Commit Graph

202 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Alex Crichton
a33caec9be Bump the wasm-tools crates (#3139)
* 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
2021-08-04 09:53:47 -05:00
Chris Fallin
a13a777230 Bump to Wasmtime v0.29.0 and Cranelift 0.76.0. 2021-08-02 11:24:09 -07:00
Alex Crichton
63a3bbbf5a Change VMMemoryDefinition::current_length to usize (#3134)
* Change VMMemoryDefinition::current_length to `usize`

This commit changes the definition of
`VMMemoryDefinition::current_length` to `usize` from its previous
definition of `u32`. This is a pretty impactful change because it also
changes the cranelift semantics of "dynamic" heaps where the bound
global value specifier must now match the pointer type for the platform
rather than the index type for the heap.

The motivation for this change is that the `current_length` field (or
bound for the heap) is intended to reflect the current size of the heap.
This is bound by `usize` on the host platform rather than `u32` or`
u64`. The previous choice of `u32` couldn't represent a 4GB memory
because we couldn't put a number representing 4GB into the
`current_length` field. By using `usize`, which reflects the host's
memory allocation, this should better reflect the size of the heap and
allows Wasmtime to support a full 4GB heap for a wasm program (instead
of 4GB minus one page).

This commit also updates the legalization of the `heap_addr` clif
instruction to appropriately cast the address to the platform's pointer
type, handling bounds checks along the way. The practical impact for
today's targets is that a `uextend` is happening sooner than it happened
before, but otherwise there is no intended impact of this change. In the
future when 64-bit memories are supported there will likely need to be
fancier logic which handles offsets a bit differently (especially in the
case of a 64-bit memory on a 32-bit host).

The clif `filetest` changes should show the differences in codegen, and
the Wasmtime changes are largely removing casts here and there.

Closes #3022

* Add tests for memory.size at maximum memory size

* Add a dfg helper method
2021-08-02 13:09:40 -05:00
Nick Fitzgerald
3d76cbdf34 Update gimli to 0.25; addr2line to 0.16 2021-07-26 11:04:53 -07:00
Alex Crichton
73fd702bb7 Don't assume all custom sections are dwarf info (#3083)
This incorrectly assumed that we had unparsed dwarf information,
regardless of custom section name. This commit updates the logic to
calculate that by first checking the section name before we set the flag
indicating that there's unparsed debuginfo.
2021-07-13 15:53:17 -05:00
Alex Crichton
992d85ae8b Add a type parameter to VMOffsets for pointer size (#3020)
* Add a type parameter to `VMOffsets` for pointer size

This commit adds a type parameter to `VMOffsets` representing the
pointer size to improve computations in `wasmtime-runtime` which always
use a constant value of the host's pointer size. The type parameter is
`u8` for `wasmtime-cranelift`'s use case where cross-compilation may be
involved.

* fix lightbeam
2021-07-13 09:52:27 -05:00
Alex Crichton
aa5d837428 Start a high-level architecture document for Wasmtime (#3019)
* Start a high-level architecture document for Wasmtime

This commit cleands up some existing documentation by removing a number
of "noop README files" and starting a high-level overview of the
architecture of Wasmtime. I've placed this documentation under the
contributing section of the book since it seems most useful for possible
contributors.

I've surely left some things out in this pass, and am happy to add more!

* Review comments

* More rewording

* typos
2021-07-02 09:02:26 -05:00
Alex Crichton
a273add815 Simplify the list of builtin intrinsics Wasmtime needs
This commit slims down the list of builtin intrinsics. It removes the
duplicated intrinsics for imported and locally defined items, instead
always using one intrinsic for both. This was previously inconsistently
applied where some intrinsics got two copies (one for imported one for
local) and other intrinsics got only one copy. This does add an extra
branch in intrinsics since they need to determine whether something is
local or not, but that's generally much lower cost than the intrinsics
themselves.

