Commit Graph

435 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Andrew Brown
c3c16eb207 wasi-threads: build the crate in the CLI application by default (#5782)
This change adds the `wasmtime-wasi-threads` crate as a default crate
for the CLI application. This is no change for embedders of Wasmtime:
they would still have to include `wasmtime-wasi-threads` manually.
Enabling the crate by default in the CLI application has several
benefits, e.g., that it is simpler to experiment with and that it will
be part of more test runs (and thus bugs can be discovered more
quickly). Users will still have to add
`--wasi-modules=experimental-wasi-threads` to enable wasi-threads on the
command line.
2023-02-16 09:37:11 -06:00
Alex Crichton
255fd6be0a Update world-selection in bindgen! macro (#5779)
* Update world-selection in `bindgen!` macro

Inspired by bytecodealliance/wit-bindgen#494 specifying a world or
document to bindgen is now optional as it's inferred if there's only one
`default world` in a package's documents.

* Add cargo-vet entry
2023-02-14 20:54:37 +00:00
Alphyr
cb150d37ce Update dependencies (#5513) 2023-02-14 19:45:15 +00:00
Alex Crichton
49613be393 Update wasm-tools crates (#5757)
* Update wasm-tools crates

Pulls in a new component binary format which should hopefully be the
last update for awhile.

* Update cargo vet configuration
2023-02-10 02:14:53 +00:00
Andrew Brown
edfa10d607 wasi-threads: an initial implementation (#5484)
This commit includes a set of changes that add initial support for `wasi-threads` to Wasmtime:

* feat: remove mutability from the WasiCtx Table

This patch adds interior mutability to the WasiCtx Table and the Table elements.

Major pain points:
* `File` only needs `RwLock<cap_std::fs::File>` to implement
  `File::set_fdflags()` on Windows, because of [1]
* Because `File` needs a `RwLock` and `RwLock*Guard` cannot
  be hold across an `.await`, The `async` from
  `async fn num_ready_bytes(&self)` had to be removed
* Because `File` needs a `RwLock` and `RwLock*Guard` cannot
  be dereferenced in `pollable`, the signature of
  `fn pollable(&self) -> Option<rustix::fd::BorrowedFd>`
  changed to `fn pollable(&self) -> Option<Arc<dyn AsFd + '_>>`

[1] da238e324e/src/fs/fd_flags.rs (L210-L217)

* wasi-threads: add an initial implementation

This change is a first step toward implementing `wasi-threads` in
Wasmtime. We may find that it has some missing pieces, but the core
functionality is there: when `wasi::thread_spawn` is called by a running
WebAssembly module, a function named `wasi_thread_start` is found in the
module's exports and called in a new instance. The shared memory of the
original instance is reused in the new instance.

This new WASI proposal is in its early stages and details are still
being hashed out in the [spec] and [wasi-libc] repositories. Due to its
experimental state, the `wasi-threads` functionality is hidden behind
both a compile-time and runtime flag: one must build with `--features
wasi-threads` but also run the Wasmtime CLI with `--wasm-features
threads` and `--wasi-modules experimental-wasi-threads`. One can
experiment with `wasi-threads` by running:

```console
$ cargo run --features wasi-threads -- \
    --wasm-features threads --wasi-modules experimental-wasi-threads \
    <a threads-enabled module>
```

Threads-enabled Wasm modules are not yet easy to build. Hopefully this
is resolved soon, but in the meantime see the use of
`THREAD_MODEL=posix` in the [wasi-libc] repository for some clues on
what is necessary. Wiggle complicates things by requiring the Wasm
memory to be exported with a certain name and `wasi-threads` also
expects that memory to be imported; this build-time obstacle can be
overcome with the `--import-memory --export-memory` flags only available
in the latest Clang tree. Due to all of this, the included tests are
written directly in WAT--run these with:

```console
$ cargo test --features wasi-threads -p wasmtime-cli -- cli_tests
```

[spec]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-threads
[wasi-libc]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-libc

This change does not protect the WASI implementations themselves from
concurrent access. This is already complete in previous commits or left
for future commits in certain cases (e.g., wasi-nn).

* wasi-threads: factor out process exit logic

As is being discussed [elsewhere], either calling `proc_exit` or
trapping in any thread should halt execution of all threads. The
Wasmtime CLI already has logic for adapting a WebAssembly error code to
a code expected in each OS. This change factors out this logic to a new
function, `maybe_exit_on_error`, for use within the `wasi-threads`
implementation.

This will work reasonably well for CLI users of Wasmtime +
`wasi-threads`, but embedders will want something better in the future:
when a `wasi-threads` threads fails, they may not want their application
to exit. Handling this is tricky, because it will require cancelling the
threads spawned by the `wasi-threads` implementation, something that is
not trivial to do in Rust. With this change, we defer that work until
later in order to provide a working implementation of `wasi-threads` for
experimentation.

[elsewhere]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-threads/pull/17

* review: work around `fd_fdstat_set_flags`

In order to make progress with wasi-threads, this change temporarily
works around limitations induced by `wasi-common`'s
`fd_fdstat_set_flags` to allow `&mut self` use in the implementation.
Eventual resolution is tracked in
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/5643. This change
makes several related helper functions (e.g., `set_fdflags`) take `&mut
self` as well.

* test: use `wait`/`notify` to improve `threads.wat` test

Previously, the test simply executed in a loop for some hardcoded number
of iterations. This changes uses `wait` and `notify` and atomic
operations to keep track of when the spawned threads are done and join
on the main thread appropriately.

* various fixes and tweaks due to the PR review

---------

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
Co-authored-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
2023-02-07 13:43:02 -08:00
Pat Hickey
743a40a6c4 Cargo update cap-std family, and audit deps (#5710)
* update cap-std family and its deps, and audit them

* audit base64: append a safe-to-deploy entry

I mistakenly marked it safe-to-run not understanding that safe-to-deploy was required.

* update to fd-lock 3.0.10

eliminates duplicate dep on windows-sys
2023-02-06 10:16:19 -08:00
wasmtime-publish
482f541101 Bump Wasmtime to 7.0.0 (#5712)
Co-authored-by: Wasmtime Publish <wasmtime-publish@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-02-06 09:10:19 -06:00
Alex Crichton
a2a0a9ef5b Update to the latest wit-parser (#5694)
This notably pulls in support in WIT for types-in-worlds.
2023-02-02 19:21:01 +00:00
Jamey Sharp
915801551b Delete old cranelift-preopt crate (#5642)
Most of these optimizations are in the egraph `cprop.isle` rules now,
making a separate crate unnecessary.

