This commit deletes the old `snapshot_0` implementation of wasi-common,
along with the `wig` crate that was used to generate bindings for it.
This then reimplements `snapshot_0` in terms of
`wasi_snapshot_preview1`. There were very few changes between the two
snapshots:
* The `nlink` field of `FileStat` was increased from 32 to 64 bits.
* The `set` field of `whence` was reordered.
* Clock subscriptions in polling dropped their redundant userdata field.
This makes all of the syscalls relatively straightforward to simply
delegate to the next snapshot's implementation. Some trickery happens to
avoid extra cost when dealing with iovecs, but since the memory layout
of iovecs remained the same this should still work.
Now that `snapshot_0` is using wiggle we simply have a trait to
implement, and that's implemented for the same `WasiCtx` that has the
`wasi_snapshot_preview1` trait implemented for it as well. While this
theoretically means that you could share the file descriptor table
between the two snapshots that's not supported in the generated bindings
just yet. A separate `WasiCtx` will be created for each WASI module.
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.
* Add an initial wasi-nn implementation for Wasmtime
This change adds a crate, `wasmtime-wasi-nn`, that uses `wiggle` to expose the current state of the wasi-nn API and `openvino` to implement the exposed functions. It includes an end-to-end test demonstrating how to do classification using wasi-nn:
- `crates/wasi-nn/tests/classification-example` contains Rust code that is compiled to the `wasm32-wasi` target and run with a Wasmtime embedding that exposes the wasi-nn calls
- the example uses Rust bindings for wasi-nn contained in `crates/wasi-nn/tests/wasi-nn-rust-bindings`; this crate contains code generated by `witx-bindgen` and eventually should be its own standalone crate
* Test wasi-nn as a CI step
This change adds:
- a GitHub action for installing OpenVINO
- a script, `ci/run-wasi-nn-example.sh`, to run the classification example
This commit moves all of the caching support that currently lives in
`wasmtime-environ` into a `wasmtime-cache` crate and makes it optional. The
goal here is to slim down the `wasmtime-environ` crate and clearly separate
boundaries where caching is a standalone and optional feature, not intertwined
with other crates.
* move caching to the CompilationArtifacts
* mv cache_config from Compiler to CompiledModule
* hash isa flags
* no cache for wasm2obj
* mv caching to wasmtime crate
* account each Compiler field when hash
* 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.
* Minor code tidying.
* Document that `Linker::iter`'s iteration order is arbitrary.
* Add a few more tests for `wasmtime::Linker`.
* Refactor `Linker::compute_imports`.
- Extract the error message generation into a separate function.
- In the error message, sort the candidates.
* Fix a typo in a comment.
* Add `__rtti_base` to the list of allowed but deprecated exports.
* Don't print an Error message when a program exits normally.
* Update comments to reflect the current code.
* Also allow "table" as an exported table, which is used by AssemblyScript.
* Reactor support.
This implements the new WASI ABI described here:
https://github.com/WebAssembly/WASI/blob/master/design/application-abi.md
It adds APIs to `Instance` and `Linker` with support for running
WASI programs, and also simplifies the process of instantiating
WASI API modules.
This currently only includes Rust API support.
* Add comments and fix a typo in a comment.
* Fix a rustdoc warning.
* Tidy an unneeded `mut`.
* Factor out instance initialization with `NewInstance`.
This also separates instantiation from initialization in a manner
similar to https://github.com/bytecodealliance/lucet/pull/506.
* Update fuzzing oracles for the API changes.
* Remove `wasi_linker` and clarify that Commands/Reactors aren't connected to WASI.
* Move Command/Reactor semantics into the Linker.
* C API support.
* Fix fuzzer build.
* Update usage syntax from "::" to "=".
* Remove `NewInstance` and `start()`.
* Elaborate on Commands and Reactors and add a spec link.
* Add more comments.
* Fix wat syntax.
* Fix wat.
* Use the `Debug` formatter to format an anyhow::Error.
* Fix wat.
* 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.