This also removes the `memory32_size` intrinsic, instead inlining the
codegen directly into the clif IR. This matches what the `table.size`
instruction does and removes the need for a few functions on a
`wasmtime_runtime::Instance`.
2021-06-23 10:30:31 -07:00
Alex Crichton
7ce46043dc Add guard pages to the front of linear memories (#2977)
* Add guard pages to the front of linear memories

This commit implements a safety feature for Wasmtime to place guard
pages before the allocation of all linear memories. Guard pages placed
after linear memories are typically present for performance (at least)
because it can help elide bounds checks. Guard pages before a linear
memory, however, are never strictly needed for performance or features.
The intention of a preceding guard page is to help insulate against bugs
in Cranelift or other code generators, such as CVE-2021-32629.

This commit adds a `Config::guard_before_linear_memory` configuration
option, defaulting to `true`, which indicates whether guard pages should
be present both before linear memories as well as afterwards. Guard
regions continue to be controlled by
`{static,dynamic}_memory_guard_size` methods.

The implementation here affects both on-demand allocated memories as
well as the pooling allocator for memories. For on-demand memories this
adjusts the size of the allocation as well as adjusts the calculations
for the base pointer of the wasm memory. For the pooling allocator this
will place a singular extra guard region at the very start of the
allocation for memories. Since linear memories in the pooling allocator
are contiguous every memory already had a preceding guard region in
memory, it was just the previous memory's guard region afterwards. Only
the first memory needed this extra guard.

I've attempted to write some tests to help test all this, but this is
all somewhat tricky to test because the settings are pretty far away
from the actual behavior. I think, though, that the tests added here
should help cover various use cases and help us have confidence in
tweaking the various `Config` settings beyond their defaults.

Note that this also contains a semantic change where
`InstanceLimits::memory_reservation_size` has been removed. Instead this
field is now inferred from the `static_memory_maximum_size` and guard
size settings. This should hopefully remove some duplication in these
settings, canonicalizing on the guard-size/static-size settings as the
way to control memory sizes and virtual reservations.

* Update config docs

* Fix a typo

* Fix benchmark

* Fix wasmtime-runtime tests

* Fix some more tests

* Try to fix uffd failing test

* Review items

* Tweak 32-bit defaults

Makes the pooling allocator a bit more reasonable by default on 32-bit
with these settings.
2021-06-18 09:57:08 -05:00
Alex Crichton
5140fd251a Update wasm-tools crates (#2989)
* Update wasm-tools crates

This brings in recent updates, notably including more improvements to
wasm-smith which will hopefully help exercise non-trapping wasm more.

* Fix some wat
2021-06-15 22:56:10 -05:00
Alex Crichton
e8b8947956 Bump to 0.28.0 (#2972) 2021-06-09 14:00:13 -05:00
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
Chris Fallin
88455007b2 Bump Wasmtime to v0.27.0 and Cranelift to v0.74.0. 2021-05-20 14:06:41 -07:00
Olivier Lemasle
b5f29bd3b2 Update wasm-tools crates (#2908)
wasmparser 0.78 adds the Unknown name subsection type.
2021-05-17 10:08:17 -05:00
Benjamin Bouvier
d7053ea9c7 Upgrade to the latest versions of gimli, addr2line, object (#2901)
* Upgrade to the latest versions of gimli, addr2line, object

And adapt to API changes. New gimli supports wasm dwarf, resulting in
some simplifications in the debug crate.

* upgrade gimli usage in linux-specific profiling too

* Add "continue" statement after interpreting a wasm local dwarf opcode
2021-05-12 10:53:17 -05:00
bjorn3
84c79982e7 Remove unnecessary dependencies
Found using cargo-udeps
2021-05-04 13:51:26 +02:00
Chris Fallin
b89c959e4a Merge pull request #2854 from uweigand/debug-endian
debug: Support big-endian architectures
2021-04-27 10:27:22 -07:00
Ulrich Weigand
801358333d debug: Support big-endian architectures
This fixes some hard-coded assumptions in the debug crate that
the native ELF files being accessed are little-endian; specifically
in create_gdbjit_image as well as in emit_dwarf.