Also I think the `udiv` optimizations here are straight-up wrong (doing
signed instead of unsigned division, and panicking instead of preserving
traps on division by zero) so I'm guessing this crate isn't seriously
used anywhere.

At the least, bjorn3 confirms that cg_clif doesn't use this, and I've
verified that Wasmtime doesn't either.

Closes #1090.
2023-01-26 21:32:33 +00:00
Alex Crichton
a7d0d00e57 Update wasm-tools crates (#5631)
Nothing major pulled in here, but wanted to update to the latest
versions which enable tail calls by default. When used in Wasmtime,
however, the feature is disabled without the possibility of being
enabled since it's not implemented.
2023-01-25 16:33:26 +00:00
Kevin Rizzo
da03ff47f1 winch: Adding support for integration tests (#5588)
* Adding in the foundations for Winch `filetests`

This commit adds two new crates into the Winch workspace:
`filetests` and `test-macros`. The intent is to mimic the
structure of Cranelift `filetests`, but in a simpler way.

* Updates to documentation

This commits adds a high level document to outline how to test Winch
through the `winch-tools` utility. It also updates some inline
documentation which gets propagated to the CLI.

* Updating test-macro to use a glob instead of only a flat directory
2023-01-19 07:34:48 -05:00
Dan Gohman
e260abfce7 Update to rustix 0.36.7. (#5590)
This fixes compilation on armv7-unknown-freebsd, as reported [here].

[here]: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/5499#issuecomment-1383157702
2023-01-18 17:15:50 -08:00
Alex Crichton
d24c2fe48c Detect components in wasmtime compile more robustly (#5592)
The binary version of component is going to change over time so use a
more robust method than checking for a fixed 8 bytes.
2023-01-18 18:39:35 -06:00
Alex Crichton
247851234b Update WIT tooling used by Wasmtime (#5565)
* Update WIT tooling used by Wasmtime

This commit updates the WIT tooling, namely the wasm-tools family of
crates, with recent updates. Notably:

* bytecodealliance/wasm-tools#867
* bytecodealliance/wasm-tools#871

This updates index spaces in components and additionally bumps the
minimum required version of the component binary format to be consumed
by Wasmtime (because of the index space changes). Additionally WIT
tooling now fully supports `use`.

Note that WIT tooling doesn't, at this time, fully support packages and
depending on remotely defined WIT packages. Currently WIT still needs to
be vendored in the project. It's hoped that future work with `cargo
component` and possible integration here could make the story about
depending on remotely-defined WIT more ergonomic and streamlined.

* Fix `bindgen!` codegen tests

* Add a test for `use` paths an implement support

* Update to crates.io versions of wasm-tools

* Uncomment codegen tests
2023-01-18 15:37:03 +00:00
Saúl Cabrera
94b51cdb17 winch: Use cranelift-codegen x64 backend for emission. (#5581)
This change substitutes the string based emission mechanism with
cranelift-codegen's x64 backend.

This change _does not_:

* Introduce new functionality in terms of supported instructions.
* Change the semantics of the assembler/macroassembler in terms of the logic to
emit instructions.

The most notable differences between this change and the previous version are:

* Handling of shared flags and ISA-specific flags, which for now are left with
the default value.
* Simplification of instruction emission per operand size: previously the
assembler defined different methods depending on the operand size (e.g. `mov`
for 64 bits, and `movl` for 32 bits). This change updates such approach so that
each assembler method takes an operand size as a parameter, reducing duplication
and making the code more concise and easier to integrate with the x64's `Inst` enum.
* Introduction of a disassembler for testing purposes.

As of this change, Winch generates the following code for the following test
programs:

```wat
(module
  (export "main" (func $main))

  (func $main (result i32)
        (i32.const 10)
        (i32.const 20)
        i32.add
        ))
```

```asm
   0:	55                   	push	rbp
   1:	48 89 e5             	mov	rbp, rsp
   4:	b8 0a 00 00 00       	mov	eax, 0xa
   9:	83 c0 14             	add	eax, 0x14
   c:	5d                   	pop	rbp
   d:	c3                   	ret
```

```wat
(module
  (export "main" (func $main))

  (func $main (result i32)
        (local $foo i32)
    (local $bar i32)
        (i32.const 10)
    (local.set $foo)
        (i32.const 20)
    (local.set $bar)

        (local.get $foo)
        (local.get $bar)
        i32.add
        ))
```

```asm
   0:	55                   	push	rbp
   1:	48 89 e5             	mov	rbp, rsp
   4:	48 83 ec 08          	sub	rsp, 8
   8:	48 c7 04 24 00 00 00 00	mov	qword ptr [rsp], 0
  10:	b8 0a 00 00 00       	mov	eax, 0xa
  15:	89 44 24 04          	mov	dword ptr [rsp + 4], eax
  19:	b8 14 00 00 00       	mov	eax, 0x14
  1e:	89 04 24             	mov	dword ptr [rsp], eax
  21:	8b 04 24             	mov	eax, dword ptr [rsp]
  24:	8b 4c 24 04          	mov	ecx, dword ptr [rsp + 4]
  28:	01 c1                	add	ecx, eax
  2a:	48 89 c8             	mov	rax, rcx
  2d:	48 83 c4 08          	add	rsp, 8
  31:	5d                   	pop	rbp
  32:	c3                   	ret
```

```wat
(module
  (export "main" (func $main))

  (func $main (param i32) (param i32) (result i32)
        (local.get 0)
        (local.get 1)
        i32.add
        ))
```

```asm
   0:	55                   	push	rbp
   1:	48 89 e5             	mov	rbp, rsp
   4:	48 83 ec 08          	sub	rsp, 8
   8:	89 7c 24 04          	mov	dword ptr [rsp + 4], edi
   c:	89 34 24             	mov	dword ptr [rsp], esi
   f:	8b 04 24             	mov	eax, dword ptr [rsp]
  12:	8b 4c 24 04          	mov	ecx, dword ptr [rsp + 4]
  16:	01 c1                	add	ecx, eax
  18:	48 89 c8             	mov	rax, rcx
  1b:	48 83 c4 08          	add	rsp, 8
  1f:	5d                   	pop	rbp
  20:	c3                   	ret
```
2023-01-18 06:58:13 -05:00
wasmtime-publish
7bfbec1b57 Bump Wasmtime to 6.0.0 (#5521)
Co-authored-by: Wasmtime Publish <wasmtime-publish@users.noreply.github.com>
2023-01-05 09:46:01 -06:00
Alex Crichton
d9fdbfd50e Use the sym operator for inline assembly (#5459)
* Use the `sym` operator for inline assembly

Avoids extra `#[no_mangle]` functions and undue symbols being exposed
from Wasmtime. This is a newly stabilized feature in Rust 1.66.0. I've
also added a `rust-version` entry to the `wasmtime` crate to try to head
off possible reports in the future about odd error messages or usage of
unstable features if the rustc version is too old.