* Implement interrupting wasm code, reimplement stack overflow
This commit is a relatively large change for wasmtime with two main
goals:
* Primarily this enables interrupting executing wasm code with a trap,
preventing infinite loops in wasm code. Note that resumption of the
wasm code is not a goal of this commit.
* Additionally this commit reimplements how we handle stack overflow to
ensure that host functions always have a reasonable amount of stack to
run on. This fixes an issue where we might longjmp out of a host
function, skipping destructors.
Lots of various odds and ends end up falling out in this commit once the
two goals above were implemented. The strategy for implementing this was
also lifted from Spidermonkey and existing functionality inside of
Cranelift. I've tried to write up thorough documentation of how this all
works in `crates/environ/src/cranelift.rs` where gnarly-ish bits are.
A brief summary of how this works is that each function and each loop
header now checks to see if they're interrupted. Interrupts and the
stack overflow check are actually folded into one now, where function
headers check to see if they've run out of stack and the sentinel value
used to indicate an interrupt, checked in loop headers, tricks functions
into thinking they're out of stack. An interrupt is basically just
writing a value to a location which is read by JIT code.
When interrupts are delivered and what triggers them has been left up to
embedders of the `wasmtime` crate. The `wasmtime::Store` type has a
method to acquire an `InterruptHandle`, where `InterruptHandle` is a
`Send` and `Sync` type which can travel to other threads (or perhaps
even a signal handler) to get notified from. It's intended that this
provides a good degree of flexibility when interrupting wasm code. Note
though that this does have a large caveat where interrupts don't work
when you're interrupting host code, so if you've got a host import
blocking for a long time an interrupt won't actually be received until
the wasm starts running again.
Some fallout included from this change is:
* Unix signal handlers are no longer registered with `SA_ONSTACK`.
Instead they run on the native stack the thread was already using.
This is possible since stack overflow isn't handled by hitting the
guard page, but rather it's explicitly checked for in wasm now. Native
stack overflow will continue to abort the process as usual.
* Unix sigaltstack management is now no longer necessary since we don't
use it any more.
* Windows no longer has any need to reset guard pages since we no longer
try to recover from faults on guard pages.
* On all targets probestack intrinsics are disabled since we use a
different mechanism for catching stack overflow.
* The C API has been updated with interrupts handles. An example has
also been added which shows off how to interrupt a module.
Closes#139Closes#860Closes#900
* Update comment about magical interrupt value
* Store stack limit as a global value, not a closure
* Run rustfmt
* Handle review comments
* Add a comment about SA_ONSTACK
* Use `usize` for type of `INTERRUPTED`
* Parse human-readable durations
* Bring back sigaltstack handling
Allows libstd to print out stack overflow on failure still.
* Add parsing and emission of stack limit-via-preamble
* Fix new example for new apis
* Fix host segfault test in release mode
* Fix new doc example
* 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.
* wasmtime: Pass around more contexts instead of fields
This commit refactors some wasmtime internals to pass around more
context-style structures rather than individual fields of each
structure. The intention here is to make the addition of fields to a
structure easier to plumb throughout the internals of wasmtime.
Currently you need to edit lots of functions to pass lots of parameters,
but ideally after this you'll only need to edit one or two struct fields
and then relevant locations have access to the information already.
Updates in this commit are:
* `debug_info` configuration is now folded into `Tunables`. Additionally
a `wasmtime::Config` now holds a `Tunables` directly and is passed
into an internal `Compiler`. Eventually this should allow for direct
configuration of the `Tunables` attributes from the `wasmtime` API,
but no new configuration is exposed at this time.
* `ModuleTranslation` is now passed around as a whole rather than
passing individual components to allow access to all the fields,
including `Tunables`.
This was motivated by investigating what it would take to optionally
allow loops and such to get interrupted, but that sort of codegen
setting was currently relatively difficult to plumb all the way through
and now it's hoped to be largely just an addition to `Tunables`.
* Fix lightbeam compile
This commit adds support for snapshot0 in the WASI C API.