In addition, data in WebAssembly memory always uses little-endian
byte order.  Therefore, if the native architecture is big-endian,
all references to base types need to be marked as little-endian
using the DW_AT_endianity attribute, so that the debugger will
be able to correctly access them.
2021-04-21 14:14:59 +02:00
Alex Crichton
196bcec6cf Process declared element segments for "possibly exported funcs" (#2851)
Now that we're using "possibly exported" as an impactful decision for
codegen (which trampolines to generate and which ABI a function has)
it's important that we calculate this property of a wasm function
correctly! Previously Wasmtime forgot to processed "declared" elements
in apart from active/passive element segments, but this updates Wasmtime
to ensure that these entries are processed and all the functions
contained within are flagged as "possibly exported".

Closes #2850
2021-04-20 16:52:51 -05:00
Alex Crichton
193551a8d6 Optimize table.init instruction and instantiation (#2847)
* Optimize `table.init` instruction and instantiation

This commit optimizes table initialization as part of instance
instantiation and also applies the same optimization to the `table.init`
instruction. One part of this commit is to remove some preexisting
duplication between instance instantiation and the `table.init`
instruction itself, after this the actual implementation of `table.init`
is optimized to effectively have fewer bounds checks in fewer places and
have a much tighter loop for instantiation.

A big fallout from this change is that memory/table initializer offsets
are now stored as `u32` instead of `usize` to remove a few casts in a
few places. This ended up requiring moving some overflow checks that
happened in parsing to later in code itself because otherwise the wrong
spec test errors are emitted during testing. I've tried to trace where
these can possibly overflow but I think that I managed to get
everything.

In a local synthetic test where an empty module with a single 80,000
element initializer this improves total instantiation time by 4x (562us
=> 141us)

* Review comments
2021-04-19 18:44:48 -05:00
Peter Huene
b775b68cfb Make module information lookup from runtime safe.
This commit uses a two-phase lookup of stack map information from modules
rather than giving back raw pointers to stack maps.

First the runtime looks up information about a module from a pc value, which
returns an `Arc` it keeps a reference on while completing the stack map lookup.

Second it then queries the module information for the stack map from a pc
value, getting a reference to the stack map (which is now safe because of the
`Arc` held by the runtime).
2021-04-16 12:30:10 -07:00
Peter Huene
ea72c621f0 Remove the stack map registry.
This commit removes the stack map registry and instead uses the existing
information from the store's module registry to lookup stack maps.

A trait is now used to pass the lookup context to the runtime, implemented by
`Store` to do the lookup.

With this change, module registration in `Store` is now entirely limited to
inserting the module into the module registry.
2021-04-16 11:08:21 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c91e14d83f Precompute fields in VMOffsets
This commit updates the implementation of `VMOffsets` to frontload all
checked arithmetic on construction of the `VMOffsets` which allows
eliding all checked arithmetic when accessing the fields of `VMOffsets`.
For testing and such this adds a new constructor as well from a new
`VMOffsetsFields` structure which is a clone of the old definition.

This should help speed up some profile hot spots I've been seeing where
with all the checked arithmetic on field sizes this was slowing down the
various accessors during instantiation (which uses `VMOffsets` to
initialize various fields of the `VMContext`).
2021-04-08 12:46:17 -07:00
Alex Crichton
c77ea0c5c7 Add some more #[inline] annotations for trivial functions (#2817)
Looking at some profiles these or their related functions were all
showing up, so this commit adds `#[inline]` to allow cross-crate
inlining by default.
2021-04-08 12:23:54 -05:00
Nick Fitzgerald
ed31f28158 wasmtime-environ: Mark all VM offset functions as #[inline]
Otherwise they won't get inlined across crates unless we enable LTO, and much of
the usage of these function is across crates (eg from the `wasmtime-runtime`
crate).
2021-04-07 16:17:26 -07:00
Alex Crichton
195bf0e29a Fully support multiple returns in Wasmtime (#2806)
* Fully support multiple returns in Wasmtime