* Fix a s390x warning

* Add `rust-version` annotation to Wasmtime crate

As the other main entrypoint for embedders.
2022-12-16 20:12:24 +00:00
Alex Crichton
3861f667a2 Update some wasm-tools crates (#5422)
Notably this pulls in
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-tools/pull/862 which should fix
some fuzz bugs on oss-fuzz.
2022-12-12 18:34:29 -06:00
Nick Fitzgerald
f2e1eaa847 cranelift-filetest: Add support for Wasm-to-CLIF translation filetests (#5412)
This adds support for `.wat` tests in `cranelift-filetest`. The test runner
translates the WAT to Wasm and then uses `cranelift-wasm` to translate the Wasm
to CLIF.

These tests are always precise output tests. The test expectations can be
updated by running tests with the `CRANELIFT_TEST_BLESS=1` environment variable
set, similar to our compile precise output tests. The test's expected output is
contained in the last comment in the test file.

The tests allow for configuring the kinds of heaps used to implement Wasm linear
memory via TOML in a `;;!` comment at the start of the test.

To get ISA and Cranelift flags parsing available in the filetests crate, I had
to move the `parse_sets_and_triple` helper from the `cranelift-tools` binary
crate to the `cranelift-reader` crate, where I think it logically
fits.

Additionally, I had to make some more bits of `cranelift-wasm`'s dummy
environment `pub` so that I could properly wrap and compose it with the
environment used for the `.wat` tests. I don't think this is a big deal, but if
we eventually want to clean this stuff up, we can probably remove the dummy
environments completely, remove `translate_module`, and fold them into these new
test environments and test runner (since Wasmtime isn't using those things
anyways).
2022-12-12 19:31:29 +00:00
Martin Evans
8f23e5a66f --json option for wasmtime settings command (#5411)
* - Added `--json` flag to settings command
 - Refactored gathering of data into a `Settings` struct which can be used in both human/machine readable paths
 - Split out human readable output to another function, it produces exactly the same result as before

* Outputting JSON by hand formatting it. This approach has the advantage of not needing any extra dependencies (i.e.serde), but is obviously a bit ugly.

* Rewritten JSON serialization to use serde

* Commenting and formatting

* Applied rustfmt

* Reduced version of serde and serde_json to fix cargo vet errors

* Updated cargo.lock to fix cargo vet errors
2022-12-12 09:32:23 -06:00
Chris Fallin
f980defe17 egraph support: rewrite to work in terms of CLIF data structures. (#5382)
* egraph support: rewrite to work in terms of CLIF data structures.

This work rewrites the "egraph"-based optimization framework in
Cranelift to operate on aegraphs (acyclic egraphs) represented in the
CLIF itself rather than as a separate data structure to which and from
which we translate the CLIF.

The basic idea is to add a new kind of value, a "union", that is like an
alias but refers to two other values rather than one.  This allows us to
represent an eclass of enodes (values) as a tree. The union node allows
for a value to have *multiple representations*: either constituent value
could be used, and (in well-formed CLIF produced by correct
optimization rules) they must be equivalent.

Like the old egraph infrastructure, we take advantage of acyclicity and
eager rule application to do optimization in a single pass. Like before,
we integrate GVN (during the optimization pass) and LICM (during
elaboration).

Unlike the old egraph infrastructure, everything stays in the
DataFlowGraph. "Pure" enodes are represented as instructions that have
values attached, but that are not placed into the function layout. When
entering "egraph" form, we remove them from the layout while optimizing.
When leaving "egraph" form, during elaboration, we can place an
instruction back into the layout the first time we elaborate the enode;
if we elaborate it more than once, we clone the instruction.

The implementation performs two passes overall:

- One, a forward pass in RPO (to see defs before uses), that (i) removes
  "pure" instructions from the layout and (ii) optimizes as it goes. As
  before, we eagerly optimize, so we form the entire union of optimized
  forms of a value before we see any uses of that value. This lets us
  rewrite uses to use the most "up-to-date" form of the value and
  canonicalize and optimize that form.

  The eager rewriting and acyclic representation make each other work
  (we could not eagerly rewrite if there were cycles; and acyclicity
  does not miss optimization opportunities only because the first time
  we introduce a value, we immediately produce its "best" form). This
  design choice is also what allows us to avoid the "parent pointers"
  and fixpoint loop of traditional egraphs.

  This forward optimization pass keeps a scoped hashmap to "intern"
  nodes (thus performing GVN), and also interleaves on a per-instruction
  level with alias analysis. The interleaving with alias analysis allows
  alias analysis to see the most optimized form of each address (so it
  can see equivalences), and allows the next value to see any
  equivalences (reuses of loads or stored values) that alias analysis
  uncovers.

- Two, a forward pass in domtree preorder, that "elaborates" pure enodes
  back into the layout, possibly in multiple places if needed. This
  tracks the loop nest and hoists nodes as needed, performing LICM as it
  goes. Note that by doing this in forward order, we avoid the
  "fixpoint" that traditional LICM needs: we hoist a def before its
  uses, so when we place a node, we place it in the right place the
  first time rather than moving later.

This PR replaces the old (a)egraph implementation. It removes both the
cranelift-egraph crate and the logic in cranelift-codegen that uses it.

On `spidermonkey.wasm` running a simple recursive Fibonacci
microbenchmark, this work shows 5.5% compile-time reduction and 7.7%
runtime improvement (speedup).

Most of this implementation was done in (very productive) pair
programming sessions with Jamey Sharp, thus:

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jsharp@fastly.com>

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Bugfix: cprop rule: `(x + k1) - k2` becomes `x - (k2 - k1)`, not `x - (k1 - k2)`.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jsharp@fastly.com>
2022-12-06 14:58:57 -08:00
Alex Crichton
2329ecc341 Add a wasmtime::component::bindgen! macro (#5317)
* Import Wasmtime support from the `wit-bindgen` repo

This commit imports the `wit-bindgen-gen-host-wasmtime-rust` crate from
the `wit-bindgen` repository into the upstream Wasmtime repository. I've
chosen to not import the full history here since the crate is relatively
small and doesn't have a ton of complexity. While the history of the
crate is quite long the current iteration of the crate's history is
relatively short so there's not a ton of import there anyway. The
thinking is that this can now continue to evolve in-tree.

