Commit Graph

8 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Yury Delendik
2a50701f0a Backtrace WebAssembly function JIT frames (#759)
* Create backtrace

* Extend unwind information with FDE data.

* Expose backtrace via API/Trap

* wasmtime_call returns not-str

* Return Arc<JITFrameTag>

* rename frame -> function

* Fix windows crashes and unwrap UNWIND_HISTORY_TABLE

* mmaps -> entries

* pass a backtrace in ActionOutcome

* add test_trap_stack_overflow

* Update cranelift version.
2020-01-15 13:48:24 -06:00
Alex Crichton
317f598969 Update CodeMemory to be Send + Sync (#780)
* Update `CodeMemory` to be `Send + Sync`

This commit updates the `CodeMemory` type in wasmtime to be both `Send`
and `Sync` by updating the implementation of `Mmap` to not store raw
pointers. This avoids the need for an `unsafe impl` and leaves the
unsafety as it is currently.

* Run rustfmt

* Rename `offset` to `ptr`
2020-01-09 16:22:49 -06:00
Alex Crichton
eb1991c579 Revert "Remove the need for HostRef<Module> (#778)"
This reverts commit 7b33f1c619.

Pushed a few extra commits by accident, so reverting this.
2020-01-08 12:44:59 -08:00
Alex Crichton
7b33f1c619 Remove the need for HostRef<Module> (#778)
* Remove the need for `HostRef<Module>`

This commit continues previous work and also #708 by removing the need
to use `HostRef<Module>` in the API of the `wasmtime` crate. The API
changes performed here are:

* The `Module` type is now itself internally reference counted.
* The `Module::store` function now returns the `Store` that was used to
  create a `Module`
* Documentation for `Module` and its methods have been expanded.

* Fix compliation of test programs harness

* Fix the python extension

* Update `CodeMemory` to be `Send + Sync`

This commit updates the `CodeMemory` type in wasmtime to be both `Send`
and `Sync` by updating the implementation of `Mmap` to not store raw
pointers. This avoids the need for an `unsafe impl` and leaves the
unsafety as it is currently.

* Fix a typo
2020-01-08 14:42:37 -06:00
XAMPPRocky
907e7aac01 Clippy fixes (#692) 2019-12-24 12:50:07 -08:00
Alex Crichton
39e57e3e9a Migrate back to std:: stylistically (#554)
* Migrate back to `std::` stylistically

This commit moves away from idioms such as `alloc::` and `core::` as
imports of standard data structures and types. Instead it migrates all
crates to uniformly use `std::` for importing standard data structures
and types. This also removes the `std` and `core` features from all
crates to and removes any conditional checking for `feature = "std"`

All of this support was previously added in #407 in an effort to make
wasmtime/cranelift "`no_std` compatible". Unfortunately though this
change comes at a cost:

* The usage of `alloc` and `core` isn't idiomatic. Especially trying to
  dual between types like `HashMap` from `std` as well as from
  `hashbrown` causes imports to be surprising in some cases.
* Unfortunately there was no CI check that crates were `no_std`, so none
  of them actually were. Many crates still imported from `std` or
  depended on crates that used `std`.

It's important to note, however, that **this does not mean that wasmtime
will not run in embedded environments**. The style of the code today and
idioms aren't ready in Rust to support this degree of multiplexing and
makes it somewhat difficult to keep up with the style of `wasmtime`.
Instead it's intended that embedded runtime support will be added as
necessary. Currently only `std` is necessary to build `wasmtime`, and
platforms that natively need to execute `wasmtime` will need to use a
Rust target that supports `std`. Note though that not all of `std` needs
to be supported, but instead much of it could be configured off to
return errors, and `wasmtime` would be configured to gracefully handle
errors.

The goal of this PR is to move `wasmtime` back to idiomatic usage of
features/`std`/imports/etc and help development in the short-term.
Long-term when platform concerns arise (if any) they can be addressed by
moving back to `no_std` crates (but fixing the issues mentioned above)
or ensuring that the target in Rust has `std` available.

* Start filling out platform support doc
2019-11-18 22:04:06 -08:00
Dan Gohman
1a0ed6e388 Use the more-asserts crate in more places.
This provides assert_le, assert_lt, and so on, which can print the
values of the operands.
2019-11-08 15:24:53 -08:00
Dan Gohman
22641de629 Initial reorg.
This is largely the same as #305, but updated for the current tree.
2019-11-08 06:35:40 -08:00