For quite some time now Wasmtime has "supported" multiple return values,
but only in the mose bare bones ways. Up until recently you couldn't get
a typed version of functions with multiple return values, and never have
you been able to use `Func::wrap` with functions that return multiple
values. Even recently where `Func::typed` can call functions that return
multiple values it uses a double-indirection by calling a trampoline
which calls the real function.

The underlying reason for this lack of support is that cranelift's ABI
for returning multiple values is not possible to write in Rust. For
example if a wasm function returns two `i32` values there is no Rust (or
C!) function you can write to correspond to that. This commit, however
fixes that.

This commit adds two new ABIs to Cranelift: `WasmtimeSystemV` and
`WasmtimeFastcall`. The intention is that these Wasmtime-specific ABIs
match their corresponding ABI (e.g. `SystemV` or `WindowsFastcall`) for
everything *except* how multiple values are returned. For multiple
return values we simply define our own version of the ABI which Wasmtime
implements, which is that for N return values the first is returned as
if the function only returned that and the latter N-1 return values are
returned via an out-ptr that's the last parameter to the function.

These custom ABIs provides the ability for Wasmtime to bind these in
Rust meaning that `Func::wrap` can now wrap functions that return
multiple values and `Func::typed` no longer uses trampolines when
calling functions that return multiple values. Although there's lots of
internal changes there's no actual changes in the API surface area of
Wasmtime, just a few more impls of more public traits which means that
more types are supported in more places!

Another change made with this PR is a consolidation of how the ABI of
each function in a wasm module is selected. The native `SystemV` ABI,
for example, is more efficient at returning multiple values than the
wasmtime version of the ABI (since more things are in more registers).
To continue to take advantage of this Wasmtime will now classify some
functions in a wasm module with the "fast" ABI. Only functions that are
not reachable externally from the module are classified with the fast
ABI (e.g. those not exported, used in tables, or used with `ref.func`).
This should enable purely internal functions of modules to have a faster
calling convention than those which might be exposed to Wasmtime itself.

Closes #1178

* Tweak some names and add docs

* "fix" lightbeam compile

* Fix TODO with dummy environ

* Unwind info is a property of the target, not the ABI

* Remove lightbeam unused imports

* Attempt to fix arm64

* Document new ABIs aren't stable

* Fix filetests to use the right target

* Don't always do 64-bit stores with cranelift

This was overwriting upper bits when 32-bit registers were being stored
into return values, so fix the code inline to do a sized store instead
of one-size-fits-all store.

* At least get tests passing on the old backend

* Fix a typo

* Add some filetests with mixed abi calls

* Get `multi` example working

* Fix doctests on old x86 backend

* Add a mixture of wasmtime/system_v tests
2021-04-07 12:34:26 -05:00
Chris Fallin
6bec13da04 Bump versions: Wasmtime to 0.26.0, Cranelift to 0.73.0. 2021-04-05 10:48:42 -07:00
Peter Huene
0ddfe97a09 Change how flags are stored in serialized modules.
This commit changes how both the shared flags and ISA flags are stored in the
serialized module to detect incompatibilities when a serialized module is
instantiated.

It improves the error reporting when a compiled module has mismatched shared
flags.
2021-04-01 21:39:57 -07:00
Peter Huene
abf3bf29f9 Add a wasmtime settings command to print Cranelift settings.
This commit adds the `wasmtime settings` command to print out available
Cranelift settings for a target (defaults to the host).