* Refactor `wasmtime-component-macro` a bit

Make room for a `wit_bindgen` macro to slot in.

* Add initial support for a `bindgen` macro

* Add tests for `wasmtime::component::bindgen!`

* Improve error forgetting `async` feature

* Add end-to-end tests for bindgen

* Add an audit of `unicase`

* Add a license to the test-helpers crate

* Add vet entry for `pulldown-cmark`

* Update publish script with new crate

* Try to fix publish script

* Update audits

* Update lock file
2022-12-06 13:06:00 -06:00
Alex Crichton
4933762d81 Add release notes for 3.0.1 and update some versions (#5364)
* Add release notes for 3.0.1

* Update some version directives for crates in Wasmtime

* Mark anything with `publish = false` as version 0.0.0
* Mark the icache coherence crate with the same version as Wasmtime

* Fix manifest directives
2022-12-06 01:26:39 +00:00
wasmtime-publish
a28d4d3c89 Bump Wasmtime to 5.0.0 (#5372)
Co-authored-by: Wasmtime Publish <wasmtime-publish@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-12-05 08:38:57 -06:00
Alex Crichton
86acb9a438 Use workspace inheritance for some more dependencies (#5349)
Deduplicate some dependency directives through `[workspace.dependencies]`
2022-11-29 22:32:56 +00:00
Dan Gohman
d6d3c49972 Update to cap-std 1.0, io-lifetimes 1.0. (#5330)
The main change here is that io-lifetimes 1.0 switches to use the I/O safety
feature in the standard library rather than providing its own copy.

This also updates to windows-sys 0.42.0 and rustix 0.36.
2022-11-28 15:31:18 -08:00
Alex Crichton
b305f251fb Update the wasm-tools family of crates (#5310)
Most of the changes here are the updates to the component model which
includes optional URL fields in imports/exports.
2022-11-21 21:37:16 +00:00
Harald Hoyer
c74706aa59 feat: implement memory.atomic.notify,wait32,wait64 (#5255)
* feat: implement memory.atomic.notify,wait32,wait64

Added the parking_spot crate, which provides the needed registry for the
operations.

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* fix: change trap message for HeapMisaligned

The threads spec test wants "unaligned atomic"
instead of "misaligned memory access".

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* tests: add test for atomic wait on non-shared memory

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* tests: add tests/spec_testsuite/proposals/threads

without pooling and reference types.
Also "shared_memory" is added to the "spectest" interface.

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* tests: add atomics_notify.wast

checking that notify with 0 waiters returns 0 on shared and non-shared
memory.

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* tests: add tests for atomic wait on shared memory

- return 2 - timeout for 0
- return 2 - timeout for 1000ns
- return 1 - invalid value

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* fixup! feat: implement memory.atomic.notify,wait32,wait64

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

* fixup! feat: implement memory.atomic.notify,wait32,wait64

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>

Signed-off-by: Harald Hoyer <harald@profian.com>
2022-11-21 18:23:06 +00:00
Andrew Brown
8426904129 bench: benchmark several common WASI scenarios (#5274)
In order to properly understand the impact of providing thread-safe
implmentations of WASI contexts (#5235), we need benchmarks that measure
the current performance of WASI calls using Wiggle. This change adds
several common WASI scenarios as WAT files (see `benches/wasi/*.wat`)
and benchmarks them with `criterion`. Using `criterion`'s `iter_custom`,
the WAT file runs the desired number of benchmark iterations internally
and the total duration of the runs is divided to get the average time
for each loop iteration.

Why WAT? When compiling these benchmarks from Rust to `wasm32-wasi`, the
output files are large, contain other WASI imports than the desired
ones, and overall it is difficult to tell if we are measuring what we
expect. By hand-writing the WAT, it is (slightly) more clear what each
benchmark is doing.
2022-11-15 17:02:35 -08:00
Alex Crichton
0548952319 Update wasm-tools crates (#5248)
No major updates, just keeping up-to-date.
2022-11-10 21:23:20 +00:00
Alex Crichton
3535acbf3b Merge pull request from GHSA-wh6w-3828-g9qf
* Unconditionally use `MemoryImageSlot`

This commit removes the internal branching within the pooling instance
allocator to sometimes use a `MemoryImageSlot` and sometimes now.
Instead this is now unconditionally used in all situations on all
platforms. This fixes an issue where the state of a slot could get
corrupted if modules being instantiated switched from having images to
not having an image or vice versa.

The bulk of this commit is the removal of the `memory-init-cow`
compile-time feature in addition to adding Windows support to the
`cow.rs` file.

* Fix compile on Unix

* Add a stricter assertion for static memory bounds

Double-check that when a memory is allocated the configuration required
is satisfied by the pooling allocator.
2022-11-10 11:34:38 -06:00
wasmtime-publish
08ef518c95 Bump Wasmtime to 4.0.0 (#5209)
Co-authored-by: Wasmtime Publish <wasmtime-publish@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-11-06 13:32:34 -06:00
Alex Crichton
cd53bed898 Implement AOT compilation for components (#5160)
* Pull `Module` out of `ModuleTextBuilder`

This commit is the first in what will likely be a number towards
preparing for serializing a compiled component to bytes, a precompiled
artifact. To that end my rough plan is to merge all of the compiled
artifacts for a component into one large object file instead of having
lots of separate object files and lots of separate mmaps to manage. To
that end I plan on eventually using `ModuleTextBuilder` to build one
large text section for all core wasm modules and trampolines, meaning
that `ModuleTextBuilder` is no longer specific to one module. I've
extracted out functionality such as function name calculation as well as
relocation resolving (now a closure passed in) in preparation for this.

For now this just keeps tests passing, and the trajectory for this
should become more clear over the following commits.

* Remove component-specific object emission

This commit removes the `ComponentCompiler::emit_obj` function in favor
of `Compiler::emit_obj`, now renamed `append_code`. This involved
significantly refactoring code emission to take a flat list of functions
into `append_code` and the caller is responsible for weaving together
various "families" of functions and un-weaving them afterwards.

* Consolidate ELF parsing in `CodeMemory`

This commit moves the ELF file parsing and section iteration from
`CompiledModule` into `CodeMemory` so one location keeps track of
section ranges and such. This is in preparation for sharing much of this
code with components which needs all the same sections to get tracked
but won't be using `CompiledModule`. A small side benefit from this is
that the section parsing done in `CodeMemory` and `CompiledModule` is no
longer duplicated.

