in proc_exit for the moment

* Group unsafes together in args and environ calls

* Simplify pwrite; more unsafe blocks

* Simplify fd_read

* Bundle up unsafes in fd_readdir

* Simplify fd_write

* Add comment to path_readlink re zero-len buffers

* Simplify unsafes in random_get

* Hide GuestPtr<str> to &str in path::get

* Rewrite pread and pwrite using SeekFrom and read/write_vectored

I've left the implementation of VirtualFs pretty much untouched
as I don't feel that comfortable in changing the API too much.
Having said that, I reckon `pread` and `pwrite` could be refactored
out, and `preadv` and `pwritev` could be entirely rewritten using
`seek` and `read_vectored` and `write_vectored`.

* Add comment about VirtFs unsafety

* Fix all mentions of FdEntry to Entry

* Fix warnings on Win

* Add aux struct EntryTable responsible for Fds and Entries

This commit adds aux struct `EntryTable` which is private to `WasiCtx`
and is basically responsible for `Fd` alloc/dealloc as well as storing
matching `Entry`s. This struct is entirely private to `WasiCtx` and
as such as should remain transparent to `WasiCtx` users.

* Remove redundant check for empty buffer in path_readlink

* Preserve and rewind file cursor in pread/pwrite

* Use GuestPtr<[u8]>::copy_from_slice wherever copying bytes directly

* Use GuestPtr<[u8]>::copy_from_slice in fd_readdir

* Clean up unsafes around WasiCtx accessors

* Fix bugs in args_get and environ_get

* Fix conflicts after rebase
2020-03-20 21:54:44 +01:00
Alex Crichton
3b7cb6ee64 Enable jitdump profiling support by default (#1310)
* Enable jitdump profiling support by default

This the result of some of the investigation I was doing for #1017. I've
done a number of refactorings here which culminated in a number of
changes that all amount to what I think should result in jitdump support being
enabled by default:

* Pass in a list of finished functions instead of just a range to
  ensure that we're emitting jit dump data for a specific module rather
  than a whole `CodeMemory` which may have other modules.
* Define `ProfilingStrategy` in the `wasmtime` crate to have everything
  locally-defined
* Add support to the C API to enable profiling
* Documentation added for profiling with jitdump to the book
* Split out supported/unsupported files in `jitdump.rs` to avoid having
  lots of `#[cfg]`.
* Make dependencies optional that are only used for `jitdump`.
* Move initialization up-front to `JitDumpAgent::new()` instead of
  deferring it to the first module.
* Pass around `Arc<dyn ProfilingAgent>` instead of
  `Option<Arc<Mutex<Box<dyn ProfilingAgent>>>>`

The `jitdump` Cargo feature is now enabled by default which means that
our published binaries, C API artifacts, and crates will support
profiling at runtime by default. The support I don't think is fully
fleshed out and working but I think it's probably in a good enough spot
we can get users playing around with it!
2020-03-20 11:44:51 -05:00
Alex Crichton
5bd03d282f Update a number of wasmtime's dependencies (#1355)
* Run `cargo update`
* Use `cargo outdated` to guide some manual version bumps
2020-03-18 14:15:33 -05:00
Nick Fitzgerald
a658e381be Merge pull request #1354 from fitzgen/update-arbitrary-and-libfuzzer-sys
Update `arbitrary` and `libfuzzer` dependencies
2020-03-18 12:11:31 -07:00
Nick Fitzgerald
5f4d3f5cd9 Update arbitrary and libfuzzer dependencies 2020-03-18 10:49:57 -07:00
Alex Crichton
381d43e40e Update wasi submodule (#1345)
* Update wasi submodule

Removes some dependencies from the `witx` crate since WebAssembly/WASI#243

* Don't pull witx from two places

* Update submodule again
2020-03-18 09:39:50 -05:00