Commit Graph

15 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
7eea5d8d43 Optimize codegen in Func::wrap (#1491)
This commit optimizes the codegen of `Func::wrap` such that if you do
something like `Func::wrap(&store, || {})` then the shim generated
contains zero code (as expected). In general this means that the extra
tidbits generated by wasmtime are all eligible to be entirely optimized
away so long as you don't actually rely on something.
2020-04-10 12:52:06 -05:00
Alex Crichton
bd374fd6fc Add Wasmtime-specific C API functions to return errors (#1467)
* Add Wasmtime-specific C API functions to return errors

This commit adds new `wasmtime_*` symbols to the C API, many of which
mirror the existing counterparts in the `wasm.h` header. These APIs are
enhanced in a number of respects:

* Detailed error information is now available through a
  `wasmtime_error_t`. Currently this only exposes one function which is
  to extract a string version of the error.

* There is a distinction now between traps and errors during
  instantiation and function calling. Traps only happen if wasm traps,
  and errors can happen for things like runtime type errors when
  interacting with the API.

* APIs have improved safety with respect to embedders where the lengths
  of arrays are now taken as explicit parameters rather than assumed
  from other parameters.

* Handle trap updates

* Update C examples

* Fix memory.c compile on MSVC

* Update test assertions

* Refactor C slightly

* Bare-bones .NET update

* Remove bogus nul handling
2020-04-06 15:13:06 -05:00
Alex Crichton
afd980b4f6 Refactor the internals of Func to remove layers of indirection (#1363)
* Remove `WrappedCallable` indirection

At this point `Func` has evolved quite a bit since inception and the
`WrappedCallable` trait I don't believe is needed any longer. This
should help clean up a few entry points by having fewer traits in play.

* Remove the `Callable` trait

This commit removes the `wasmtime::Callable` trait, changing the
signature of `Func::new` to take an appropriately typed `Fn`.
Additionally the function now always takes `&Caller` like `Func::wrap`
optionally can, to empower `Func::new` to have the same capabilities of
`Func::wrap`.

* Add a test for an already-fixed issue

Closes #849

* rustfmt

* Update more locations for `Callable`

* rustfmt

* Remove a stray leading borrow

* Review feedback

* Remove unneeded `wasmtime_call_trampoline` shim
2020-03-19 14:21:45 -05:00
Alex Crichton
f63c3c814e Add a first-class way of accessing caller's exports (#1290)
* Add a first-class way of accessing caller's exports

This commit is a continuation of #1237 and updates the API of `Func` to
allow defining host functions which have easy access to a caller's
memory in particular. The new APIs look like so:

* The `Func::wrap*` family of functions was condensed into one
  `Func::wrap` function.
* The ABI layer of conversions in `WasmTy` were removed
* An optional `Caller<'_>` argument can be at the front of all
  host-defined functions now.

The old way the wasi bindings looked up memory has been removed and is
now replaced with the `Caller` type. The `Caller` type has a
`get_export` method on it which allows looking up a caller's export by
name, allowing you to get access to the caller's memory easily, and even
during instantiation.

* Add a temporary note

* Move some docs
2020-03-18 16:57:31 -05:00
Alex Crichton
3e2be43502 Pre-generate trampoline functions (#957)
* Refactor wasmtime_runtime::Export

Instead of an enumeration with variants that have data fields have an
enumeration where each variant has a struct, and each struct has the
data fields. This allows us to store the structs in the `wasmtime` API
and avoid lots of `panic!` calls and various extraneous matches.

* Pre-generate trampoline functions

The `wasmtime` crate supports calling arbitrary function signatures in
wasm code, and to do this it generates "trampoline functions" which have
a known ABI that then internally convert to a particular signature's ABI
and call it. These trampoline functions are currently generated
on-the-fly and are cached in the global `Store` structure. This,
however, is suboptimal for a few reasons:

* Due to how code memory is managed each trampoline resides in its own
  64kb allocation of memory. This means if you have N trampolines you're
  using N * 64kb of memory, which is quite a lot of overhead!

* Trampolines are never free'd, even if the referencing module goes
  away. This is similar to #925.

* Trampolines are a source of shared state which prevents `Store` from
  being easily thread safe.