* Remove separately tracked traps in components

Previously components would generate an "always trapping" function
and the metadata around which pc was allowed to trap was handled
manually for components. With recent refactorings the Wasmtime-standard
trap section in object files is now being generated for components as
well which means that can be reused instead of custom-tracking this
metadata. This commit removes the manual tracking for the `always_trap`
functions and plumbs the necessary bits around to make components look
more like modules.

* Remove a now-unnecessary `Arc` in `Module`

Not expected to have any measurable impact on performance, but
complexity-wise this should make it a bit easier to understand the
internals since there's no longer any need to store this somewhere else
than its owner's location.

* Merge compilation artifacts of components

This commit is a large refactoring of the component compilation process
to produce a single artifact instead of multiple binary artifacts. The
core wasm compilation process is refactored as well to share as much
code as necessary with the component compilation process.

This method of representing a compiled component necessitated a few
medium-sized changes internally within Wasmtime:

* A new data structure was created, `CodeObject`, which represents
  metadata about a single compiled artifact. This is then stored as an
  `Arc` within a component and a module. For `Module` this is always
  uniquely owned and represents a shuffling around of data from one
  owner to another. For a `Component`, however, this is shared amongst
  all loaded modules and the top-level component.

* The "module registry" which is used for symbolicating backtraces and
  for trap information has been updated to account for a single region
  of loaded code holding possibly multiple modules. This involved adding
  a second-level `BTreeMap` for now. This will likely slow down
  instantiation slightly but if it poses an issue in the future this
  should be able to be represented with a more clever data structure.

This commit additionally solves a number of longstanding issues with
components such as compiling only one host-to-wasm trampoline per
signature instead of possibly once-per-module. Additionally the
`SignatureCollection` registration now happens once-per-component
instead of once-per-module-within-a-component.

* Fix compile errors from prior commits

* Support AOT-compiling components

This commit adds support for AOT-compiled components in the same manner
as `Module`, specifically adding:

* `Engine::precompile_component`
* `Component::serialize`
* `Component::deserialize`
* `Component::deserialize_file`

Internally the support for components looks quite similar to `Module`.
All the prior commits to this made adding the support here
(unsurprisingly) easy. Components are represented as a single object
file as are modules, and the functions for each module are all piled
into the same object file next to each other (as are areas such as data
sections). Support was also added here to quickly differentiate compiled
components vs compiled modules via the `e_flags` field in the ELF
header.

* Prevent serializing exported modules on components

The current representation of a module within a component means that the
implementation of `Module::serialize` will not work if the module is
exported from a component. The reason for this is that `serialize`
doesn't actually do anything and simply returns the underlying mmap as a
list of bytes. The mmap, however, has `.wasmtime.info` describing
component metadata as opposed to this module's metadata. While rewriting
this section could be implemented it's not so easy to do so and is
otherwise seen as not super important of a feature right now anyway.

* Fix windows build

* Fix an unused function warning

* Update crates/environ/src/compilation.rs

Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>

Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>
2022-11-02 15:26:26 +00:00
Saúl Cabrera
835abbcd11 Initial skeleton for Winch (#4907)
* Initial skeleton for Winch

This commit introduces the initial skeleton for Winch, the "baseline"
compiler.

This skeleton contains mostly setup code for the ISA, ABI, registers,
and compilation environment abstractions. It also includes the
calculation of function local slots.

As of this commit, the structure of these abstractions looks like the
following:

                        +------------------------+
                        |                        v
     +----------+     +-----+     +-----------+-----+-----------------+
     | Compiler | --> | ISA | --> | Registers | ABI | Compilation Env |
     +----------+     +-----+     +-----------+-----+-----------------+
                        |                              ^
                        +------------------------------+

* Compilation environment will hold a reference to the function data

* Add basic documentation to the ABI trait

* Enable x86 and arm64 in cranelift-codegen

* Add reg_name function for x64

* Introduce the concept of a MacroAssembler and Assembler

This commit introduces the concept of a MacroAsesembler and
Assembler. The MacroAssembler trait will provide a high enough
interface across architectures so that each ISA implementation can use their own low-level
Assembler implementation to fulfill the interface. Each Assembler will
provide a 1-1 mapping to each ISA instruction.

As of this commit, only a partial debug implementation is provided for
the x64 Assembler.

* Add a newtype over PReg

Adds a newtype `Reg` over regalloc2::PReg; this ensures that Winch
will operate only on the concept of `Reg`. This change is temporary
until we have the necessary machinery to share a common Reg
abstraction via `cranelift_asm`

* Improvements to local calcuation

- Add `LocalSlot::addressed_from_sp`
- Use `u32` for local slot and local sizes calculation

* Add helper methods to ABIArg

Adds helper methods to retrieve register and type information from the argument

* Make locals_size public in frame

* Improve x64 register naming depending on size

* Add new methods to the masm interface

This commit introduces the ability for the MacroAssembler to reserve
stack space, get the address of a given local and perform a stack
store based on the concept of `Operand`s.

There are several motivating factors to introduce the concept of an
Operand:

- Make the translation between Winch and Cranelift easier;
- Make dispatching from the MacroAssembler to the underlying Assembler
- easier by minimizing the amount of functions that we need to define
- in order to satisfy the store/load combinations

This commit also introduces the concept of a memory address, which
essentially describes the addressing modes; as of this commit only one
addressing mode is supported. We'll also need to verify that this
structure will play nicely with arm64.

* Blank masm implementation for arm64

* Implementation of reserve_stack, local_address, store and fp_offset
for x64

* Implement function prologue and argument register spilling

* Add structopt and wat

* Fix debug instruction formatting

* Make TargetISA trait publicly accessible

* Modify the MacroAssembler finalize siganture to return a slice of strings

* Introduce a simple CLI for Winch

To be able to compile Wasm programs with Winch independently. Mostly
meant for testing / debugging

* Fix bug in x64 assembler mov_rm

* Remove unused import

* Move the stack slot calculation to the Frame

This commit moves the calculation of the stack slots to the frame
handler abstraction and also includes the calculation of the limits
for the function defined locals, which will be used to zero the locals
that are not associated to function arguments

* Add i32 and i64 constructors to local slots

* Introduce the concept of DefinedLocalsRange

This commit introduces `DefinedLocalsRange` to track the stack offset
at which the function-defined locals start and end; this is later used
to zero-out that stack region

* Add constructors for int and float registers

* Add a placeholder stack implementation

* Add a regset abstraction to track register availability

Adds a bit set abstraction to track register availability for register
allocation.

The bit set has no specific knowledge about physical registers, it
works on the register's hardware encoding as the source of truth.

