This commit updates the output of failed expectations in the `wast`
crate to fold in the check-is-the-value-the-same with the
generate-a-nice-message. Additionally this tries to make sure that
everything is aligned in the output to make it a bit more easily
readable. Vectors should notably be improved where lane differences can
be compared vertically in the case of integers and printed out
specifically in the case of floats.
* Bump the wasm-tools crates
Pulls in some updates here and there, mostly for updating crates to the
latest version to prepare for later memory64 work.
* Update lightbeam
* wasmtime_runtime: move ResourceLimiter defaults into this crate
In preparation of changing wasmtime::ResourceLimiter to be a re-export
of this definition, because translating between two traits was causing
problems elsewhere.
* wasmtime: make ResourceLimiter a re-export of wasmtime_runtime::ResourceLimiter
* refactor Store internals to support ResourceLimiter as part of store's data
* add hooks for entering and exiting native code to Store
* wasmtime-wast, fuzz: changes to adapt ResourceLimiter API
* fix tests
* wrap calls into wasm with entering/exiting exit hooks as well
* the most trivial test found a bug, lets write some more
* store: mark some methods as #[inline] on Store, StoreInner, StoreInnerMost
Co-authored-By: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
* improve tests for the entering/exiting native hooks
Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
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 is intended to do almost everything necessary for processing
the alias section of module linking. Most of this is internal
refactoring, the highlights being:
* Type contents are now stored separately from a `wasmtime_env::Module`.
Given that modules can freely alias types and have them used all over
the place, it seemed best to have one canonical location to type
storage which everywhere else points to (with indices). A new
`TypeTables` structure is produced during compilation which is shared
amongst all member modules in a wasm blob.
* Instantiation is heavily refactored to account for module linking. The
main gotcha here is that imports are now listed as "initializers". We
have a sort of pseudo-bytecode-interpreter which interprets the
initialization of a module. This is more complicated than just
matching imports at this point because in the module linking proposal
the module, alias, import, and instance sections may all be
interleaved. This means that imports aren't guaranteed to show up at
the beginning of the address space for modules/instances.
Otherwise most of the changes here largely fell out from these two
design points. Aliases are recorded as initializers in this scheme.
Copying around type information and/or just knowing type information
during compilation is also pretty easy since everything is just a
pointer into a `TypeTables` and we don't have to actually copy any types
themselves. Lots of various refactorings were necessary to accomodate
these changes.
Tests are hoped to cover a breadth of functionality here, but not
necessarily a depth. There's still one more piece of the module linking
proposal missing which is exporting instances/modules, which will come
in a future PR.
It's also worth nothing that there's one large TODO which isn't
implemented in this change that I plan on opening an issue for.
With module linking when a set of modules comes back from compilation
each modules has all the trampolines for the entire set of modules. This
is quite a lot of duplicate trampolines across module-linking modules.
We'll want to refactor this at some point to instead have only one set
of trampolines per set of module linking modules and have them shared
from there. I figured it was best to separate out this change, however,
since it's purely related to resource usage, and doesn't impact
non-module-linking modules at all.
cc #2094
With the module linking proposal the field name on imports is now
optional, and only the module is required to be specified. This commit
propagates this API change to the boundary of wasmtime's API, ensuring
consumers are aware of what's optional with module linking and what
isn't. Note that it's expected that all existing users will either
update accordingly or unwrap the result since module linking is
presumably disabled.
This commit is intended to update wasmparser to 0.59.0. This primarily
includes bytecodealliance/wasm-tools#40 which is a large update to how
parsing and validation works. The impact on Wasmtime is pretty small at
this time, but over time I'd like to refactor the internals here to lean
more heavily on that upstream wasmparser refactoring.
For now, though, the intention is to get on the train of wasmparser's
latest `main` branch to ensure we get bug fixes and such.
As part of this update a few other crates and such were updated. This is
primarily to handle the new encoding of `ref.is_null` where the type is
not part of the instruction encoding any more.
Better to be loud that we don't support attaching arbitrary host info to
`externref`s than to limp along and pretend we do support it. Supporting it
properly won't reuse any of this code anyways.
`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.
* Remove Cranelift's OutOfBounds trap, which is no longer used.
* Change proc_exit to unwind instead of exit the host process.
This implements the semantics in https://github.com/WebAssembly/WASI/pull/235.
Fixes#783.
Fixes#993.
* Fix exit-status tests on Windows.
* Revert the wiggle changes and re-introduce the wasi-common implementations.
* Move `wasi_proc_exit` into the wasmtime-wasi crate.
* Revert the spec_testsuite change.
* Remove the old proc_exit implementations.
* Make `TrapReason` an implementation detail.
* Allow exit status 2 on Windows too.
