This commit is a mirror of bytecodealliance/wit-bindgen#547 into the
`bindgen!` macro for Wasmtime. The new default is to generate only one
Rust type per WIT type input, regardless of if the representation can be
slightly more optimal in niche cases with more borrows. This should make
the macro easier to work with in the limit ideally.
Closes#6124
`FunctionBuilder::create_stackslot` was split into `create_sized_stack_slot`
and `create_dynamic_stack_slot`. This updates the doc in the `StackBuilder`
docstring to refer to the new methods.
Fixes#5838.
Wasmtime disallows guests from using `path_symlink` to create
absolute-path symlinks, as they could confuse other code into
accessing resources on the host that the guest otherwise doesn't
have access to.
This patch adds a test for this behavior.
* Remove the validate_address State trait method
It isn't used anywhere
* Expose the inner Function of a Frame
This is necessary to create your own interpreter that reuses most of
cranelift-interpreter. For example to use a different State
implementation.
* Support the symbol_value and tls_value instructions in the interpreter
Instead remove the colocated flag for hotplug mode in define_function.
This prevents issues if declare_*_in_func wasn't used due to eg the
function being from a previously serialized module and now deserialized
into JITModule.
* Cranelift: remove non-egraphs optimization pipeline and `use_egraphs` option.
This PR removes the LICM, GVN, and preopt passes, and associated support
pieces, from `cranelift-codegen`. Not to worry, we still have
optimizations: the egraph framework subsumes all of these, and has been
on by default since #5181.
A few decision points:
- Filetests for the legacy LICM, GVN and simple_preopt were removed too.
As we built optimizations in the egraph framework we wrote new tests
for the equivalent functionality, and many of the old tests were
testing specific behaviors in the old implementations that may not be
relevant anymore. However if folks prefer I could take a different
approach here and try to port over all of the tests.
- The corresponding filetest modes (commands) were deleted too. The
`test alias_analysis` mode remains, but no longer invokes a separate
GVN first (since there is no separate GVN that will not also do alias
analysis) so the tests were tweaked slightly to work with that. The
egrpah testsuite also covers alias analysis.
- The `divconst_magic_numbers` module is removed since it's unused
without `simple_preopt`, though this is the one remaining optimization
we still need to build in the egraphs framework, pending #5908. The
magic numbers will live forever in git history so removing this in the
meantime is not a major issue IMHO.
- The `use_egraphs` setting itself was removed at both the Cranelift and
Wasmtime levels. It has been marked deprecated for a few releases now
(Wasmtime 6.0, 7.0, upcoming 8.0, and corresponding Cranelift
versions) so I think this is probably OK. As an alternative if anyone
feels strongly, we could leave the setting and make it a no-op.
* Update test outputs for remaining test differences.
In #6089, I accidentally left in a change that pegged the
`install-openvino-action` to a commit instead of the latest released
version. This change uses the latest released version.
(Run all CI actions: prtest:full)
* Remove the DataContext wrapper around DataDescription
It doesn't have much of a purpose while making it harder to for example
rewrite the function and data object declarations within it as is
necessary for deserializing a serialized module.
* Derive Debug for DataDescription
* ci: unpin the wasi-nn tasks from an older Ubuntu
Previously, OpenVINO's lack of APT packages for Ubuntu 22.04 (`jammy`)
prevented us from upgrading the GitHub runner to use `ubuntu-latest`. I
updated the `install-openvino-action` to substitute in the `focal`
packages in this case (this is what the OpenVINO team considers the fix)
so this pin should no longer be necessary. Fixes#5408.
(Run all CI actions: prtest:full)
* vet: audit the openvino version bump
Overall, I'm just trying to make these bits of documentation reflect our
process as it stands today. There are some specific changes I want to
draw attention to though.
Asking new contributors to pick a reviewer is a waste of time for two
reasons: Only people with write access to the repository are allowed to
pick reviewers, and new contributors have no idea who would be a good
reviewer for their PR anyway. So I'm deleting all mention of that. We
now auto-assign reviewers instead.