Each RegSet is expected to be created with the universe of allocatable
registers per ISA when starting the compilation of a particular function.

* Add an abstraction over register and immediate

This is meant to be used as the source for stores.

* Add a way to zero local slots and an initial skeletion of regalloc

This commit introduces `zero_local_slots` to the MacroAssembler; which
ensures that function defined locals are zeroed out when starting the
function body.

The algorithm divides the defined function locals stack range
into 8 byte slots and stores a zero at each address. This process
relies on register allocation if the amount of slots that need to be
initialized is greater than 1. In such case, the next available
register is requested to the register set and it's used to store a 0,
which is then stored at every local slot

* Update to wasmparser 0.92

* Correctly track if the regset has registers available

* Add a result entry to the ABI signature

This commuit introduces ABIResult as part of the ABISignature;
this struct will track how function results are stored; initially it
will consiste of a single register that will be requested to the
register allocator at the end of the function; potentially causing a spill

* Move zero local slots and add more granular methods to the masm

This commit removes zeroing local slots from the MacroAssembler and
instead adds more granular methods to it (e.g `zero`, `add`).

This allows for better code sharing since most of the work done by the
algorithm for zeroing slots will be the same in all targets, except
for the binary emissions pieces, which is what gets delegated to the masm

* Use wasmparser's visitor API and add initial support for const and add

This commit adds initial support for the I32Const and I32
instructions; this involves adding a minimum for register
allocation. Note that some regalloc pieces are still incomplete, since
for the current set of supported instructions they are not needed.

* Make the ty field public in Local

* Add scratch_reg to the abi

* Add a method to get a particular local from the Frame

* Split the compilation environment abstraction

This commit splits the compilation environment into two more concise
abstractions:

1. CodeGen: the main abstraction for code generation
2. CodeGenContext: abstraction that shares the common pieces for
compilation; these pieces are shared between the code generator and
the register allocator

* Add `push` and `load` to the MacroAssembler

* Remove dead code warnings for unused paths

* Map ISA features to cranelift-codegen ISA features

* Apply formatting

* Fix Cargo.toml after a bad rebase

* Add component-compiler feature

* Use clap instead of structopt

* Add winch to publish.rs script

* Minor formatting

* Add tests to RegSet and fix two bugs when freeing and checking for
register availability

* Add tests to Stack

* Free source register after a non-constant i32 add

* Improve comments

- Remove unneeded comments
- And improve some of the TODO items

* Update default features

* Drop the ABI generic param and pass the word_size information directly

To avoid dealing with dead code warnings this commit passes the word
size information directly, since it's the only piece of information
needed from the ABI by Codegen until now

* Remove dead code

This piece of code will be put back once we start integrating Winch
with Wasmtime

* Remove unused enum variant

This variant doesn't get constructed; it should be added back once a
backend is added and not enabled by default or when Winch gets
integrated into Wasmtime

* Fix unused code in regset tests

* Update spec testsuite

* Switch the visitor pattern for a simpler operator match

This commit removes the usage of wasmparser's visitor pattern and
instead defaults to a simpler operator matching approach. This removes
the complexity of having to define all the visitor trait functions at once.

* Use wasmparser's Visitor trait with a different macro strategy

This commit puts back wasmparser's Visitor trait, with a sigle;
simpler macro, only used for unsupported operators.

* Restructure Winch

This commit restuructures Winch's parts. It divides the initial
approach into three main crates: `winch-codegen`,`wasmtime-winch` and `winch-tools`.

`wasmtime-winch` is reponsible for the Wasmtime-Winch integration.
`winch-codegen` is solely responsible for code generation.
`winch-tools` is CLI tool to compile Wasm programs, mainly for testing purposes.

* Refactor zero local slots

This commit moves the logic of zeroing local slots from the codegen
module into a method with a default implementation in the
MacroAssembler trait: `zero_mem_range`.

The refactored implementation is very similar to the previous
implementation with the only difference
that it doesn't allocates a general-purpose register; it instead uses
the register allocator to retrieve the scratch register and uses this
register to unroll the series of zero stores.

* Tie the codegen creation to the ISA ABI

This commit makes the relationship between the ISA ABI and the codegen
explicit. This allows us to pass down ABI-specific bit and pieces to
the codegeneration. In this case the only concrete piece that we need
is the ABI word size.

* Mark winch as publishable directory

* Revamp winch docs

This commit ensures that all the code comments in Winch are compliant
with the syle used in the rest of Wasmtime's codebase.

It also imptoves, generally the quality of the comments in some modules.

* Panic when using multi-value when the target is aarch64

Similar to x64, this commit ensures that the abi signature of the
current function doesn't use multi-value returns

* Document the usage of directives

* Use endianness instead of endianess in the ISA trait

* Introduce a three-argument form in the MacroAssembler

This commit introduces the usage of three-argument form for the
MacroAssembler interface. This allows for a natural mapping for
architectures like aarch64. In the case of x64, the implementation can
simply restrict the implementation asserting for equality in two of
the arguments of defaulting to a differnt set of instructions.

As of this commit, the implementation of `add` panics if the
destination and the first source arguments are not equal; internally
the x64 assembler implementation will ensure that all the allowed
combinations of `add` are satisfied. The reason for panicking and not
emitting a `mov` followed by an `add` for example is simply because register
allocation happens right before calling `add`, which ensures any
register-to-register moves, if needed.

This implementation will evolve in the future and this panic will be
lifted if needed.

* Improve the documentation for the MacroAssembler.

Documents the usage of three-arg form and the intention around the
high-level interface.

* Format comments in remaining modules

* Clean up Cargo.toml for winch pieces

This commit adds missing fields to each of Winch's Cargo.toml.

* Use `ModuleTranslation::get_types()` to derive the function type

* Assert that start range is always word-size aligned
2022-10-28 14:19:34 -07:00
Alex Crichton
bc3285e845 Update wasm-tools crates (#5130)
* Update wasm-tools crates

Mostly just a hygienic update, nothing major here

* Fix fuzz compile

* Fix test expectations
2022-10-26 18:29:10 +00:00
Afonso Bordado
4639e85c4e Flush Icache on AArch64 Windows (#4997)
* cranelift: Add FlushInstructionCache for AArch64 on Windows

This was previously done on #3426 for linux.

* wasmtime: Add FlushInstructionCache for AArch64 on Windows

This was previously done on #3426 for linux.

* cranelift: Add MemoryUse flag to JIT Memory Manager

This allows us to keep the icache flushing code self-contained and not leak implementation details.

This also changes the windows icache flushing code to only flush pages that were previously unflushed.