* Fix a documentation link.
* Really fix a documentation link.
* 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.
* Add APIs to lookup values in `Linker`
This commit adds three new methods to `Linker` in order to inspect it
after values have been inserted:
* `Linker::iter` - iterates over all defined values
* `Linker::get` - lookup a value by its `ImportType`
* `Linker::get_by_name` - lookup values based on their name
Closes#1454
* More apis!
* 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
* Use `Linker` in `*.wast` testing
By default `Linker` disallows shadowing previously defined items, but it
looks like the `*.wast` test suites rely on this so this commit adds a
boolean flag to `Linker` as well indicating whether duplicates are
allowed.
* Review comments
* Add a test with a number of recursive instances
* Deny warnings in doctests
* No tabs
* Enable the already-passing `bulk-memoryoperations/imports.wast` test
* Implement support for the `memory.init` instruction and passive data
This adds support for passive data segments and the `memory.init` instruction
from the bulk memory operations proposal. Passive data segments are stored on
the Wasm module and then `memory.init` instructions copy their contents into
memory.
* Implement the `data.drop` instruction
This allows wasm modules to deallocate passive data segments that it doesn't
need anymore. We keep track of which segments have not been dropped on an
`Instance` and when dropping them, remove the entry from the instance's hash
map. The module always needs all of the segments for new instantiations.
* Enable final bulk memory operations spec test
This requires special casing an expected error message for an `assert_trap`,
since the expected error message contains the index of an uninitialized table
element, but our trap implementation doesn't save that diagnostic information
and shepherd it out.
* Update cranelift to 0.58.0
* Update `wasmprinter` dep to require 0.2.1
We already had it in the lock file, but this ensures we won't ever go back down.
* Ensure that our error messages match `assert_invalid`'s
The bulk of this work was done in
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmparser/pull/186 but now we can test it
at the `wasmtime` level as well.
Fixes#492
* Stop feeling guilty about not matching `assert_malformed` messages
Remove the "TODO" and stop printing warning messages. These would just be busy
work to implement, and getting all the messages the exact same relies on using
the same structure as the spec interpreter's parser, which means that where you
have a helper function and they don't, then things go wrong, and vice versa. Not
worth it.
Fixes#492
* Enable (but ignore) the reference-types proposal tests
* Match test suite directly, instead of roundabout starts/endswith
* Enable (but ignore) bulk memory operations proposal test suite
* Document the `wasmtime::Instance` APIs
This documents oddities like the import list and export list and how to
match them all up. Addtionally this largely just expands all the docs
related to `Instance` to get filled out.
This also moves the `set_signal_handler` functions into
platform-specific modules in order to follow Rust idioms about how to
expose platform-specific information. Additionally the methods are
marked `unsafe` because I figure anything having to do with signal
handling is `unsafe` inherently. I don't actually know what these
functions do, so they're currently still undocumented.
* Fix build of python bindings
* Fix some rebase conflicts
* Don't require `Store` in `Instance` constructor
This can be inferred from the `Module` argument. Additionally add a
`store` accessor to an `Instance` in case it's needed to instantiate
another `Module`.
cc #708
* Update more constructors
* Fix a doctest
* Don't ignore store in `wasm_instance_new`
* Run rustfmt
* Update to the latest spec_testsuite and dependencies.
Update to target-lexicon 0.10, cranelift 0.54, wast 0.6, faerie 0.14,
and the latest spec_testsuite.
For wast and cranelift-wasm, update the code for API changes.
* Factor out the code for matching f32, f64, and v128.
This takes the idea from #802 to split out `f32_matches`, `f64_matches`,
and `v128_matches` functions, which better factor out the matching
functionality between scalar and vector.
This commit refactors the `wasmtime-wast` crate to internally make it a
bit more concise with less repetition. Additionally it also improves the
error messages by guaranteeing that all failed tests have context
indicating where the test was defined.
It turns out there was also a bug in the previous implementation where
an `AssertMalformed` directive with a `quote` module would accidentally
skip all further tests. This has now been fixed, and all futher tests
continued to pass except for the `simd_const.wast` test. This test has
been disabled temporarily but once the `wasmparser` and `wast` crates
are updated (being worked on independently) this should be possible to
re-enable.
* Remove `HostRef` from the `wasmtime` public API
This commit removes all remaining usages of `HostRef` in the public API
of the `wasmtime` crate. This involved a number of API decisions such
as:
* None of `Func`, `Global`, `Table`, or `Memory` are wrapped in `HostRef`
* All of `Func`, `Global`, `Table`, and `Memory` implement `Clone` now.
* Methods called `type` are renamed to `ty` to avoid typing `r#type`.