By the time someone is opening a PR, asking them to open an issue just
makes extra work for everyone. They've already picked an approach
without discussing it; we might as well look at what they did. We may
then have to ask them to take a different approach, but at that point,
asking them to open an issue won't save them any effort.
I removed mention of tests from the pull request template. There are
many things we'd like to see in a PR, and we may have to ask for them
during review if the contributor doesn't follow our development process
documentation. But I think the only crucial information for starting a
review is the two questions I'm leaving in the template: why do you want
this, and where can I find more context?
The code of conduct link still had the branch name as `master`, which is
a hint at how long it's been since anyone reviewed it.
* Integrate experimental HTTP into wasmtime.
* Reset Cargo.lock
* Switch to bail!, plumb options partially.
* Implement timeouts.
* Remove generated files & wasm, add Makefile
* Remove generated code textfile
* Update crates/wasi-http/Cargo.toml
Co-authored-by: Eduardo de Moura Rodrigues <16357187+eduardomourar@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update crates/wasi-http/Cargo.toml
Co-authored-by: Eduardo de Moura Rodrigues <16357187+eduardomourar@users.noreply.github.com>
* Extract streams from request/response.
* Fix read for len < buffer length.
* Formatting.
* types impl: swap todos for traps
* streams_impl: idioms, and swap todos for traps
* component impl: idioms, swap all unwraps for traps, swap all todos for traps
* http impl: idiom
* Remove an unnecessary mut.
* Remove an unsupported function.
* Switch to the tokio runtime for the HTTP request.
* Add a rust example.
* Update to latest wit definition
* Remove example code.
* wip: start writing a http test...
* finish writing the outbound request example
havent executed it yet
* better debug output
* wasi-http: some stubs required for rust rewrite of the example
* add wasi_http tests to test-programs
* CI: run the http tests
* Fix some warnings.
* bump new deps to latest releases (#3)
* Add tests for wasi-http to test-programs (#2)
* wip: start writing a http test...
* finish writing the outbound request example
havent executed it yet
* better debug output
* wasi-http: some stubs required for rust rewrite of the example
* add wasi_http tests to test-programs
* CI: run the http tests
* bump new deps to latest releases
h2 0.3.16
http 0.2.9
mio 0.8.6
openssl 0.10.48
openssl-sys 0.9.83
tokio 1.26.0
---------
Co-authored-by: Brendan Burns <bburns@microsoft.com>
* Update crates/test-programs/tests/http_tests/runtime/wasi_http_tests.rs
* Update crates/test-programs/tests/http_tests/runtime/wasi_http_tests.rs
* Update crates/test-programs/tests/http_tests/runtime/wasi_http_tests.rs
* wasi-http: fix cargo.toml file and publish script to work together (#4)
unfortunately, the publish script doesn't use a proper toml parser (in
order to not have any dependencies), so the whitespace has to be the
trivial expected case.
then, add wasi-http to the list of crates to publish.
* Update crates/test-programs/build.rs
* Switch to rustls
* Cleanups.
* Merge switch to rustls.
* Formatting
* Remove libssl install
* Fix tests.
* Rename wasi-http -> wasmtime-wasi-http
* prtest:full
Conditionalize TLS on riscv64gc.
* prtest:full
Fix formatting, also disable tls on s390x
* prtest:full
Add a path parameter to wit-bindgen, remove symlink.
* prtest:full
Fix tests for places where SSL isn't supported.
* Update crates/wasi-http/Cargo.toml
---------
Co-authored-by: Eduardo de Moura Rodrigues <16357187+eduardomourar@users.noreply.github.com>
Co-authored-by: Pat Hickey <phickey@fastly.com>
Co-authored-by: Pat Hickey <pat@moreproductive.org>
* cranelift-interpreter: Propagate traps from call's
* cranelift-interpreter: Make `unwrap_return` only available in tests
This is a footgun for normal use in the interpreter (#6156) but it
still has uses in the tests, so enable it only there.