The compile command has been updated to remove the Cranelift ISA options in
favor of encouraging users to use `wasmtime settings` to discover what settings
are available.  This will reduce the maintenance cost for syncing the compile
command with Cranelift ISA flags.
2021-04-01 19:38:19 -07:00
Peter Huene
29d366db7b Add a compile command to Wasmtime.
This commit adds a `compile` command to the Wasmtime CLI.

The command can be used to Ahead-Of-Time (AOT) compile WebAssembly modules.

With the `all-arch` feature enabled, AOT compilation can be performed for
non-native architectures (i.e. cross-compilation).

The `Module::compile` method has been added to perform AOT compilation.

A few of the CLI flags relating to "on by default" Wasm features have been
changed to be "--disable-XYZ" flags.

A simple example of using the `wasmtime compile` command:

```text
$ wasmtime compile input.wasm
$ wasmtime input.cwasm
```
2021-04-01 19:38:18 -07:00
Alex Crichton
211731b876 Update wasm-tools crates (#2773)
Brings in some fuzzing-related bug-fixes
2021-03-25 18:44:31 -05:00
Alex Crichton
654156714c Deduplicate function signatures in wasm modules (#2772)
Currently wasmtime will generate a `SignatureIndex`-per-type in the
module itself, even if the module itself declares the same type multiple
times. To make matters worse if the same type is declared across
multiple modules used in a module-linking-using-module then the
signature will be recorded each time it's declared.

This commit adds a simple map to module translation to deduplicate these
function types. This should improve the performance of module-linking
graphs where the same function type may be declared in a number of
modules. For modules that don't use module linking this adds an extra
map that's not used too often, but the time spent managing it should be
dwarfed by other compile tasks.
2021-03-25 18:44:22 -05:00
Nick Fitzgerald
d081ef9c2e Bump Wasmtime to 0.25.0; Cranelift to 0.72.0 2021-03-16 11:02:56 -07:00
Peter Huene
a464465e2f Code review feedback changes.
* Add `anyhow` dependency to `wasmtime-runtime`.
* Revert `get_data` back to `fn`.
* Remove `DataInitializer` and box the data in `Module` translation instead.
* Improve comments on `MemoryInitialization`.
* Remove `MemoryInitialization::OutOfBounds` in favor of proper bulk memory
  semantics.
* Use segmented memory initialization except for when the uffd feature is
  enabled on Linux.
* Validate modules with the allocator after translation.
* Updated various functions in the runtime to return `anyhow::Result`.
* Use a slice when copying pages instead of `ptr::copy_nonoverlapping`.
* Remove unnecessary casts in `OnDemandAllocator::deallocate`.
* Better document the `uffd` feature.
* Use WebAssembly page-sized pages in the paged initialization.
* Remove the stack pool from the uffd handler and simply protect just the guard
  pages.
2021-03-04 18:19:46 -08:00
Peter Huene
505437e353 Code cleanup.
Last minute code clean up to fix some comments and rename `address_space_size`
to `memory_reservation_size` to better describe what the option is doing.
2021-03-04 18:19:46 -08:00
Peter Huene
f5c4d87c45 Implement on-demand memory initialization for the uffd feature.
This commit implements copying paged initialization data upon a fault of a
linear memory page.

If the initialization data is "paged", then the appropriate pages are copied
into the Wasm page (or zeroed if the page is not present in the
initialization data).

If the initialization data is not "paged", the Wasm page is zeroed so that
module instantiation can initialize the pages.
2021-03-04 18:19:45 -08:00
Peter Huene
e71ccbf9bc Implement the pooling instance allocator.
This commit implements the pooling instance allocator.

The allocation strategy can be set with `Config::with_allocation_strategy`.

The pooling strategy uses the pooling instance allocator to preallocate a
contiguous region of memory for instantiating modules that adhere to various
limits.