A name parameter was added to `wasi_instance_new` to accept which WASI module
is being instantiated.
Additionally, the C# API now supports constructing a WASI instance based on the
WASI module name.
Fixes#1221.
* Temporarily remove support for interface types
This commit temporarily removes support for interface types from the
`wasmtime` CLI and removes the `wasmtime-interface-types` crate. An
error is now printed for any input wasm modules that have wasm interface
types sections to indicate that support has been removed and references
to two issues are printed as well:
* #677 - tracking work for re-adding interface types support
* #1271 - rationale for removal and links to other discussions
Closes#1271
* Update the python extension
* Exit with a more severe error code if the program traps.
Previously, the wasmtime CLI would return with a regular failure
error code, such as 1 on Unix. However, a program trap indicates a bug
in the program, which can be useful to distinguish from a simple error
status. Check for the trap case, and return an appropriate OS-specific
exit status.
* Use a loop to iterate over the error causes to find Traps.
* Use anyhow's `chain()` iterator.
* For completeness, handle non-Unix and non-Windows platforms too.
* Add a CLI test for a trapping program.
* Replace a manual `.cause` loop with a `.is` call.
* Correct the expected exit status on Windows.
* Use assert_eq/assert_ne so that if these fail, it prints the output.
Change the default from file-per-thread-logger to pretty-env-logger,
which is more common in Rust projects, and change the option from `-d`
to `--log-to-files`.
This commit makes `WasiCtxBuilder` take `&mut Self` and return `&mut
Self` for its methods. This is needed to allow for the same
(unmoved) `WasiCtxBuilder` to be used when building a WASI context.
Also fixes up the C API to remove the unnecessary `Box::from_raw` and
`forget` calls which were previously needed for the moving version of
`WasiCtxBuilder`.
* Optimize generated code via the CLI by default
This commit updates the behavior of the CLI and adds a new flag. It
first enables the `--optimize` flag by default, ensuring that usage of
the `wasmtime` CLI will enable cranelift optimizations by default. Next
it also adds a `--opt-level` flag which is similar to Rust's
`-Copt-level` where it takes a string argument of how to optimize. This
is updates to support 0/1/2/s, where 1 is currently the same as 2 but
added for consistency with other compilers. The default setting is
`--opt-level=2`.
When the `-O` flag is not passed the `--opt-level` flag is used,
otherwise `-O` takes precedent in the sense that it implies
`--opt-level=2` which is the highest optimization level. The thinking is
that these flags will in general select the highest optimization level
specified as the final optimization level.
* Add inline docs
* fix a test
* Add more CLI flags for wasm features
This commit adds a few more flags to enable wasm features via the CLI,
mirroring the existing `--enable-simd` flag:
* `--enable-reference-types`
* `--enable-multi-value`
* `--enable-threads`
* `--enable-bulk-memory`
Additionally the bulk memory feature is now automatically enabled if
`reference-types` or `threads` are enabled since those two proposals
largely depend on `bulk-memory`.
* Add --enable-all to enable all wasm features
* Update src/lib.rs
Co-Authored-By: Peter Huene <peterhuene@protonmail.com>
* Apply suggestions from code review
Co-Authored-By: Peter Huene <peterhuene@protonmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Peter Huene <peterhuene@protonmail.com>
* Remove all global state from the caching system
This commit is a continuation of an effort to remove usages of
`lazy_static!` and similar global state macros which can otherwise be
accomodated with passing objects around. Previously there was a global
cache system initialized per-process, but it was initialized in a bit of
a roundabout way and wasn't actually reachable from the `wasmtime` crate
itself. The changes here remove all global state, refactor many of the
internals in the cache system, and makes configuration possible through
the `wasmtime` crate.
Specifically some changes here are:
* Usage of `lazy_static!` and many `static` items in the cache module
have all been removed.
* Global `cache_config()`, `worker()`, and `init()` functions have all
been removed. Instead a `CacheConfig` is a "root object" which
internally owns its worker and passing around the `CacheConfig` is
required for cache usage.