* Add a limits and trap-on-OOM options to the CLI
This commit adds new options to the `wasmtime` CLI to control the
`Store::limiter` behavior at runtime. This enables artificially
restriction the memory usage of the wasm instance, for example.
Additionally a new option is added to `StoreLimits` to force a trap on
growth failure. This is intended to help quickly debug modules with
backtraces if OOM is happening, or even diagnosing if OOM is happening
in the first place.
* Fix compile of fuzzing oracle
This commit adds new lowerings to the AArch64 backend of the
element-based `fmla` and `fmls` instructions. These instructions have
one of the multiplicands as an implicit broadcast of a single lane of
another register and can help remove `shuffle` or `dup` instructions
that would otherwise be used to implement them.
This commit updates the implementation of the `wasmtime compile` to use
the native host as the default targeted output. Previously the string
for the native host's target was used as the default target, but this
notably disables CPU feature inference meaning that the baseline was
always generated.
While type-checking the AST for a pattern, ISLE was passing in an
`Option<TypeId>` for the expected result type of the pattern. However,
at every call we either passed `Some` type explicitly, or passed the
parent's expected type in a self-recursive call.
Therefore, by induction, `expected_ty` is never `None`. So this PR
unwraps the type everywhere. That in turn shows that a bunch of error
messages were unreachable, so this deletes a bunch of error-handling
code.
In addition, this function returned the type it computed for the
sub-pattern, but that information is already available in the
sub-pattern itself. Not only that but the type should always be equal to
`expected_ty`; when it isn't, we've reported a type error and are just
trying to check for more errors.
Most callers ignored the returned type but in some cases we used it to
try to avoid emitting useless error messages. I've preserved that
behavior for bind-patterns.
For and-patterns, the returned type looked like it was being used, but
because `expected_ty` was never `None`, the fallback of "fill in with
the sub-pattern's type" never fired. So I've deleted that fallback.
Finally, this reverts #4915 (9d99eff6f9)
which was introduced to flatten nested and-patterns, to simplify overlap
checking. However, the visitor trait used by trie_again effectively
flattens and-patterns anyway, so the current representation used for
overlap checking doesn't need this any more.
This commit adds constant-propagation optimizations for
`splat`-of-constant to produce a `vconst` node. This should help later
hoisting these constants out of loops if it shows up in wasm.
This commit changes resolution of libcall relocations from writing a
`usize` into a raw pointer to specifically performing an unaligned
write. The addresses of libcalls to write to are not guaranteed to be
aligned, so this could technically have caused issues on some platforms
perhaps.
This was discovered now that Rust nightly will panic on unaligned writes
to pointers, and fuzzing ran into this case when compiled with a more
recent Nightly build.
* Adding in trampoline compiling method for ISA
* Adding support for indirect call to memory address
* Refactoring frame to externalize defined locals, so it removes WASM depedencies in trampoline case
* Adding initial version of trampoline for testing
* Refactoring trampoline to be re-used by other architectures
* Initial wiring for winch with wasmtime
* Add a Wasmtime CLI option to select `winch`
This is effectively an option to select the `Strategy` enumeration.
* Implement `Compiler::compile_function` for Winch
Hook this into the `TargetIsa::compile_function` hook as well. Currently
this doesn't take into account `Tunables`, but that's left as a TODO for
later.
* Filling out Winch append_code method
* Adding back in changes from previous branch
Most of these are a WIP. It's missing trampolines for x64, but a basic
one exists for aarch64. It's missing the handling of arguments that
exist on the stack.
It currently imports `cranelift_wasm::WasmFuncType` since it's what's
passed to the `Compiler` trait. It's a bit awkward to use in the
`winch_codegen` crate since it mostly operates on `wasmparser` types.
I've had to hack in a conversion to get things working. Long term, I'm
not sure it's wise to rely on this type but it seems like it's easier on
the Cranelift side when creating the stub IR.
