Commit Graph

15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Brown
edfa10d607 wasi-threads: an initial implementation (#5484)
This commit includes a set of changes that add initial support for `wasi-threads` to Wasmtime:

* feat: remove mutability from the WasiCtx Table

This patch adds interior mutability to the WasiCtx Table and the Table elements.

Major pain points:
* `File` only needs `RwLock<cap_std::fs::File>` to implement
  `File::set_fdflags()` on Windows, because of [1]
* Because `File` needs a `RwLock` and `RwLock*Guard` cannot
  be hold across an `.await`, The `async` from
  `async fn num_ready_bytes(&self)` had to be removed
* Because `File` needs a `RwLock` and `RwLock*Guard` cannot
  be dereferenced in `pollable`, the signature of
  `fn pollable(&self) -> Option<rustix::fd::BorrowedFd>`
  changed to `fn pollable(&self) -> Option<Arc<dyn AsFd + '_>>`

[1] da238e324e/src/fs/fd_flags.rs (L210-L217)

* wasi-threads: add an initial implementation

This change is a first step toward implementing `wasi-threads` in
Wasmtime. We may find that it has some missing pieces, but the core
functionality is there: when `wasi::thread_spawn` is called by a running
WebAssembly module, a function named `wasi_thread_start` is found in the
module's exports and called in a new instance. The shared memory of the
original instance is reused in the new instance.

This new WASI proposal is in its early stages and details are still
being hashed out in the [spec] and [wasi-libc] repositories. Due to its
experimental state, the `wasi-threads` functionality is hidden behind
both a compile-time and runtime flag: one must build with `--features
wasi-threads` but also run the Wasmtime CLI with `--wasm-features
threads` and `--wasi-modules experimental-wasi-threads`. One can
experiment with `wasi-threads` by running:

```console
$ cargo run --features wasi-threads -- \
    --wasm-features threads --wasi-modules experimental-wasi-threads \
    <a threads-enabled module>
```

Threads-enabled Wasm modules are not yet easy to build. Hopefully this
is resolved soon, but in the meantime see the use of
`THREAD_MODEL=posix` in the [wasi-libc] repository for some clues on
what is necessary. Wiggle complicates things by requiring the Wasm
memory to be exported with a certain name and `wasi-threads` also
expects that memory to be imported; this build-time obstacle can be
overcome with the `--import-memory --export-memory` flags only available
in the latest Clang tree. Due to all of this, the included tests are
written directly in WAT--run these with:

```console
$ cargo test --features wasi-threads -p wasmtime-cli -- cli_tests
```

[spec]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-threads
[wasi-libc]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-libc

This change does not protect the WASI implementations themselves from
concurrent access. This is already complete in previous commits or left
for future commits in certain cases (e.g., wasi-nn).

* wasi-threads: factor out process exit logic

As is being discussed [elsewhere], either calling `proc_exit` or
trapping in any thread should halt execution of all threads. The
Wasmtime CLI already has logic for adapting a WebAssembly error code to
a code expected in each OS. This change factors out this logic to a new
function, `maybe_exit_on_error`, for use within the `wasi-threads`
implementation.

This will work reasonably well for CLI users of Wasmtime +
`wasi-threads`, but embedders will want something better in the future:
when a `wasi-threads` threads fails, they may not want their application
to exit. Handling this is tricky, because it will require cancelling the
threads spawned by the `wasi-threads` implementation, something that is
not trivial to do in Rust. With this change, we defer that work until
later in order to provide a working implementation of `wasi-threads` for
experimentation.

[elsewhere]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-threads/pull/17

* review: work around `fd_fdstat_set_flags`

In order to make progress with wasi-threads, this change temporarily
works around limitations induced by `wasi-common`'s
`fd_fdstat_set_flags` to allow `&mut self` use in the implementation.
Eventual resolution is tracked in
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/5643. This change
makes several related helper functions (e.g., `set_fdflags`) take `&mut
self` as well.

* test: use `wait`/`notify` to improve `threads.wat` test

Previously, the test simply executed in a loop for some hardcoded number
of iterations. This changes uses `wait` and `notify` and atomic
operations to keep track of when the spawned threads are done and join
on the main thread appropriately.

* various fixes and tweaks due to the PR review

---------

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
Co-authored-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
2023-02-07 13:43:02 -08:00
Alex Crichton
1f09954fa4 Avoid unconditional getrandom syscall creating a WasiCtx (#5244)
This commit updates the default random context inserted into a
`WasiCtxt` to be seeded from `thread_rng` rather than the system's
entropy. This avoids an unconditional syscall on the creation of all
`WasiCtx` structures shouldn't reduce the quality of the random numbers
produced.
2022-11-10 13:58:11 -06:00
Dan Gohman
cbd2efd236 Optimize the WASI random_get implementation. (#4917)
* Optimize the WASI `random_get` implementation.

