Now that we're using "possibly exported" as an impactful decision for
codegen (which trampolines to generate and which ABI a function has)
it's important that we calculate this property of a wasm function
correctly! Previously Wasmtime forgot to processed "declared" elements
in apart from active/passive element segments, but this updates Wasmtime
to ensure that these entries are processed and all the functions
contained within are flagged as "possibly exported".
Closes#2850
* Optimize `table.init` instruction and instantiation
This commit optimizes table initialization as part of instance
instantiation and also applies the same optimization to the `table.init`
instruction. One part of this commit is to remove some preexisting
duplication between instance instantiation and the `table.init`
instruction itself, after this the actual implementation of `table.init`
is optimized to effectively have fewer bounds checks in fewer places and
have a much tighter loop for instantiation.
A big fallout from this change is that memory/table initializer offsets
are now stored as `u32` instead of `usize` to remove a few casts in a
few places. This ended up requiring moving some overflow checks that
happened in parsing to later in code itself because otherwise the wrong
spec test errors are emitted during testing. I've tried to trace where
these can possibly overflow but I think that I managed to get
everything.
In a local synthetic test where an empty module with a single 80,000
element initializer this improves total instantiation time by 4x (562us
=> 141us)
* Review comments
* Fully support multiple returns in Wasmtime
For quite some time now Wasmtime has "supported" multiple return values,
but only in the mose bare bones ways. Up until recently you couldn't get
a typed version of functions with multiple return values, and never have
you been able to use `Func::wrap` with functions that return multiple
values. Even recently where `Func::typed` can call functions that return
multiple values it uses a double-indirection by calling a trampoline
which calls the real function.
The underlying reason for this lack of support is that cranelift's ABI
for returning multiple values is not possible to write in Rust. For
example if a wasm function returns two `i32` values there is no Rust (or
C!) function you can write to correspond to that. This commit, however
fixes that.
This commit adds two new ABIs to Cranelift: `WasmtimeSystemV` and
`WasmtimeFastcall`. The intention is that these Wasmtime-specific ABIs
match their corresponding ABI (e.g. `SystemV` or `WindowsFastcall`) for
everything *except* how multiple values are returned. For multiple
return values we simply define our own version of the ABI which Wasmtime
implements, which is that for N return values the first is returned as
if the function only returned that and the latter N-1 return values are
returned via an out-ptr that's the last parameter to the function.
These custom ABIs provides the ability for Wasmtime to bind these in
Rust meaning that `Func::wrap` can now wrap functions that return
multiple values and `Func::typed` no longer uses trampolines when
calling functions that return multiple values. Although there's lots of
internal changes there's no actual changes in the API surface area of
Wasmtime, just a few more impls of more public traits which means that
more types are supported in more places!
Another change made with this PR is a consolidation of how the ABI of
each function in a wasm module is selected. The native `SystemV` ABI,
for example, is more efficient at returning multiple values than the
wasmtime version of the ABI (since more things are in more registers).
To continue to take advantage of this Wasmtime will now classify some
functions in a wasm module with the "fast" ABI. Only functions that are
not reachable externally from the module are classified with the fast
ABI (e.g. those not exported, used in tables, or used with `ref.func`).
This should enable purely internal functions of modules to have a faster
calling convention than those which might be exposed to Wasmtime itself.
Closes#1178
* Tweak some names and add docs
* "fix" lightbeam compile
* Fix TODO with dummy environ
* Unwind info is a property of the target, not the ABI
* Remove lightbeam unused imports
* Attempt to fix arm64
* Document new ABIs aren't stable
* Fix filetests to use the right target
* Don't always do 64-bit stores with cranelift
This was overwriting upper bits when 32-bit registers were being stored
into return values, so fix the code inline to do a sized store instead
of one-size-fits-all store.