* Methods requiring mutability for external items now no longer require
mutability. The mutable reference here is sort of a lie anyway since
the internals are aliased by the underlying module anyway. This
affects:
* `Table::set`
* `Table::grow`
* `Memory::grow`
* `Instance::set_signal_handler`
* The `Val::FuncRef` type is now no longer automatically coerced to
`AnyRef`. This is technically a breaking change which is pretty bad,
but I'm hoping that we can live with this interim state while we sort
out the `AnyRef` story in general.
* The implementation of the C API was refactored and updated in a few
locations to account for these changes:
* Accessing the exports of an instance are now cached to ensure we
always hand out the same `HostRef` values.
* `wasm_*_t` for external values no longer have internal cache,
instead they all wrap `wasm_external_t` and have an unchecked
accessor for the underlying variant (since the type is proof that
it's there). This makes casting back and forth much more trivial.
This is all related to #708 and while there's still more work to be done
in terms of documentation, this is the major bulk of the rest of the
implementation work on #708 I believe.
* More API updates
* Run rustfmt
* Fix a doc test
* More test updates
This commit continues previous work and also #708 by removing the need
to use `HostRef<Module>` in the API of the `wasmtime` crate. The API
changes performed here are:
* The `Module` type is now itself internally reference counted.
* The `Module::store` function now returns the `Store` that was used to
create a `Module`
* Documentation for `Module` and its methods have been expanded.
* Remove the need for `HostRef<Module>`
This commit continues previous work and also #708 by removing the need
to use `HostRef<Module>` in the API of the `wasmtime` crate. The API
changes performed here are:
* The `Module` type is now itself internally reference counted.
* The `Module::store` function now returns the `Store` that was used to
create a `Module`
* Documentation for `Module` and its methods have been expanded.
* Fix compliation of test programs harness
* Fix the python extension
* Update `CodeMemory` to be `Send + Sync`
This commit updates the `CodeMemory` type in wasmtime to be both `Send`
and `Sync` by updating the implementation of `Mmap` to not store raw
pointers. This avoids the need for an `unsafe impl` and leaves the
unsafety as it is currently.
* Fix a typo
* Remove the need for `HostRef<Store>`
This commit goes through the public API of the `wasmtime` crate and
removes the need for `HostRef<Store>`, as discussed in #708. This commit
is accompanied with a few changes:
* The `Store` type now also implements `Default`, creating a new
`Engine` with default settings and returning that.
* The `Store` type now implements `Clone`, and is documented as being a
"cheap clone" aka being reference counted. As before there is no
supported way to create a deep clone of a `Store`.
* All APIs take/return `&Store` or `Store` instead of `HostRef<Store>`,
and `HostRef<T>` is left as purely a detail of the C API.
* The `global_exports` function is tagged as `#[doc(hidden)]` for now
while we await its removal.
* The `Store` type is not yet `Send` nor `Sync` due to the usage of
`global_exports`, but it is intended to become so eventually.
* Touch up comments on some examples
* Run rustfmt
* Ensure `Trap` is returned for start function traps
Handle another case of errors coming out of instantiation, resolve a
FIXME, and remove an unneeded dependency from the wast testsuite crate.
* Run rustfmt
* Update the `*.wast` runner to use the `wasmtime` API
This commit migrates the `wasmtime-wast` crate, which executes `*.wast`
test suites, to use the `wasmtime` crate exclusively instead of the raw
support provided by the `wasmtime-*` family of crates.
The primary motivation for this change is to use `*.wast` test to test
the support for interface types, but interface types is only being added
in the `wasmtime` crate for now rather than all throughout the core
crates. This means that without this transition it's much more difficult
to write tests for wasm interface types!
A secondary motivation for this is that it's testing the support we
provide to users through the `wasmtime` crate, since that's the
expectation of what most users would use rather than the raw
`wasmtime-*` crates.
* Run rustfmt
* Fix the multi example
* Handle v128 values in the `wasmtime` crate
Ensure that we allocate 128-bit stack slots instead of 64-bit stack
slots.
* Update to master
* Add comment
* Reduce duplication in error messages
This commit removes duplication in error messages where the same text
would show up multiple times in a fully rendered error message.
When using `derive(Error)` when the `#[from]` attribute is used there's
no need to also render that payload into the error string because the
`#[from]` establishes a "backtrace" which means that when the full
context of an error is rendered it will include the `#[from]` in the
lower frames of the backtrace anyway.
This commit audits the `derive(Error)` implementations to avoid
duplication in the rendered error messages, ensuring that if `#[from]`
is used then the `#[from]` field isn't also rendered in the textual
description.
* Search the full error in wast assertions
Don't just search the top error, but search the whole backtrace by using
the `{:?}` format instead of `{}`.