* The `wasmtime::Config` structure has grown options to load and parse
cache files at runtime. Currently only loading files is supported,
although we can likely eventually support programmatically configuring
APIs as well.
* Usage of the `spin` crate has been removed and the dependency is removed.
* The internal `errors` field of `CacheConfig` is removed, instead
changing all relevant methods to return a `Result<()>` instead of
storing errors internally.
* Tests have all been updated with the new interfaces and APIs.
Functionally no real change is intended here. Usage of the `wasmtime`
CLI, for example, should still enable the cache by default.
* Fix lightbeam compilation
* 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
This commit deletes the old C implementation of the original
`wasi_unstable` module, instead only leaving around our single
`wasmtime-wasi` crate as the implementation for both
`wasi_snapshot_preview1` and `wasi_unstable`.
This hasn't been discussed (AFAIK) up until now, so this is also a
proposal! Some thoughts in favor of this deletion I would have are:
* This has been off-by-default for ages
* We don't build or test any of this on CI
* Published binaries with `wasmtime` do not have this possibility
enabled
* Future refactorings to the `wasmtime-wasi` crate will either need to
work around how the C implementation is different or bring it up to
speed.
This is motivated by the last bullet point where I was working on
getting `wasmtime-wasi` working purely as an implementation detail on
top of the `wasmtime` crate itself, but quickly ran into a case where
the CLI would need to multiplex all sorts of wasi implementations. In
any case I'm curious what others think, is this too soon? Is there
something remaining blocking this? (etc)
* Replace the global-exports mechanism with a caller-vmctx mechanism.
This eliminates the global exports mechanism, and instead adds a
caller-vmctx argument to wasm functions so that WASI can obtain the
memory and other things from the caller rather than looking them up in a
global registry.
This replaces #390.
* Fixup some merge conflicts
* Rustfmt
* Ensure VMContext is aligned to 16 bytes
With the removal of `global_exports` it "just so happens" that this
isn't happening naturally any more.
* Fixup some bugs with double vmctx in wasmtime crate
* Trampoline stub needed adjusting
* Use pointer type instead of always using I64 for caller vmctx
* Don't store `ir::Signature` in `Func` since we don't know the pointer
size at creation time.
* Skip the first 2 arguments in IR signatures since that's the two vmctx
parameters.
* Update cranelift to 0.56.0
* Handle more merge conflicts
* Rustfmt
Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
* 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
* 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
Change a `bail!` macro which renders the debug representation of an
error to a call to `context` which preserves the original error object
and improves rendering later on down the road.
* 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
This commit refactors the Wasmtime CLI tools to use `structopt` instead of
`docopt`.
The `wasmtime` tool now has the following subcommands:
* `config new` - creates a new Wasmtime configuration file.
* `run` - runs a WebAssembly module.
* `wasm2obj` - translates a Wasm module to native object file.
* `wast` - runs a test script file.
If no subcommand is specified, the `run` subcommand is used. Thus,
`wasmtime foo.wasm` should continue to function as expected.
The `wasm2obj` and `wast` tools still exist, but delegate to the same
implementation as the `wasmtime` subcommands. The standalone `wasm2obj` and
`wast` tools may be removed in the future in favor of simply using `wasmtime`.
Included in this commit is a breaking change to the default Wasmtime
configuration file: it has been renamed from `wasmtime-cache-config.toml` to
simply `config.toml`. The new name is less specific which will allow for
additional (non-cache-related) settings in the future.
There are some breaking changes to improve command line UX:
* The `--cache-config` option has been renamed to `--config`.
* The `--create-config-file` option has moved to the `config new` subcommand.
As a result, the `wasm2obj` and `wast` tools cannot be used to create a new
config file.
* The short form of the `--optimize` option has changed from
`-o` to `-O` for consistency.
* The `wasm2obj` command takes the output object file as a
required positional argument rather than the former required output *option*
(e.g. `wasmtime wasm2obj foo.wasm foo.obj`).