Commit Graph

11 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Nick Fitzgerald
cb97e4ec8e Implement table.init and elem.drop from the bulk memory proposal 2020-02-26 14:35:09 -08:00
Nick Fitzgerald
33b4a37bcb Add support for table.copy
This adds support for the `table.copy` instruction from the bulk memory
proposal. It also supports multiple tables, which were introduced by the
reference types proposal.

Part of #928
2020-02-26 14:30:43 -08:00
Alex Crichton
c8ab1e293e Improve robustness of cache loading/storing (#974)
* Improve robustness of cache loading/storing

Today wasmtime incorrectly loads compiled compiled modules from the
global cache when toggling settings such as optimizations. For example
if you execute `wasmtime foo.wasm` that will cache globally an
unoptimized version of the wasm module. If you then execute `wasmtime -O
foo.wasm` it would then reload the unoptimized version from cache, not
realizing the compilation settings were different, and use that instead.
This can lead to very surprising behavior naturally!

This commit updates how the cache is managed in an attempt to make it
much more robust against these sorts of issues. This takes a leaf out of
rustc's playbook and models the cache with a function that looks like:

    fn load<T: Hash>(
        &self,
        data: T,
        compute: fn(T) -> CacheEntry,
    ) -> CacheEntry;

The goal here is that it guarantees that all the `data` necessary to
`compute` the result of the cache entry is hashable and stored into the
hash key entry. This was previously open-coded and manually managed
where items were hashed explicitly, but this construction guarantees
that everything reasonable `compute` could use to compile the module is
stored in `data`, which is itself hashable.

This refactoring then resulted in a few workarounds and a few fixes,
including the original issue:

* The `Module` type was split into `Module` and `ModuleLocal` where only
  the latter is hashed. The previous hash function for a `Module` left
  out items like the `start_func` and didn't hash items like the imports
  of the module. Omitting the `start_func` was fine since compilation
  didn't actually use it, but omitting imports seemed uncomfortable
  because while compilation didn't use the import values it did use the
  *number* of imports, which seems like it should then be put into the
  cache key. The `ModuleLocal` type now derives `Hash` to guarantee that
  all of its contents affect the hash key.

* The `ModuleTranslationState` from `cranelift-wasm` doesn't implement
  `Hash` which means that we have a manual wrapper to work around that.
  This will be fixed with an upstream implementation, since this state
  affects the generated wasm code. Currently this is just a map of
  signatures, which is present in `Module` anyway, so we should be good
  for the time being.

* Hashing `dyn TargetIsa` was also added, where previously it was not
  fully hashed. Previously only the target name was used as part of the
  cache key, but crucially the flags of compilation were omitted (for
  example the optimization flags). Unfortunately the trait object itself
  is not hashable so we still have to manually write a wrapper to hash
  it, but we likely want to add upstream some utilities to hash isa
  objects into cranelift itself. For now though we can continue to add
  hashed fields as necessary.

Overall the goal here was to use the compiler to expose what we're not
hashing, and then make sure we organize data and write the right code to
ensure everything is hashed, and nothing more.

* Update crates/environ/src/module.rs

Co-Authored-By: Peter Huene <peterhuene@protonmail.com>

* Fix lightbeam

* Fix compilation of tests

* Update the expected structure of the cache

* Revert "Update the expected structure of the cache"

This reverts commit 2b53fee426a4e411c313d8c1e424841ba304a9cd.

* Separate the cache dir a bit

* Add a test the cache is busted with opt levels

* rustfmt

Co-authored-by: Peter Huene <peterhuene@protonmail.com>
2020-02-26 16:18:02 -06:00
Sergei Pepyakin
c94cdc7730 Treat undeclared maximum as 4GiB (#944)
* Treat undeclared maximum as 4GiB

* Review fixes.
2020-02-18 08:33:57 -06:00
Alex Crichton
3db1074c15 Improve handling of strings for backtraces (#843)
* Improve handling of strings for backtraces

Largely avoid storing strings at all in the `wasmtime-*` internal
crates, and instead only store strings in a separate global cache
specific to the `wasmtime` crate itself. This global cache is inserted
and removed from dynamically as modules are created and deallocated, and
the global cache is consulted whenever a `Trap` is created to
symbolicate any wasm frames.

This also avoids the need to thread `module_name` through the jit crates
and back, and additionally removes the need for `ModuleSyncString`.

* Run rustfmt
2020-01-24 11:53:55 -06:00
Yury Delendik
b2bfb98f1f Provide proper function index and name in the FrameInfo (#824)
* fix function index

* Add function name to JITFunctionTag

* Add ModuleSyncString.
2020-01-16 12:36:51 -06:00
Alex Crichton
41780fb1a6 Handle same-named imports with different signatures
This commit fixes the `wasmtime::Instance` instantiation API when
imports have the same name but might be imported under different types.
This is handled in the API by listing imports as a list instead of as a
name map, but they were interpreted as a name map under the hood causing
collisions.

This commit now keeps track of the index used to define each import, and
the index is passed through in the `Resolver`. Existing implementaitons
of `Resolver` all ignore this, but the API now uses it exclusivley to
match up `Extern` definitions to imports.
2020-01-09 17:21:19 -08:00
Yury Delendik
d651408b5a Module name (#775) 2020-01-09 10:02:33 -06:00
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