Use `StdRng` instead of the `OsRng` in the default implementation of
`random_get`. This uses a userspace CSPRNG, making `random_get` 3x faster
in simple benchmarks.

* Update cargo-vet audits for cap-std 0.25.3.

* Update all cap-std packages to 0.25.3.
2022-09-16 10:27:06 -05:00
Harald Hoyer
853a025613 Implement sock_accept
With the addition of `sock_accept()` in `wasi-0.11.0`, wasmtime can now
implement basic networking for pre-opened sockets.

For Windows `AsHandle` was replaced with `AsRawHandleOrSocket` to cope
with the duality of Handles and Sockets.

For Unix a `wasi_cap_std_sync::net::Socket` enum was created to handle
the {Tcp,Unix}{Listener,Stream} more efficiently in
`WasiCtxBuilder::preopened_socket()`.

The addition of that many `WasiFile` implementors was mainly necessary,
because of the difference in the `num_ready_bytes()` function.

A known issue is Windows now busy polling on sockets, because except
for `stdin`, nothing is querying the status of windows handles/sockets.

Another know issue on Windows, is that there is no crate providing
support for `fcntl(fd, F_GETFL, 0)` on a socket.

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
2022-01-31 16:25:11 -08:00
Dan Gohman
197aec9a08 Update io-lifetimes, cap-std, and rsix (#3269)
- Fixes for compiling on OpenBSD

 - io-lifetimes 0.3.0 has an option (io_lifetimes_use_std, which is off
   by default) for testing the `io_safety` feature in Rust nightly.
2021-08-31 13:02:37 -07:00
Dan Gohman
6a5a295019 Port wasi-common from unsafe-io to io-lifetimes (#3049)
* Port wasi-common to io-lifetimes.

This ports wasi-common from unsafe-io to io-lifetimes.

Ambient authority is now indicated via calls to `ambient_authority()`
from the ambient-authority crate, rather than using `unsafe` blocks.

The `GetSetFdFlags::set_fd_flags` function is now split into two phases,
to simplify lifetimes in implementations which need to close and re-open
the underlying file.

* Use posish for errno values instead of libc.

This eliminates one of the few remaining direct libc dependencies.

* Port to posish::io::poll.

Use posish::io::poll instead of calling libc directly. This factors out
more code from Wasmtime, and eliminates the need to manipulate raw file
descriptors directly.

And, this eliminates the last remaining direct dependency on libc in
wasi-common.

* Port wasi-c-api to io-lifetimes.

* Update to posish 0.16.0.

* Embeded NULs in filenames now get `EINVAL` instead of `EILSEQ`.

* Accept either `EILSEQ` or `EINVAL` for embedded NULs.

* Bump the nightly toolchain to 2021-07-12.

This fixes build errors on the semver crate, which as of this writing
builds with latest nightly and stable but not 2021-04-11, the old pinned
version.

* Have cap-std-sync re-export ambient_authority so that users get the same version.
2021-07-14 15:39:09 -07:00
Alex Crichton
7a1b7cdf92 Implement RFC 11: Redesigning Wasmtime's APIs (#2897)
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.
2021-06-03 09:10:53 -05:00
Pat Hickey
0f5bdc6497 only wasi_cap_std_sync and wasi_tokio need to define WasiCtxBuilders (#2917)
* wasmtime-wasi: re-exporting this WasiCtxBuilder was shadowing the right one

wasi-common's WasiCtxBuilder is really only useful wasi_cap_std_sync and
wasi_tokio to implement their own Builder on top of.

This re-export of wasi-common's is 1. not useful and 2. shadow's the
re-export of the right one in sync::*.

* wasi-common: eliminate WasiCtxBuilder, make the builder methods on WasiCtx instead

* delete wasi-common::WasiCtxBuilder altogether

just put those methods directly on &mut WasiCtx.

As a bonus, the sync and tokio WasiCtxBuilder::build functions
are no longer fallible!

* bench fixes

* more test fixes
2021-05-21 12:59:39 -05:00
Pat Hickey
07245a8763 wasi-cap-std-sync: re-export Dir while we're at it 2021-03-25 17:05:02 -07:00
Pat Hickey
58aa98ac8e cap-std-sync docs 2021-02-01 18:07:05 -08:00
Pat Hickey
b6cd7d84ad cap-std-sync: export ctx components 2021-01-30 13:38:44 -08:00
Pat Hickey
b48e7fcc5d integrate with c-api 2021-01-29 14:09:44 -08:00
Pat Hickey
e498888732 hook run command up to both wasi snapshots
sharing the same context! at long last
2021-01-29 12:29:30 -08:00
Pat Hickey
9bd89abc0c rename everything c2 related to the "real" names 2021-01-28 15:34:03 -08:00
Pat Hickey
47fec44c10 move wasi-c2 into wasi-common 2021-01-28 15:15:50 -08:00