This fixes some fuzz bugs that came about enabling simd where nan
canonicalization is performed on the fuzzers but cranelift would panic
on these ops for vectors. This adds some custom codegen with `bitselect`
to ensure any nan lanes are canonical-nan lanes in the canonicalized
operations.
* Consolidate address calculations for atomics
This commit consolidates all calcuations of guest addresses into one
`prepare_addr` function. This notably remove the atomics-specifics paths
as well as the `prepare_load` function (now renamed to `prepare_addr`
and folded into `get_heap_addr`).
The goal of this commit is to simplify how addresses are managed in the
code generator for atomics to use all the shared infrastrucutre of other
loads/stores as well. This additionally fixes#3132 via the use of
`heap_addr` in clif for all operations.
I also added a number of tests for loads/stores with varying alignments.
Originally I was going to allow loads/stores to not be aligned since
that's what the current formal specification says, but the overview of
the threads proposal disagrees with the formal specification, so I
figured I'd leave it as-is but adding tests probably doesn't hurt.
Closes#3132
* Fix old backend
* Guarantee misalignment checks happen before out-of-bounds
This commit fixes an issue where `cargo test` was failing pretty
reliably on an 80-thread system where many of the pooling tests would
fail in `mmap` to reserve address space for the linear memories
allocated for a pooling allocator. Each test wants to reserve about 6TB
of address space, and if we let 80 tests do that apparently Linux
doesn't like that and starts returning errors from `mmap`.
The implementation here is a relatively simple semaphore-lookalike
which allows a fixed amount of concurrency in pooling tests.
* 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
This was a bit of an oversight in the relnotes updates for the
just-released v0.29: since the release PR was prepared a few days before
the actual release, I should have updated the "released on" date in
RELEASES.md (oops!). I don't think it's a big enough deal to re-roll
anything but we should have the correct date in the version on `main`.
* 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
PR #3131 fixed the failing builds by allowing this field to be dead.
After looking at it further the field is not being used and can be
removedi completely.
One of the fields of `TargetIsa` isn't used in the
cranelift-codegen-meta crate, but instead of refactoring to try to
remove it this just adds `#[allow(dead_code)]` for now in the assumption
that when the old backends go away this will probably go away as well.
This exposes the functionality of the `Linker` type where a
store-independent function can be created and inserted, allowing a
linker's functions to be used across many stores (instead of requiring
one linker-per-store).
Closes#3110
This was needed a long time ago in the original implementation when the
function being called here was hotter than it was before, but nowadays
this function isn't hot as it's protected elsewhere from being
repeatedly called, so the caching thread local is no longer necessary.
Fixes#2943, though not as optimally as may be desired. With x64 SIMD
instructions, the memory operand must be aligned--this change adds that
check. There are cases, however, where we can do better--see #3106.
Cranelift crates have historically been much more verbose with debug-level
logging than most other crates in the Rust ecosystem. We log things like how
many parameters a basic block has, the color of virtual registers during
regalloc, etc. Even for Cranelift hackers, these things are largely only useful
when hacking specifically on Cranelift and looking at a particular test case,
not even when using some Cranelift embedding (such as Wasmtime).
Most of the time, when people want logging for their Rust programs, they do
something like:
RUST_LOG=debug cargo run
This means that they get all that mostly not useful debug logging out of
Cranelift. So they might want to disable logging for Cranelift, or change it to
a higher log level:
RUST_LOG=debug,cranelift=info cargo run
The problem is that this is already more annoying to type that `RUST_LOG=debug`,
and that Cranelift isn't one single crate, so you actually have to play
whack-a-mole with naming all the Cranelift crates off the top of your head,
something more like this:
RUST_LOG=debug,cranelift=info,cranelift_codegen=info,cranelift_wasm=info,...
Therefore, we're changing most of the `debug!` logs into `trace!` logs: anything
that is very Cranelift-internal, unlikely to be useful/meaningful to the
"average" Cranelift embedder, or prints a message for each instruction visited
during a pass. On the other hand, things that just report a one line statistic
for a whole pass, for example, are left as `debug!`. The more verbose the log
messages are, the higher the bar they must clear to be `debug!` rather than
`trace!`.
This commit adds some clarifying documentation to both the `ModuleLimits` and
`InstanceLimits` types in the Wasmtime API.
It clarifies how each setting relates to the memory allocated by the pooling
instance allocator.
Closes#3080.