This commit refactors how trampolines are managed inside of the
`wasmtime` crate and jit/runtime internals. All trampolines are now
allocated in the same pass of `CodeMemory` that the main module is
allocated into. A trampoline is generated per-signature in a module as
well, instead of per-function. This cache of trampolines is stored
directly inside of an `Instance`. Trampolines are stored based on
`VMSharedSignatureIndex` so they can be looked up from the internals of
the `ExportFunction` value.

The `Func` API has been updated with various bits and pieces to ensure
the right trampolines are registered in the right places. Overall this
should ensure that all trampolines necessary are generated up-front
rather than lazily. This allows us to remove the trampoline cache from
the `Compiler` type, and move one step closer to making `Compiler`
threadsafe for usage across multiple threads.

Note that as one small caveat the `Func::wrap*` family of functions
don't need to generate a trampoline at runtime, they actually generate
the trampoline at compile time which gets passed in.

Also in addition to shuffling a lot of code around this fixes one minor
bug found in `code_memory.rs`, where `self.position` was loaded before
allocation, but the allocation may push a new chunk which would cause
`self.position` to be zero instead.

* Pass the `SignatureRegistry` as an argument to where it's needed.

This avoids the need for storing it in an `Arc`.

* Ignore tramoplines for functions with lots of arguments

Co-authored-by: Dan Gohman <sunfish@mozilla.com>
2020-03-12 16:17:48 -05:00
Alex Crichton
11510ec426 Disallow values to cross stores (#1016)
* Disallow values to cross stores

Lots of internals in the wasmtime-{jit,runtime} crates are highly
unsafe, so it's up to the `wasmtime` API crate to figure out how to make
it safe. One guarantee we need to provide is that values never cross
between stores. For example you can't take a function in one store and
move it over into a different instance in a different store. This
dynamic check can't be performed at compile time and it's up to
`wasmtime` to do the check itself.

This adds a number of checks, but not all of them, to the codebase for
now. This primarily adds checks around instantiation, globals, and
tables. The main hole in this is functions, where you can pass in
arguments or return values that are not from the right store. For now
though we can't compile modules with `anyref` parameters/returns anyway,
so we should be good. Eventually when that is supported we'll need to
put the guards in place.

Closes #958

* Clarify how values test they come from stores

* Allow null anyref to initialize tables
2020-03-10 09:28:31 -05:00
Alex Crichton
85fab0ab56 Expand Func documentation, rewrite Rust embed docs (#1236)
This commit expands the documentation of the `Func` type as well as
updating the Rust embedding tutorial with more recent APIs. I wanted to
also leave space in the Rust tutorial to get more ambitious over time
with what it's documenting, but I stopped around here, curious to see
what others think about it!
2020-03-05 12:54:42 -06:00
Maciej Woś
8acfdbdd8a add more wrappers and getters (#1222) 2020-03-03 22:58:11 -06:00
Dan Gohman
d55a9967b1 Remove some obsolete re-exports in wasmtime-jit. (#992)
These were from when wasmtime-jit was trying to present a different API;
now they're not needed.
2020-02-26 05:13:28 -08:00
Josh Triplett
aa78d491b0 Make Func::getN return a Result rather than an Option (#966)
This allows getN to return a detailed explanation of any type signature
mismatch, and makes it easy to just use `?` on the result of getN rather
than constructing a (necessarily vaguer) error message in the caller.
2020-02-22 17:56:23 -06:00
Josh Triplett
8be80cbd0d Extend Func::getN up to get10, allowing up to 10-argument functions (#965)
* Func: Number type arguments rather than using successive letters

This simplifies future extension, and avoids potential conflicts with
other type argument names.

* Extend Func::getN up to get10, allowing up to 10-argument functions
2020-02-22 17:09:06 -06:00
Alex Crichton
80b095f2e2 Add API to statically assert signature of a Func (#955)
* Add API to statically assert signature of a `Func`

This commit add a family of APIs to `Func` named `getN` where `N` is the
number of arguments. Each function will attempt to statically assert the
signature of a `Func` and, if matching, returns a corresponding closure
which can be used to invoke the underlying function.