* Small API changes to make integration easier
* Adding in new FuncEnv, only a stub for now
* Removing unneeded parts of the old PoC, and refactoring trampoline code
* Moving FuncEnv into a separate file
* More comments for trampolines
* Adding in winch integration tests for first pass
* Using new addressing method to fix stack pointer error
* Adding test for stack arguments
* Only run tests on x86 for now, it's more complete for winch
* Add in missing documentation after rebase
* Updating based on feedback in draft PR
* Fixing formatting on doc comment for argv register
* Running formatting
* Lock updates, and turning on winch feature flags during tests
* Updating configuration with comments to no longer gate Strategy enum
* Using the winch-environ FuncEnv, but it required changing the sig
* Proper comment formatting
* Removing wasmtime-winch from dev-dependencies, adding the winch feature makes this not necessary
* Update doc attr to include winch check
* Adding winch feature to doc generation, which seems to fix the feature error in CI
* Add the `component-model` feature to the cargo doc invocation in CI
To match the metadata used by the docs.rs invocation when building docs.
* Add a comment clarifying the usage of `component-model` for docs.rs
* Correctly order wasmtime-winch and winch-environ in the publish script
* Ensure x86 test dependencies are included in cfg(target_arch)
* Further constrain Winch tests to x86_64 _and_ unix
---------
Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
Co-authored-by: Saúl Cabrera <saulecabrera@gmail.com>
* The `vectorizelanes` function performs a check to see whether there
is a single value provided in an array, and if so returns it as a
scalar.
While elsewhere in the interpreter this behaviour is relied
upon, it yields an incorrect result when attempting to convert a
scalar to a vector.
The original `vectorizelanes` remains untouched, however, an
unconditional variant `vectorizelanes_all` was added.
* A test was added under `filetests/runtests/issue5911.clif`.
Fixes#5911
* simple_gvn: recognize commutative operators
Normalize instructions with commutative opcodes by sorting the arguments. This
means instructions like `iadd v0, v1` and `iadd v1, v0` will be considered
identical by GVN and deduplicated.
* Remove `UsubSat` and `SsubSat` from `is_commutative`
They are not actually commutative
* Remove `TODO`s
* Move InstructionData normalization into helper fn
* Add normalization of commutative instructions in the epgrah implementation
* Handle reflexive icmp/fcmps in GVN
* Change formatting of `normalize_in_place`
* suggestions from code review
The `ring` crate needed to be exempted: it contains a large quantity of asm and native binary implementations of crypto primitives. It is a major undertaking to certify the safety of those implementations.
ring also pulled in the wasm-bindgen family of crates for its wasm32-unknown-unknown target, which this project will not be using. Because we don't care about that platform, I added exemptions for all of these crates, so we don't have to audit them.
The actual supply chain audits for rusttls, rustls-webpki, sct, and tokio-rustls were unremarkable. I also audited a small diff on wasm-bindgen-shared because it was trivial.
* ISLE: move `icmp` rewrites to separate file.
Move `icmp`-related rewrite rules from `algebraic.isle` to `icmp.isle`.
Also move `icmp`-related tests from `algebraic.clif` to `icmp.clif`.
* Put parameterized and unparameterized `icmp` tests in separate files
* Undo refactoring of (ir)reflexivity rewrites
* Fix `icmp-parameterised.clif`
* Undo formatting/comment changes
* add cargo-deny exception for duplicate versions of windows-sys
* cargo vetting for all new deps introduced by https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/pull/5929
The audits are straightforward. The exemptions, as always, need to be justified:
* core-foundation, core-foundation-sys, security-framework, security-framework-sys: these are large crates which are FFI bindings to Mac OS frameworks. As such they contain tons of unsafe code to make these FFI calls and manage memory. These crates are too big to audit.
* schannel: same as the above, except this is a windows component, which I'm also unfamiliar with.
* openssl, openssl-sys: also large FFI bindings which are impractical to audit.