The intention of the pooling instance allocator is to reserve as much of the
host address space needed for instantiating modules ahead of time and to reuse
committed memory pages wherever possible.
2021-03-04 18:18:51 -08:00
Peter Huene
3bb145f65c Only treat a memory as static when the minimum is also within bounds.
With the change to artificially limit unbounded memories based on Tunables,
it's possible to hit the assert where the minimum might exceed the static
memory bound.

This commit removes the assert in favor of a check to see if the minimum also
fits within the static memory bound. It also corrects the maximum bounding to
ensure the minimum between the memory's maximum and the configured maximum is
used.

If it does not fit, the memory will be treated as dynamic.  In the case of the
pooling instance allocator, the bounds will be checked again during translation
and an appropriate error will be returned as dynamic memories are not supported
for that allocator.
2021-03-04 18:18:51 -08:00
Peter Huene
c8871ee1e6 Allow instance allocators control over module compilation.
This commit introduces two new methods on `InstanceAllocator`:

* `validate_module` - this method is used to validate a module after
  translation but before compilation. It will be used for the upcoming pooling
  allocator to ensure a module being compiled adheres to the limits of the
  allocator.

* `adjust_tunables` - this method is used to adjust the `Tunables` given the
  JIT compiler.  The pooling allocator will use this to force all memories to
  be static during compilation.
2021-03-04 18:18:50 -08:00
Peter Huene
b58afbf849 Refactor module instantiation in the runtime.
This commit refactors module instantiation in the runtime to allow for
different instance allocation strategy implementations.

It adds an `InstanceAllocator` trait with the current implementation put behind
the `OnDemandInstanceAllocator` struct.

The Wasmtime API has been updated to allow a `Config` to have an instance
allocation strategy set which will determine how instances get allocated.

This change is in preparation for an alternative *pooling* instance allocator
that can reserve all needed host process address space in advance.

This commit also makes changes to the `wasmtime_environ` crate to represent
compiled modules in a way that reduces copying at instantiation time.
2021-03-04 18:18:50 -08:00
Dan Gohman
8854dec01d Bump version to 0.24.0
I used a specially modified version of the publish script to avoid
bumping the `witx` version.
2021-03-04 18:17:03 -08:00
Andrew Brown
44e76fe9c0 Update spec tests (#2690)
* Update wasm-tools crates

* Update Wasm SIMD spec tests

* Invert 'experimental_x64_should_panic' logic

By doing this, it is easier to see which spec tests currently panic. The new tests correspond to recently-added instructions.

* Fix: ignore new spec tests for all backends
2021-03-01 16:39:20 -06:00
Alex Crichton
98d3e6823f Update wasmparser/wat dependencies (#2675)
* Update wasmparser/wat dependencies

Bring in new opcodes and new instructions for SIMD

* Update module linking syntax
2021-02-22 11:56:34 -06:00
Dan Gohman
8d90ea0390 Bump version to 0.23.0
I used a specially modified version of the publish script to avoid
bumping the `witx` version.
2021-02-17 15:35:43 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0e41861662 Implement limiting WebAssembly execution with fuel (#2611)
* Consume fuel during function execution

This commit adds codegen infrastructure necessary to instrument wasm
code to consume fuel as it executes. Currently nothing is really done
with the fuel, but that'll come in later commits.

The focus of this commit is to implement the codegen infrastructure
necessary to consume fuel and account for fuel consumed correctly.

* Periodically check remaining fuel in wasm JIT code

This commit enables wasm code to periodically check to see if fuel has
run out. When fuel runs out an intrinsic is called which can do what it
needs to do in the result of fuel running out. For now a trap is thrown
to have at least some semantics in synchronous stores, but another
planned use for this feature is for asynchronous stores to periodically
yield back to the host based on fuel running out.

Checks for remaining fuel happen in the same locations as interrupt
checks, which is to say the start of the function as well as loop
headers.