The purpose of this commit is to add a highly optimized way to enter a
wasm module, performing type checks up front and avoiding all the costs
of boxing and unboxing arguments within a `Val`. In general this should
be much more optimized than the previous `call` API for entering a wasm
module, if the signature is statically known.

* rustfmt

* Remove stray debugging
2020-02-20 09:28:12 -06:00
Alex Crichton
f5b505de04 Remove the jit_function_registry global state (#915)
* Remove the `jit_function_registry` global state

This commit removes on the final pieces of global state in wasmtime
today, the `jit_function_registry` module. The purpose of this module is
to help translate a native backtrace with native program counters into a
wasm backtrace with module names, function names, and wasm module
indices. To that end this module retained a global map of function
ranges to this metadata information for each compiled function.

It turns out that we already had a `NAMES` global in the `wasmtime`
crate for symbolicating backtrace addresses, so this commit moves that
global into its own file and restructures the internals to account for
program counter ranges as well. The general set of changes here are:

* Remove `jit_function_registry`
* Remove `NAMES`
* Create a new `frame_info` module which has a singleton global
  registering compiled module's frame information.
* Update traps to use the `frame_info` module to symbolicate pcs,
  directly extracting a `FrameInfo` from the module.
* Register and unregister information on a module level instead of on a
  per-function level (at least in terms of locking granluarity).

This commit leaves the new `FRAME_INFO` global variable as the only
remaining "critical" global variable in `wasmtime`, which only exists
due to the API of `Trap` where it doesn't take in any extra context when
capturing a stack trace through which we could hang off frame
information. I'm thinking though that this is ok, and we can always
tweak the API of `Trap` in the future if necessary if we truly need to
accomodate this.

* Remove a lazy_static dep

* Add some comments and restructure
2020-02-07 07:33:21 -06:00
Alex Crichton
3dd5a3cb3f Reimplement wasmtime-wasi on top of wasmtime (#899)
* Reimplement `wasmtime-wasi` on top of `wasmtime`

This commit reimplements the `wasmtime-wasi` crate on top of the
`wasmtime` API crate, instead of being placed on top of the `wasmtime-*`
family of internal crates. The purpose here is to continue to exercise
the API as well as avoid usage of internals wherever possible and
instead use the safe API as much as possible.

The `wasmtime-wasi` crate's API has been updated as part of this PR as
well. The general outline of it is now:

* Each module snapshot has a `WasiCtxBuilder`, `WasiCtx`, and `Wasi`
  type.
  * The `WasiCtx*` types are reexported from `wasi-common`.
  * The `Wasi` type is synthesized by the `wig` crate's procedural macro
* The `Wasi` type exposes one constructor which takes a `Store` and a
  `WasiCtx`, and produces a `Wasi`
* Each `Wasi` struct fields for all the exported functions in that wasi
  module. They're all public an they all have type `wasmtime::Func`
* The `Wasi` type has a `get_export` method to fetch an struct field by
  name.

The intention here is that we can continue to make progress on #727 by
integrating WASI construction into the `Instance::new` experience, but
it requires everything to be part of the same system!

The main oddity required by the `wasmtime-wasi` crate is that it needs
access to the caller's `memory` export, if any. This is currently done
with a bit of a hack and is expected to go away once interface types are
more fully baked in.

* Remove now no-longer-necessary APIs from `wasmtime`

* rustfmt

* Rename to from_abi
2020-02-06 09:23:06 -06:00
Alex Crichton
1bfca842b0 Support Func imports with zero shims (#839)
* Move `Func` to its own file

* Support `Func` imports with zero shims

This commit extends the `Func` type in the `wasmtime` crate with static
`wrap*` constructors. The goal of these constructors is to create a
`Func` type which has zero shims associated with it, creating as small
of a layer as possible between wasm code and calling imported Rust code.

This is achieved by creating an `extern "C"` shim function which matches
the ABI of what Cranelift will generate, and then the host function is
passed directly into an `InstanceHandle` to get called later. This also
enables enough inlining opportunities that LLVM will be able to see all
functions and inline everything to the point where your function is
called immediately from wasm, no questions asked.
2020-02-04 14:32:35 -06:00