* futures-macro, futures-task: while not as complex as futures-util, these are beyond my personal understanding of futures to vet practically. I've asked Alex to look at auditing these, and he will after he returns from vacation next week.
* futures-util: 25kloc of code, over 149 instances of the substring "unsafe" (case insensitive), this is impractical to audit in the extreme.
* h2, http, httparse, hyper, mio, tokio: this so-called tokio/hyper family are very large and challenging to audit. Bobby Holley has indicated that he is working to get the AWS engineers who maintain these crates to publish their own audits, which we can then import. We expect to exempt these until those imports are available.
* x64: Add AVX encodings of `vcvt{ss2sd,sd2ss}`
Additionally update the instruction helpers to take an `XmmMem` argument
to allow load sinking into the instruction.
* x64: Add AVX encoding of `sqrts{s,d}`
* x64: Add AVX support for `rounds{s,d}`
* x64: Deduplicate fcmp emission logic
The `select`-of-`fcmp` lowering duplicated a good deal of `FloatCC`
lowering logic that was already done by `emit_fcmp`, so this commit
refactors these lowering rules to instead delegate to `emit_fcmp` and
then handle that result.
* Swap order of condition codes
Shouldn't affect the correctness of this operation and it's a bit more
natural to write the lowering rule this way.
* Swap the order of comparison operands
No need to swap `a b`, only the `x y` needs swapping.
* Fix x64 printing of `XmmCmove`
The teams named in this revised version of the `CODEOWNERS` file are
currently configured with the same members as are listed in the file
now.
We wanted a single member of the selected team to be assigned as a
reviewer, but listing people explicitly in CODEOWNERS causes all the
named people to be assigned. Using teams instead allows us to configure
the load-balancing policy.
This also will allow us to add and remove reviewers without needing a PR
every time.
* Add `precise_output` argument to `test optimise`.
Also allow optimise tests to be updated by `CRANELIFT_TEST_BLESS=1`
* Move `check_precise_output` and `update_test` to `subtest`
* winch(x64): Initial implementation for function calls
This change adds the main building blocks for calling locally defined
functions. Support for function imports will be added iteratively after this
change lands and once trampolines are supported.
To support function calls, this change introduces the following functionality to
the MacroAssembler:
* `pop` to pop the machine stack into a given register, which in the case of
this change, translates to the x64 pop instruction.
* `call` to a emit a call to locally defined functions.
* `address_from_sp` to construct memory addresses with the SP as a base.
* `free_stack` to emit the necessary instrunctions to claim stack space.
The heavy lifting of setting up and emitting the function call is done through
the implementation of `FnCall`.
* Fix spill behaviour in function calls and add more documentation
This commits adds a more detailed documentation to the `call.rs` module.
It also fixes a couple of bugs, mainly:
* The previous commit didn't account for memory addresses used as arguments for
the function call, any memory entry in the value stack used as a function
argument should be tracked and then used to claim that memory when the function
call ends. We could `pop` and do this implicitly, but we can also track this
down and emit a single instruction to decrement the stack pointer, which will
result in better code.
* Introduce a differentiator between addresses relative or absolute to the stack
pointer. When passing arguments in the stack -- assuming that SP at that point
is aligned for the function call -- we should store the arguments relative to
the absolute position of the stack pointer and when addressing a memory entry in
the Wasm value stack, we should use an address relative to the offset and the
position of the stack pointer.
* Simplify tracking of the stack space needed for emitting a function call
We want to make sure every contributor gets some kind of meaningful
response in a timely fashion. To that end, this PR configures GitHub to
auto-assign somebody to every newly-opened PR.
People must only be added to this file if they've agreed to this
obligation. The details of what's expected are listed in the file. I'll
only merge this if it's signed off by everyone listed in this initial
version.
* Fix export translation for components.
Exports in the component model cause a new index to be added to the index space
of the item being exported.
This commit updates component translation so that translation of component
export sections properly updates internal lists representing those index
spaces.
* Code review feedback.