* At least get tests passing on the old backend
* Fix a typo
* Add some filetests with mixed abi calls
* Get `multi` example working
* Fix doctests on old x86 backend
* Add a mixture of wasmtime/system_v tests
This bumps target-lexicon and adds support for the AppleAarch64 calling
convention. Specifically for WebAssembly support, we only have to worry
about the new stack slots convention. Stack slots don't need to be at
least 8-bytes, they can be as small as the data type's size. For
instance, if we need stack slots for (i32, i32), they can be located at
offsets (+0, +4). Note that they still need to be properly aligned on
the data type they're containing, though, so if we need stack slots for
(i32, i64), we can't start the i64 slot at the +4 offset (it must start
at the +8 offset).
Added one test that was failing on the Mac M1, as well as other tests
stressing different yet similar situations.
The Wasm SIMD specification has added new instructions that allow inserting to the lane of a vector from a memory location, and conversely, extracting from a lane of a vector to a memory location. The simplest implementation lowers these instructions, `load[8|16|32|64]_lane` and `store[8|16|32|64]_lane`, to a sequence of either `load + insertlane` or `extractlane + store` (in CLIF). With the new backend's pattern matching, we expect these CLIF sequences to compile as a single machine instruction (at least in x64).
This commit refactors module instantiation in the runtime to allow for
different instance allocation strategy implementations.
It adds an `InstanceAllocator` trait with the current implementation put behind
the `OnDemandInstanceAllocator` struct.
The Wasmtime API has been updated to allow a `Config` to have an instance
allocation strategy set which will determine how instances get allocated.
This change is in preparation for an alternative *pooling* instance allocator
that can reserve all needed host process address space in advance.
This commit also makes changes to the `wasmtime_environ` crate to represent
compiled modules in a way that reduces copying at instantiation time.
This instruction has a single instruction lowering in AVX512F/VL and a three instruction lowering in AVX but neither is currently supported in the x64 backend. To implement this, we instead subtract the vector from 0 and use a blending instruction to pick the lanes containing the absolute value.
* Update wasm-tools crates
* Update Wasm SIMD spec tests
* Invert 'experimental_x64_should_panic' logic
By doing this, it is easier to see which spec tests currently panic. The new tests correspond to recently-added instructions.
* Fix: ignore new spec tests for all backends
- Panic messages must now be string literals (we used `format!()` in
many places; `panic!()` can take format strings directly).
- Some dead enum options with EVEX encoding stuff in old x86 backend.
This will go away soon and/or be moved to the new backend anyway, so
let's silence the warning for now.
- A few other misc warnings.
* Consume fuel during function execution
This commit adds codegen infrastructure necessary to instrument wasm
code to consume fuel as it executes. Currently nothing is really done
with the fuel, but that'll come in later commits.
The focus of this commit is to implement the codegen infrastructure
necessary to consume fuel and account for fuel consumed correctly.
* Periodically check remaining fuel in wasm JIT code
This commit enables wasm code to periodically check to see if fuel has
run out. When fuel runs out an intrinsic is called which can do what it
needs to do in the result of fuel running out. For now a trap is thrown
to have at least some semantics in synchronous stores, but another
planned use for this feature is for asynchronous stores to periodically
yield back to the host based on fuel running out.
Checks for remaining fuel happen in the same locations as interrupt
checks, which is to say the start of the function as well as loop
headers.
* Improve codegen by caching `*const VMInterrupts`
The location of the shared interrupt value and fuel value is through a
double-indirection on the vmctx (load through the vmctx and then load
through that pointer). The second pointer in this chain, however, never
changes, so we can alter codegen to account for this and remove some
extraneous load instructions and hopefully reduce some register
pressure even maybe.
* Add tests fuel can abort infinite loops
* More fuzzing with fuel
Use fuel to time out modules in addition to time, using fuzz input to
figure out which.
* Update docs on trapping instructions
* Fix doc links
* Fix a fuzz test
* Change setting fuel to adding fuel
* Fix a doc link
* Squelch some rustdoc warnings
This commit goes through the dependencies that wasmtime has and updates
versions where possible. This notably brings in a wasmparser/wast update
which has some simd spec changes with new instructions. Otherwise most
of these are just routine updates.