* Add jit-icache-coherence crate

* cranelift: Use `jit-icache-coherence`

* wasmtime: Use `jit-icache-coherence`

* jit-icache-coherence: Make rustix feature additive

Mutually exclusive features cause issues.

* wasmtime: Remove rustix from wasmtime-jit

We now use it via jit-icache-coherence

* Rename wasmtime-jit-icache-coherency crate

* Use cfg-if in wasmtime-jit-icache-coherency crate

* Use inline instead of inline(always)

* Add unsafe marker to clear_cache

* Conditionally compile all rustix operations

membarrier does not exist on MacOS

* Publish `wasmtime-jit-icache-coherence`

* Remove explicit windows check

This is implied by the target_os = "windows" above

* cranelift: Remove len != 0 check

This is redundant as it is done in non_protected_allocations_iter

* Comment cleanups

Thanks @akirilov-arm!

* Make clear_cache safe

* Rename pipeline_flush to pipeline_flush_mt

* Revert "Make clear_cache safe"

This reverts commit 21165d81c9030ed9b291a1021a367214d2942c90.

* More docs!

* Fix pipeline_flush reference on clear_cache

* Update more docs!

* Move pipeline flush after `mprotect` calls

Technically the `clear_cache` operation is a lie in AArch64, so move the pipeline flush after the `mprotect` calls so that it benefits from the implicit cache cleaning done by it.

* wasmtime: Remove rustix backend from icache crate

* wasmtime: Use libc for macos

* wasmtime: Flush icache on all arch's for windows

* wasmtime: Add flags to membarrier call
2022-10-12 11:15:38 -07:00
Chris Fallin
2be12a5167 egraph-based midend: draw the rest of the owl (productionized). (#4953)
* egraph-based midend: draw the rest of the owl.

* Rename `egg` submodule of cranelift-codegen to `egraph`.

* Apply some feedback from @jsharp during code walkthrough.

* Remove recursion from find_best_node by doing a single pass.

Rather than recursively computing the lowest-cost node for a given
eclass and memoizing the answer at each eclass node, we can do a single
forward pass; because every eclass node refers only to earlier nodes,
this is sufficient. The behavior may slightly differ from the earlier
behavior because we cannot short-circuit costs to zero once a node is
elaborated; but in practice this should not matter.

* Make elaboration non-recursive.

Use an explicit stack instead (with `ElabStackEntry` entries,
alongside a result stack).

* Make elaboration traversal of the domtree non-recursive/stack-safe.

* Work analysis logic in Cranelift-side egraph glue into a general analysis framework in cranelift-egraph.

* Apply static recursion limit to rule application.

* Fix aarch64 wrt dynamic-vector support -- broken rebase.

* Topo-sort cranelift-egraph before cranelift-codegen in publish script, like the comment instructs me to!

* Fix multi-result call testcase.

* Include `cranelift-egraph` in `PUBLISHED_CRATES`.

* Fix atomic_rmw: not really a load.

* Remove now-unnecessary PartialOrd/Ord derivations.

* Address some code-review comments.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* No overlap in mid-end rules, because we are defining a multi-constructor.

* rustfmt

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Remove redundant `mut`.

* Add comment noting what rules can do.

* Review feedback.

* Clarify comment wording.

* Update `has_memory_fence_semantics`.

* Apply @jameysharp's improved loop-level computation.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fix suggestion commit.

* Fix off-by-one in new loop-nest analysis.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Review feedback.

* Use `Default`, not `std::default::Default`, as per @fitzgen

Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>

* Apply @fitzgen's comment elaboration to a doc-comment.

Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>

* Add stat for hitting the rewrite-depth limit.

* Some code motion in split prelude to make the diff a little clearer wrt `main`.

* Take @jameysharp's suggested `try_into()` usage for blockparam indices.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion to avoid double-match on load op.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fix suggestion (add import).

* Review feedback.

* Fix stack_load handling.

* Remove redundant can_store case.

* Take @jameysharp's suggested improvement to FuncEGraph::build() logic

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Tweaks to FuncEGraph::build() on top of suggestion.

* Take @jameysharp's suggested clarified condition

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Clean up after suggestion (unused variable).

* Fix loop analysis.

* loop level asserts

* Revert constant-space loop analysis -- edge cases were incorrect, so let's go with the simple thing for now.

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion re: result_tys

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fix up after suggestion

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion to use fold rather than reduce

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>

* Fixup after suggestion

* Take @jameysharp's suggestion to remove elaborate_eclass_use's return value.

* Clarifying comment in terminator insts.

Co-authored-by: Jamey Sharp <jamey@minilop.net>
Co-authored-by: Nick Fitzgerald <fitzgen@gmail.com>
2022-10-11 18:15:53 -07:00
wasmtime-publish
a9be4a9b56 Bump Wasmtime to 3.0.0 (#5016)
Co-authored-by: Wasmtime Publish <wasmtime-publish@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-10-05 09:30:55 -05:00
Alex Crichton
2607590d8c Update the wasm-tools family of crates (#5010)
* Update the wasm-tools family of crates

Only minor updates here, mostly internal changes and no binary-related
changes today.

* Fix test expectation
2022-10-04 16:26:22 -05:00
Alex Crichton
29c7de7340 Update wasm-tools dependencies (#4970)
* Update wasm-tools dependencies

This update brings in a number of features such as:

* The component model binary format and AST has been slightly adjusted
  in a few locations. Names are dropped from parameters/results now in
  the internal representation since they were not used anyway. At this
  time the ability to bind a multi-return function has not been exposed.

* The `wasmparser` validator pass will now share allocations with prior
  functions, providing what's probably a very minor speedup for Wasmtime
  itself.

* The text format for many component-related tests now requires named
  parameters.

* Some new relaxed-simd instructions are updated to be ignored.

I hope to have a follow-up to expose the multi-return ability to the
embedding API of components.

* Update audit information for new crates
2022-09-27 13:12:34 -05:00
Alex Crichton
7b311004b5 Leverage Cargo's workspace inheritance feature (#4905)
* Leverage Cargo's workspace inheritance feature

This commit is an attempt to reduce the complexity of the Cargo
manifests in this repository with Cargo's workspace-inheritance feature
becoming stable in Rust 1.64.0. This feature allows specifying fields in
the root workspace `Cargo.toml` which are then reused throughout the
workspace. For example this PR shares definitions such as:

* All of the Wasmtime-family of crates now use `version.workspace =
  true` to have a single location which defines the version number.
* All crates use `edition.workspace = true` to have one default edition
  for the entire workspace.
* Common dependencies are listed in `[workspace.dependencies]` to avoid
  typing the same version number in a lot of different places (e.g. the
  `wasmparser = "0.89.0"` is now in just one spot.

