* Port wasi-common to io-lifetimes.
This ports wasi-common from unsafe-io to io-lifetimes.
Ambient authority is now indicated via calls to `ambient_authority()`
from the ambient-authority crate, rather than using `unsafe` blocks.
The `GetSetFdFlags::set_fd_flags` function is now split into two phases,
to simplify lifetimes in implementations which need to close and re-open
the underlying file.
* Use posish for errno values instead of libc.
This eliminates one of the few remaining direct libc dependencies.
* Port to posish::io::poll.
Use posish::io::poll instead of calling libc directly. This factors out
more code from Wasmtime, and eliminates the need to manipulate raw file
descriptors directly.
And, this eliminates the last remaining direct dependency on libc in
wasi-common.
* Port wasi-c-api to io-lifetimes.
* Update to posish 0.16.0.
* Embeded NULs in filenames now get `EINVAL` instead of `EILSEQ`.
* Accept either `EILSEQ` or `EINVAL` for embedded NULs.
* Bump the nightly toolchain to 2021-07-12.
This fixes build errors on the semver crate, which as of this writing
builds with latest nightly and stable but not 2021-04-11, the old pinned
version.
* Have cap-std-sync re-export ambient_authority so that users get the same version.
This code assumes that the Dirent structure has the same memory
layout on the host (Rust code) as in wasm code. This is not true
if the host is big-endian, as wasm is always little-endian.
Fixed by always byte-swapping Dirent fields to little-endian
before passing them on to wasm code.
Implement Wasmtime's new API as designed by RFC 11. This is quite a large commit which has had lots of discussion externally, so for more information it's best to read the RFC thread and the PR thread.
unfortunately, the borrow checker defeated me: changing the
RwSubscription file form a Ref to a RefMut turned into borrow checker
errors in the impl of the poll_oneoff trait method.
This implementation makes an end run by having Poll hold onto the table
and fd, and borrow the file at the site of use, rather than try to own
the RefMut. I have no idea why this convinces the borrow checker that
anything is different, but it does and I need to get this PR done and
I don't think comprimising on this internal abstraction is worth
fighting against
Add support for `poll_oneoff` calls which just sleep on a relative
timeout. This fixes a bug handling code compiled with WASI libc's `sleep`
family of functions, which call `poll_oneoff` with a `CLOCK_REALTIME`
timer, which wasn't previously implemented.
the fdstat of a dirfd needs to include both the file and dir rights in
the inheriting field.
The wasi-libc path_open bases the base rights of child directories off
the inheriting rights of the parent, so if we only put file rights in
there, opening a child directory will not have any directory operations
permitted.
Fixes https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/2638
Previously, `fd_readdir` was truncating directory entry names based on the
calculation of `min(name_len, buf_len - bufused)`, but `bufused` was not being
updated after writing in the `dirent` structure to the buffer.
This allowed `bufused` to be incremented beyond `buf_len` and returned as the
number of bytes written to the buffer, which is invalid.
This fix adjusts `bufused` when the buffer is written to for the `dirent` so
that name truncation happens as expected.
Fixes#2618.
`fd_readdir` returns a "bufused" value, which indicates the number of
bytes read into the buffer. WASI libc expects this value to be equal
to the size of the buffer if the end of the directory has not yet
been scanned.
Previously, wasi-common's `fd_readdir` was writing as many complete
entries as it could fit and then stopping, but this meant it was
returning size less than the buffer size even when the directory had
more entries. This patch makes it continue writing up until the end
of the buffer, and return that number of bytes, to let WASI libc
know that there's more to be read.
Fixes#2493.
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.