This commit updates the various tooling used by wasmtime which has new
updates to the module linking proposal. This is done primarily to sync
with WebAssembly/module-linking#26. The main change implemented here is
that wasmtime now supports creating instances from a set of values, nott
just from instantiating a module. Additionally subtyping handling of
modules with respect to imports is now properly handled by desugaring
two-level imports to imports of instances.
A number of small refactorings are included here as well, but most of
them are in accordance with the changes to `wasmparser` and the updated
binary format for module linking.
The translation of Operator::Select and Operator::TypedSelect for vector-typed
operands, lacks the relevant bitcasting of the operands to I8X16. This commit
adds it.
WebAssembly memory operations are by definition little-endian even on
big-endian target platforms. However, other memory accesses will require
native target endianness (e.g. to access parts of the VMContext that is
also accessed by VM native code). This means on big-endian targets,
the code generator will have to handle both little- and big-endian
memory accesses. However, there is currently no way to encode that
distinction into the Cranelift IR that describes memory accesses.
This patch provides such a way by adding an (optional) explicit
endianness marker to an instance of MemFlags. Since each Cranelift IR
instruction that describes memory accesses already has an instance of
MemFlags attached, this can now be used to provide endianness
information.
Note that by default, memory accesses will continue to use the native
target ISA endianness. To override this to specify an explicit
endianness, a MemFlags value that was built using the set_endianness
routine must be used. This patch does so for accesses that implement
WebAssembly memory operations.
This patch addresses issue #2124.
This commit updates all the wasm-tools crates that we use and enables
fuzzing of the module linking proposal in our various fuzz targets. This
also refactors some of the dummy value generation logic to not be
fallible and to always succeed, the thinking being that we don't want to
accidentally hide errors while fuzzing. Additionally instantiation is
only allowed to fail with a `Trap`, other failure reasons are unwrapped.
* Implement imported/exported modules/instances
This commit implements the final piece of the module linking proposal
which is to flesh out the support for importing/exporting instances and
modules. This ended up having a few changes:
* Two more `PrimaryMap` instances are now stored in an `Instance`. The value
for instances is `InstanceHandle` (pretty easy) and for modules it's
`Box<dyn Any>` (less easy).
* The custom host state for `InstanceHandle` for `wasmtime` is now
`Arc<TypeTables` to be able to fully reconstruct an instance's types
just from its instance.
* Type matching for imports now has been updated to take
instances/modules into account.
One of the main downsides of this implementation is that type matching
of imports is duplicated between wasmparser and wasmtime, leading to
posssible bugs especially in the subtelties of module linking. I'm not
sure how best to unify these two pieces of validation, however, and it
may be more trouble than it's worth.
cc #2094
* Update wat/wast/wasmparser
* Review comments
* Fix a bug in publish script to vendor the right witx
Currently there's two witx binaries in our repository given the two wasi
spec submodules, so this updates the publication script to vendor the
right one.
This commit is intended to do almost everything necessary for processing
the alias section of module linking. Most of this is internal
refactoring, the highlights being:
* Type contents are now stored separately from a `wasmtime_env::Module`.
Given that modules can freely alias types and have them used all over
the place, it seemed best to have one canonical location to type
storage which everywhere else points to (with indices). A new
`TypeTables` structure is produced during compilation which is shared
amongst all member modules in a wasm blob.
* Instantiation is heavily refactored to account for module linking. The
main gotcha here is that imports are now listed as "initializers". We
have a sort of pseudo-bytecode-interpreter which interprets the
initialization of a module. This is more complicated than just
matching imports at this point because in the module linking proposal
the module, alias, import, and instance sections may all be
interleaved. This means that imports aren't guaranteed to show up at
the beginning of the address space for modules/instances.
Otherwise most of the changes here largely fell out from these two
design points. Aliases are recorded as initializers in this scheme.
Copying around type information and/or just knowing type information
during compilation is also pretty easy since everything is just a
pointer into a `TypeTables` and we don't have to actually copy any types
themselves. Lots of various refactorings were necessary to accomodate
these changes.