* Improve codegen by caching `*const VMInterrupts`

The location of the shared interrupt value and fuel value is through a
double-indirection on the vmctx (load through the vmctx and then load
through that pointer). The second pointer in this chain, however, never
changes, so we can alter codegen to account for this and remove some
extraneous load instructions and hopefully reduce some register
pressure even maybe.

* Add tests fuel can abort infinite loops

* More fuzzing with fuel

Use fuel to time out modules in addition to time, using fuzz input to
figure out which.

* Update docs on trapping instructions

* Fix doc links

* Fix a fuzz test

* Change setting fuel to adding fuel

* Fix a doc link

* Squelch some rustdoc warnings
2021-01-29 08:57:17 -06:00
Chris Fallin
c84d6be6f4 Detailed debug-info (DWARF) support in new backends (initially x64).
This PR propagates "value labels" all the way from CLIF to DWARF
metadata on the emitted machine code. The key idea is as follows:

- Translate value-label metadata on the input into "value_label"
  pseudo-instructions when lowering into VCode. These
  pseudo-instructions take a register as input, denote a value label,
  and semantically are like a "move into value label" -- i.e., they
  update the current value (as seen by debugging tools) of the given
  local. These pseudo-instructions emit no machine code.

- Perform a dataflow analysis *at the machine-code level*, tracking
  value-labels that propagate into registers and into [SP+constant]
  stack storage. This is a forward dataflow fixpoint analysis where each
  storage location can contain a *set* of value labels, and each value
  label can reside in a *set* of storage locations. (Meet function is
  pairwise intersection by storage location.)

  This analysis traces value labels symbolically through loads and
  stores and reg-to-reg moves, so it will naturally handle spills and
  reloads without knowing anything special about them.

- When this analysis converges, we have, at each machine-code offset, a
  mapping from value labels to some number of storage locations; for
  each offset for each label, we choose the best location (prefer
  registers). Note that we can choose any location, as the symbolic
  dataflow analysis is sound and guarantees that the value at the
  value_label instruction propagates to all of the named locations.

- Then we can convert this mapping into a format that the DWARF
  generation code (wasmtime's debug crate) can use.

This PR also adds the new-backend variant to the gdb tests on CI.
2021-01-21 15:59:49 -08:00
Alex Crichton
4a351ab7fe Update a number of dependencies (#2594)
This commit goes through the dependencies that wasmtime has and updates
versions where possible. This notably brings in a wasmparser/wast update
which has some simd spec changes with new instructions. Otherwise most
of these are just routine updates.
2021-01-21 15:49:13 -06:00
Alex Crichton
207f60a18e module-linking: Implement outer module aliases (#2590)
This commit fully implements outer aliases of the module linking
proposal. Outer aliases can now handle multiple-level-up aliases and now
properly also handle closed-over-values of modules that are either
imported or defined.

The structure of `wasmtime::Module` was altered as part of this commit.
It is now a compiled module plus two lists of "upvars", or closed over
values used when instantiating the module. One list of upvars is
compiled artifacts which are submodules that could be used. Another is
module values that are injected via outer aliases. Serialization and
such have been updated as appropriate to handle this.
2021-01-21 09:21:30 -06:00
Alex Crichton
703762c49e Update support for the module linking proposal
This commit updates the various tooling used by wasmtime which has new
updates to the module linking proposal. This is done primarily to sync
with WebAssembly/module-linking#26. The main change implemented here is
that wasmtime now supports creating instances from a set of values, nott
just from instantiating a module. Additionally subtyping handling of
modules with respect to imports is now properly handled by desugaring
two-level imports to imports of instances.

A number of small refactorings are included here as well, but most of
them are in accordance with the changes to `wasmparser` and the updated
binary format for module linking.
2021-01-14 10:37:39 -08:00
Yury Delendik
3580205f12 [Cranelift][Atomics] Add address folding for atomic notify/wait. (#2556)
* fold address in wasm wait and notify ops

* add atomics addr folding tests
2021-01-08 11:55:21 -06:00