* Add the ability to cache typechecking an instance
This commit adds the abilty to cache the type-checked imports of an
instance if an instance is going to be instantiated multiple times. This
can also be useful to do a "dry run" of instantiation where no wasm code
is run but it's double-checked that a `Linker` possesses everything
necessary to instantiate the provided module.
This should ideally help cut down repeated instantiation costs slightly
by avoiding type-checking and allocation a `Vec<Extern>` on each
instantiation. It's expected though that the impact on instantiation
time is quite small and likely not super significant. The functionality,
though, of pre-checking can be useful for some embeddings.
* Fix build with async
Implement Wasmtime's new API as designed by RFC 11. This is quite a large commit which has had lots of discussion externally, so for more information it's best to read the RFC thread and the PR thread.
This commit implements the `--allow-unknown-exports` option to the CLI run
command that will ignore unknown exports in a command module rather than
return an error.
Fixes#2587.
* Add resource limiting to the Wasmtime API.
This commit adds a `ResourceLimiter` trait to the Wasmtime API.
When used in conjunction with `Store::new_with_limiter`, this can be used to
monitor and prevent WebAssembly code from growing linear memories and tables.
This is particularly useful when hosts need to take into account host resource
usage to determine if WebAssembly code can consume more resources.
A simple `StaticResourceLimiter` is also included with these changes that will
simply limit the size of linear memories or tables for all instances created in
the store based on static values.
* Code review feedback.
* Implemented `StoreLimits` and `StoreLimitsBuilder`.
* Moved `max_instances`, `max_memories`, `max_tables` out of `Config` and into
`StoreLimits`.
* Moved storage of the limiter in the runtime into `Memory` and `Table`.
* Made `InstanceAllocationRequest` use a reference to the limiter.
* Updated docs.
* Made `ResourceLimiterProxy` generic to remove a level of indirection.
* Fixed the limiter not being used for `wasmtime::Memory` and
`wasmtime::Table`.
* Code review feedback and bug fix.
* `Memory::new` now returns `Result<Self>` so that an error can be returned if
the initial requested memory exceeds any limits placed on the store.
* Changed an `Arc` to `Rc` as the `Arc` wasn't necessary.
* Removed `Store` from the `ResourceLimiter` callbacks. Custom resource limiter
implementations are free to capture any context they want, so no need to
unnecessarily store a weak reference to `Store` from the proxy type.
* Fixed a bug in the pooling instance allocator where an instance would be
leaked from the pool. Previously, this would only have happened if the OS was
unable to make the necessary linear memory available for the instance. With
these changes, however, the instance might not be created due to limits
placed on the store. We now properly deallocate the instance on error.
* Added more tests, including one that covers the fix mentioned above.
* Code review feedback.
* Add another memory to `test_pooling_allocator_initial_limits_exceeded` to
ensure a partially created instance is successfully deallocated.
* Update some doc comments for better documentation of `Store` and
`ResourceLimiter`.
When `Linker` was first created it was attempted to be created with the
ability to instantiate any wasm modules, including those with duplicate
import strings of different types. In an effort to support this a
`Linker` supports defining the same names twice so long as they're
defined with differently-typed values.
This ended up causing wast testsuite failures module linking is enabled,
however, because the wrong error message is returned. While it would be
possible to fix this there's already the possibility for confusing error
messages today due to the `Linker` trying to take on this type-level
complexity. In a way this is yet-another type checker for wasm imports,
but sort of a bad one because it only supports things like
globals/functions, and otherwise you can only define one `Memory`, for
example, with a particular name.
This commit completely removes this feature from `Linker` to simplify
the implementation and make error messages more straightforward. This
means that any error message coming from a `Linker` is purely "this
thing wasn't defined" rather than a hybrid of "maybe the types didn't
match?". I think this also better aligns with the direction that we see
conventional wasm modules going which is that duplicate imports are not
ever present.
* Redo the statically typed `Func` API
This commit reimplements the `Func` API with respect to statically typed
dispatch. Previously `Func` had a `getN` and `getN_async` family of
methods which were implemented for 0 to 16 parameters. The return value
of these functions was an `impl Fn(..)` closure with the appropriate
parameters and return values.
There are a number of downsides with this approach that have become
apparent over time:
* The addition of `*_async` doubled the API surface area (which is quite
large here due to one-method-per-number-of-parameters).
* The [documentation of `Func`][old-docs] are quite verbose and feel
"polluted" with all these getters, making it harder to understand the
other methods that can be used to interact with a `Func`.
* These methods unconditionally pay the cost of returning an owned `impl
Fn` with a `'static` lifetime. While cheap, this is still paying the
cost for cloning the `Store` effectively and moving data into the
closed-over environment.
* Storage of the return value into a struct, for example, always
requires `Box`-ing the returned closure since it otherwise cannot be
named.