Currently the workspace-inheritance feature doesn't allow having two
different versions to inherit, so all of the Cranelift-family of crates
still manually specify their version. The inter-crate dependencies,
however, are shared amongst the root workspace.

This feature can be seen as a method of "preprocessing" of sorts for
Cargo manifests. This will help us develop Wasmtime but shouldn't have
any actual impact on the published artifacts -- everything's dependency
lists are still the same.

* Fix wasi-crypto tests
2022-09-26 11:30:01 -05:00
Chris Fallin
89abd80c3c Add the aegraph (acyclic e-graph) implementation crate. (#4909)
* Add the aegraph (acyclic egraph) implementation crate.

* fix crate-dep version for cranelift-entity (rebase error)

* Review feedback.

* Fix link in Markdown doc comment.

* Doc link fix again.

* add cranelift-egraph to publish list.
2022-09-22 00:33:27 +00:00
Dan Gohman
6f50ddaaf2 Update to cap-std 0.26. (#4940)
* Update to cap-std 0.26.

This is primarily to pull in bytecodealliance/cap-std#271, the fix for #4936,
compilation on Rust nightly on Windows.

It also updates to rustix 0.35.10, to pull in bytecodealliance/rustix#403,
the fix for bytecodealliance/rustix#402, compilation on newer versions of
the libc crate, which changed a public function from `unsafe` to safe.

Fixes #4936.

* Update the system-interface audit for 0.23.

* Update the libc supply-chain config version.
2022-09-21 14:56:38 -05:00
Alex Crichton
65930640f8 Bump Wasmtime to 2.0.0 (#4874)
This commit replaces #4869 and represents the actual version bump that
should have happened had I remembered to bump the in-tree version of
Wasmtime to 1.0.0 prior to the branch-cut date. Alas!
2022-09-06 13:49:56 -05:00
Nick Fitzgerald
ff0e84ecf4 Wasmtime: fix stack walking across frames from different stores (#4779)
We were previously implicitly assuming that all Wasm frames in a stack used the
same `VMRuntimeLimits` as the previous frame we walked, but this is not true
when Wasm in store A calls into the host which then calls into Wasm in store B:

    | ...             |
    | Host            |  |
    +-----------------+  | stack
    | Wasm in store A |  | grows
    +-----------------+  | down
    | Host            |  |
    +-----------------+  |
    | Wasm in store B |  V
    +-----------------+

Trying to walk this stack would previously result in a runtime panic.

The solution is to push the maintenance of our list of saved Wasm FP/SP/PC
registers that allow us to identify contiguous regions of Wasm frames on the
stack deeper into `CallThreadState`. The saved registers list is now maintained
whenever updating the `CallThreadState` linked list by making the
`CallThreadState::prev` field private and only accessible via a getter and
setter, where the setter always maintains our invariants.
2022-08-30 18:28:00 +00:00
Alex Crichton
09c93c70cc Remove the ansi_term transitive dependency (#4822)
Only used during tests but this resolves #4742 by slimming the
dependency tree.
2022-08-30 17:29:17 +00:00
Alex Crichton
57dca934ad Upgrade wasm-tools crates, namely the component model (#4715)
* Upgrade wasm-tools crates, namely the component model

This commit pulls in the latest versions of all of the `wasm-tools`
family of crates. There were two major changes that happened in
`wasm-tools` in the meantime:

* bytecodealliance/wasm-tools#697 - this commit introduced a new API for
  more efficiently reading binary operators from a wasm binary. The old
  `Operator`-based reading was left in place, however, and continues to
  be what Wasmtime uses. I hope to update Wasmtime in a future PR to use
  this new API, but for now the biggest change is...

* bytecodealliance/wasm-tools#703 - this commit was a major update to
  the component model AST. This commit almost entirely deals with the
  fallout of this change.

The changes made to the component model were:

1. The `unit` type no longer exists. This was generally a simple change
   where the `Unit` case in a few different locations were all removed.
2. The `expected` type was renamed to `result`. This similarly was
   relatively lightweight and mostly just a renaming on the surface. I
   took this opportunity to rename `val::Result` to `val::ResultVal` and
   `types::Result` to `types::ResultType` to avoid clashing with the
   standard library types. The `Option`-based types were handled with
   this as well.
3. The payload type of `variant` and `result` types are now optional.
   This affected many locations that calculate flat type
   representations, ABI information, etc. The `#[derive(ComponentType)]`
   macro now specifically handles Rust-defined `enum` types which have
   no payload to the equivalent in the component model.
4. Functions can now return multiple parameters. This changed the
   signature of invoking component functions because the return value is
   now bound by `ComponentNamedList` (renamed from `ComponentParams`).
   This had a large effect in the tests, fuzz test case generation, etc.
5. Function types with 2-or-more parameters/results must uniquely name
   all parameters/results. This mostly affected the text format used
   throughout the tests.

I haven't added specifically new tests for multi-return but I changed a
number of tests to use it. Additionally I've updated the fuzzers to all
exercise multi-return as well so I think we should get some good
coverage with that.

* Update version numbers

* Use crates.io
2022-08-17 16:17:34 +00:00
wasmtime-publish
412fa04911 Bump Wasmtime to 0.41.0 (#4620)
Co-authored-by: Wasmtime Publish <wasmtime-publish@users.noreply.github.com>
2022-08-04 20:02:19 -05:00
Joel Dice
ed8908efcf implement fuzzing for component types (#4537)
This addresses #4307.

For the static API we generate 100 arbitrary test cases at build time, each of
which includes 0-5 parameter types, a result type, and a WAT fragment containing
an imported function and an exported function.  The exported function calls the
imported function, which is implemented by the host.  At runtime, the fuzz test
selects a test case at random and feeds it zero or more sets of arbitrary
parameters and results, checking that values which flow host-to-guest and
guest-to-host make the transition unchanged.

The fuzz test for the dynamic API follows a similar pattern, the only difference
being that test cases are generated at runtime.

Signed-off-by: Joel Dice <joel.dice@fermyon.com>
2022-08-04 12:02:55 -05:00
Alex Crichton
ee5b192d35 Re-enable component model *.wast tests (#4577)
* Re-enable component model `*.wast` tests

These accidentally stopped running as part of #4556 on CI since I forgot
one more location to touch a feature gate.

* Enable logging in component tests

This is a small convenience to get log messages during testing for
components by default.
2022-08-02 15:43:33 -05:00