Tests are hoped to cover a breadth of functionality here, but not
necessarily a depth. There's still one more piece of the module linking
proposal missing which is exporting instances/modules, which will come
in a future PR.
It's also worth nothing that there's one large TODO which isn't
implemented in this change that I plan on opening an issue for.
With module linking when a set of modules comes back from compilation
each modules has all the trampolines for the entire set of modules. This
is quite a lot of duplicate trampolines across module-linking modules.
We'll want to refactor this at some point to instead have only one set
of trampolines per set of module linking modules and have them shared
from there. I figured it was best to separate out this change, however,
since it's purely related to resource usage, and doesn't impact
non-module-linking modules at all.
cc #2094
This commit implements the interpretation necessary of the instance
section of the module linking proposal. Instantiating a module which
itself has nested instantiated instances will now instantiate the nested
instances properly. This isn't all that useful without the ability to
alias exports off the result, but we can at least observe the side
effects of instantiation through the `start` function.
cc #2094
This makes the value of `state.reachable()` inaccurate when observing at
the tail of functions (in the post-function hook) after an ordinary
return instruction.
In some cases, it is useful to do some work at entry to or exit from a
Cranelift function translated from WebAssembly. This PR adds two
optional methods to the `FuncEnvironment` trait to do just this,
analogous to the pre/post-hooks on operators that already exist.
This PR also includes a drive-by compilation fix due to the latest
nightly wherein `.is_empty()` on a `Range` ambiguously refers to either
the `Range` impl or the `ExactSizeIterator` impl and can't resolve.
With the module linking proposal the field name on imports is now
optional, and only the module is required to be specified. This commit
propagates this API change to the boundary of wasmtime's API, ensuring
consumers are aware of what's optional with module linking and what
isn't. Note that it's expected that all existing users will either
update accordingly or unwrap the result since module linking is
presumably disabled.
This was added as an incremental step to improve AArch64 code quality in
PR #2278. At the time, we did not have a way to pattern-match the load +
splat opcode sequence that the relevant Wasm opcodes lowered to.
However, now with PR #2366, we can merge effectful instructions such as
loads into other ops, and so we can do this pattern matching directly.
The pattern-matching update will come in a subsequent commit.
* this requires upgrading to wasmparser 0.67.0.
* There are no CLIF side changes because the CLIF `select` instruction is
polymorphic enough.
* on aarch64, there is unfortunately no conditional-move (csel) instruction on
vectors. This patch adds a synthetic instruction `VecCSel` which *does*
behave like that. At emit time, this is emitted as an if-then-else diamond
(4 insns).
* aarch64 implementation is otherwise straightforwards.
This commit adds lots of plumbing to get the type section from the
module linking proposal plumbed all the way through to the `wasmtime`
crate and the `wasmtime-c-api` crate. This isn't all that useful right
now because Wasmtime doesn't support imported/exported
modules/instances, but this is all necessary groundwork to getting that
exported at some point. I've added some light tests but I suspect the
bulk of the testing will come in a future commit.
One major change in this commit is that `SignatureIndex` no longer
follows type type index space in a wasm module. Instead a new
`TypeIndex` type is used to track that. Function signatures, still
indexed by `SignatureIndex`, are then packed together tightly.
This commit is intended to be the first of many in implementing the
module linking proposal. At this time this builds on #2059 so it
shouldn't land yet. The goal of this commit is to compile bare-bones
modules which use module linking, e.g. those with nested modules.
My hope with module linking is that almost everything in wasmtime only
needs mild refactorings to handle it. The goal is that all per-module
structures are still per-module and at the top level there's just a
`Vec` containing a bunch of modules. That's implemented currently where
`wasmtime::Module` contains `Arc<[CompiledModule]>` and an index of
which one it's pointing to. This should enable
serialization/deserialization of any module in a nested modules
scenario, no matter how you got it.
Tons of features of the module linking proposal are missing from this
commit. For example instantiation flat out doesn't work, nor does
import/export of modules or instances. That'll be coming as future
commits, but the purpose here is to start laying groundwork in Wasmtime
for handling lots of modules in lots of places.