* Recently I had the desire to implement an "unchecked" path for
invoking wasm where you unsafely assert the type signature of a wasm
function. Doing this with today's scheme would require doubling
(again) the API surface area for both async and synchronous calls,
further polluting the documentation.
The main benefit of the previous scheme is that by returning a `impl Fn`
it was quite easy and ergonomic to actually invoke the function. In
practice, though, examples would often have something akin to
`.get0::<()>()?()?` which is a lot of things to interpret all at once.
Note that `get0` means "0 parameters" yet a type parameter is passed.
There's also a double function invocation which looks like a lot of
characters all lined up in a row.
Overall, I think that the previous design is starting to show too many
cracks and deserves a rewrite. This commit is that rewrite.
The new design in this commit is to delete the `getN{,_async}` family of
functions and instead have a new API:
impl Func {
fn typed<P, R>(&self) -> Result<&Typed<P, R>>;
}
impl Typed<P, R> {
fn call(&self, params: P) -> Result<R, Trap>;
async fn call_async(&self, params: P) -> Result<R, Trap>;
}
This should entirely replace the current scheme, albeit by slightly
losing ergonomics use cases. The idea behind the API is that the
existence of `Typed<P, R>` is a "proof" that the underlying function
takes `P` and returns `R`. The `Func::typed` method peforms a runtime
type-check to ensure that types all match up, and if successful you get
a `Typed` value. Otherwise an error is returned.
Once you have a `Typed` then, like `Func`, you can either `call` or
`call_async`. The difference with a `Typed`, however, is that the
params/results are statically known and hence these calls can be much
more efficient.
This is a much smaller API surface area from before and should greatly
simplify the `Func` documentation. There's still a problem where
`Func::wrapN_async` produces a lot of functions to document, but that's
now the sole offender. It's a nice benefit that the
statically-typed-async verisons are now expressed with an `async`
function rather than a function-returning-a-future which makes it both
more efficient and easier to understand.
The type `P` and `R` are intended to either be bare types (e.g. `i32`)
or tuples of any length (including 0). At this time `R` is only allowed
to be `()` or a bare `i32`-style type because multi-value is not
supported with a native ABI (yet). The `P`, however, can be any size of
tuples of parameters. This is also where some ergonomics are lost
because instead of `f(1, 2)` you now have to write `f.call((1, 2))`
(note the double-parens). Similarly `f()` becomes `f.call(())`.
Overall I feel that this is a better tradeoff than before. While not
universally better due to the loss in ergonomics I feel that this design
is much more flexible in terms of what you can do with the return value
and also understanding the API surface area (just less to take in).
[old-docs]: https://docs.rs/wasmtime/0.24.0/wasmtime/struct.Func.html#method.get0
* Rename Typed to TypedFunc
* Implement multi-value returns through `Func::typed`
* Fix examples in docs
* Fix some more errors
* More test fixes
* Rebasing and adding `get_typed_func`
* Updating tests
* Fix typo
* More doc tweaks
* Tweak visibility on `Func::invoke`
* Fix tests again
* Implement defining host functions at the Config level.
This commit introduces defining host functions at the `Config` rather than with
`Func` tied to a `Store`.
The intention here is to enable a host to define all of the functions once
with a `Config` and then use a `Linker` (or directly with
`Store::get_host_func`) to use the functions when instantiating a module.
This should help improve the performance of use cases where a `Store` is
short-lived and redefining the functions at every module instantiation is a
noticeable performance hit.
This commit adds `add_to_config` to the code generation for Wasmtime's `Wasi`
type.
The new method adds the WASI functions to the given config as host functions.
This commit adds context functions to `Store`: `get` to get a context of a
particular type and `set` to set the context on the store.
For safety, `set` cannot replace an existing context value of the same type.
`Wasi::set_context` was added to set the WASI context for a `Store` when using
`Wasi::add_to_config`.
* Add `Config::define_host_func_async`.
* Make config "async" rather than store.
This commit moves the concept of "async-ness" to `Config` rather than `Store`.
Note: this is a breaking API change for anyone that's already adopted the new
async support in Wasmtime.
Now `Config::new_async` is used to create an "async" config and any `Store`
associated with that config is inherently "async".
This is needed for async shared host functions to have some sanity check during their
execution (async host functions, like "async" `Func`, need to be called with
the "async" variants).
* Update async function tests to smoke async shared host functions.
This commit updates the async function tests to also smoke the shared host
functions, plus `Func::wrap0_async`.
This also changes the "wrap async" method names on `Config` to
`wrap$N_host_func_async` to slightly better match what is on `Func`.
* Move the instance allocator into `Engine`.
This commit moves the instantiated instance allocator from `Config` into
`Engine`.
This makes certain settings in `Config` no longer order-dependent, which is how
`Config` should ideally be.
This also removes the confusing concept of the "default" instance allocator,
instead opting to construct the on-demand instance allocator when needed.
This does alter the semantics of the instance allocator as now each `Engine`
gets its own instance allocator rather than sharing a single one between all
engines created from a configuration.
* Make `Engine::new` return `Result`.
This is a breaking API change for anyone using `Engine::new`.
As creating the pooling instance allocator may fail (likely cause is not enough
memory for the provided limits), instead of panicking when creating an
`Engine`, `Engine::new` now returns a `Result`.
* Remove `Config::new_async`.
This commit removes `Config::new_async` in favor of treating "async support" as
any other setting on `Config`.
The setting is `Config::async_support`.
* Remove order dependency when defining async host functions in `Config`.
This commit removes the order dependency where async support must be enabled on
the `Config` prior to defining async host functions.
The check is now delayed to when an `Engine` is created from the config.
* Update WASI example to use shared `Wasi::add_to_config`.
This commit updates the WASI example to use `Wasi::add_to_config`.
As only a single store and instance are used in the example, it has no semantic
difference from the previous example, but the intention is to steer users
towards defining WASI on the config and only using `Wasi::add_to_linker` when
more explicit scoping of the WASI context is required.
This commit fixes a memory leak that can happen with `Linker::module`
when the provided module is a command. This function creates a closure
but the closure closed over a strong reference to `Store` (and
transitively through any imports provided). Unfortunately a `Store`
keeps everything alive, including `Func`, so this meant that `Store` was
inserted into a cycle which caused the leak.
The cycle here is manually broken by closing over the raw value of each
external value rather than the external value itself (which has a
strong reference to `Store`).
`funcref`s are implemented as `NonNull<VMCallerCheckedAnyfunc>`.
This should be more efficient than using a `VMExternRef` that points at a
`VMCallerCheckedAnyfunc` because it gets rid of an indirection, dynamic
allocation, and some reference counting.
Note that the null function reference is *NOT* a null pointer; it is a
`VMCallerCheckedAnyfunc` that has a null `func_ptr` member.
Part of #929
* Moves CodeMemory, VMInterrupts and SignatureRegistry from Compiler
* CompiledModule holds CodeMemory and GdbJitImageRegistration
* Store keeps track of its JIT code
* Makes "jit_int.rs" stuff Send+Sync
* Adds the threads example.
This is enough to get an `externref -> externref` identity function
passing.
However, `externref`s that are dropped by compiled Wasm code are (safely)
leaked. Follow up work will leverage cranelift's stack maps to resolve this
issue.
* Minor code tidying.
* Document that `Linker::iter`'s iteration order is arbitrary.
* Add a few more tests for `wasmtime::Linker`.
* Refactor `Linker::compute_imports`.
- Extract the error message generation into a separate function.
- In the error message, sort the candidates.
* Fix a typo in a comment.
* Add `__rtti_base` to the list of allowed but deprecated exports.
* Don't print an Error message when a program exits normally.
* Update comments to reflect the current code.
* Also allow "table" as an exported table, which is used by AssemblyScript.
* Compute instance exports on demand.
Instead having instances eagerly compute a Vec of Externs, and bumping
the refcount for each Extern, compute Externs on demand.
This also enables `Instance::get_export` to avoid doing a linear search.
This also means that the closure returned by `get0` and friends now
holds an `InstanceHandle` to dynamically hold the instance live rather
than being scoped to a lifetime.
* Compute module imports and exports on demand too.
And compute Extern::ty on demand too.
* Add a utility function for computing an ExternType.
* Add a utility function for looking up a function's signature.
* Add a utility function for computing the ValType of a Global.
* Rename wasmtime_environ::Export to EntityIndex.
This helps differentiate it from other Export types in the tree, and
describes what it is.
* Fix a typo in a comment.
* Simplify module imports and exports.
* Make `Instance::exports` return the export names.
This significantly simplifies the public API, as it's relatively common
to need the names, and this avoids the need to do a zip with
`Module::exports`.
This also changes `ImportType` and `ExportType` to have public members
instead of private members and accessors, as I find that simplifies the
usage particularly in cases where there are temporary instances.
* Remove `Instance::module`.
This doesn't quite remove `Instance`'s `module` member, it gets a step
closer.
* Use a InstanceHandle utility function.
* Don't consume self in the `Func::get*` methods.
Instead, just create a closure containing the instance handle and the
export for them to call.
* Use `ExactSizeIterator` to avoid needing separate `num_*` methods.
* Rename `Extern::func()` etc. to `into_func()` etc.
* Revise examples to avoid using `nth`.
* Add convenience methods to instance for getting specific extern types.
* Use the convenience functions in more tests and examples.
* Avoid cloning strings for `ImportType` and `ExportType`.
* Remove more obviated clone() calls.
* Simplify `Func`'s closure state.
* Make wasmtime::Export's fields private.
This makes them more consistent with ExportType.
* Fix compilation error.
* Make a lifetime parameter explicit, and use better lifetime names.
Instead of 'me, use 'instance and 'module to make it clear what the
lifetime is.
* More lifetime cleanups.
* 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