* 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
* Start a high-level architecture document for Wasmtime
This commit cleands up some existing documentation by removing a number
of "noop README files" and starting a high-level overview of the
architecture of Wasmtime. I've placed this documentation under the
contributing section of the book since it seems most useful for possible
contributors.
I've surely left some things out in this pass, and am happy to add more!
* Review comments
* More rewording
* typos
* Update wasm-tools crates
This brings in recent updates, notably including more improvements to
wasm-smith which will hopefully help exercise non-trapping wasm more.
* Fix some wat
* Upgrade to the latest versions of gimli, addr2line, object
And adapt to API changes. New gimli supports wasm dwarf, resulting in
some simplifications in the debug crate.
* upgrade gimli usage in linux-specific profiling too
* Add "continue" statement after interpreting a wasm local dwarf opcode
This fixes some hard-coded assumptions in the debug crate that
the native ELF files being accessed are little-endian; specifically
in create_gdbjit_image as well as in emit_dwarf.
In addition, data in WebAssembly memory always uses little-endian
byte order. Therefore, if the native architecture is big-endian,
all references to base types need to be marked as little-endian
using the DW_AT_endianity attribute, so that the debugger will
be able to correctly access them.
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.
* 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
This PR propagates "value labels" all the way from CLIF to DWARF
metadata on the emitted machine code. The key idea is as follows:
- Translate value-label metadata on the input into "value_label"
pseudo-instructions when lowering into VCode. These
pseudo-instructions take a register as input, denote a value label,
and semantically are like a "move into value label" -- i.e., they
update the current value (as seen by debugging tools) of the given
local. These pseudo-instructions emit no machine code.
- Perform a dataflow analysis *at the machine-code level*, tracking
value-labels that propagate into registers and into [SP+constant]
stack storage. This is a forward dataflow fixpoint analysis where each
storage location can contain a *set* of value labels, and each value
label can reside in a *set* of storage locations. (Meet function is
pairwise intersection by storage location.)
This analysis traces value labels symbolically through loads and
stores and reg-to-reg moves, so it will naturally handle spills and
reloads without knowing anything special about them.
- When this analysis converges, we have, at each machine-code offset, a
mapping from value labels to some number of storage locations; for
each offset for each label, we choose the best location (prefer
registers). Note that we can choose any location, as the symbolic
dataflow analysis is sound and guarantees that the value at the
value_label instruction propagates to all of the named locations.
- Then we can convert this mapping into a format that the DWARF
generation code (wasmtime's debug crate) can use.
This PR also adds the new-backend variant to the gdb tests on CI.
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.
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 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.
I don't think this has happened in awhile but I've run a `cargo update`
as well as trimming some of the duplicate/older dependencies in
`Cargo.lock` by updating some of our immediate dependencies as well.
This patch implements, for aarch64, the following wasm SIMD extensions
i32x4.dot_i16x8_s instruction
https://github.com/WebAssembly/simd/pull/127
It also updates dependencies as follows, in order that the new instruction can
be parsed, decoded, etc:
wat to 1.0.27
wast to 26.0.1
wasmparser to 0.65.0
wasmprinter to 0.2.12
The changes are straightforward:
* new CLIF instruction `widening_pairwise_dot_product_s`
* translation from wasm into `widening_pairwise_dot_product_s`
* new AArch64 instructions `smull`, `smull2` (part of the `VecRRR` group)
* translation from `widening_pairwise_dot_product_s` to `smull ; smull2 ; addv`
There is no testcase in this commit, because that is a separate repo. The
implementation has been tested, nevertheless.
This commit reduces the size of `InstructionAddressMap` from 24 bytes to
8 bytes by dropping the `code_len` field and reducing `code_offset` to
`u32` instead of `usize`. The intention is to primarily make the
in-memory version take up less space, and the hunch is that the
`code_len` is largely not necessary since most entries in this map are
always adjacent to one another. The `code_len` field is now implied by
the `code_offset` field of the next entry in the map.
This isn't as big of an improvement to serialized module size as #2321
or #2322, primarily because of the switch to variable-length encoding.
Despite this though it shaves about 10MB off the encoded size of the
module from #2318
* normalise value prior to right shifts
by first left-aligning (shift left by 32 bits)
then shifting back (respecting signedness)
* Update crates/debug/src/transform/expression.rs
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
* Update crates/debug/src/transform/expression.rs
* Update crates/debug/src/transform/expression.rs
* update translation of DW_OP_shr in test
* add translation test for DW_OP_shra
* explain normalisation
* optimise the expression by performing only one right shift
We assume that the expression evaluator permits collapsing
two shifts as long as they go in the same direction.
Review feedback.
Co-authored-by: bjorn3 <bjorn3@users.noreply.github.com>
* Validate modules while translating
This commit is a change to cranelift-wasm to validate each function body
as it is translated. Additionally top-level module translation functions
will perform module validation. This commit builds on changes in
wasmparser to perform module validation interwtwined with parsing and
translation. This will be necessary for future wasm features such as
module linking where the type behind a function index, for example, can
be far away in another module. Additionally this also brings a nice
benefit where parsing the binary only happens once (instead of having an
up-front serial validation step) and validation can happen in parallel
for each function.
Most of the changes in this commit are plumbing to make sure everything
lines up right. The major functional change here is that module
compilation should be faster by validating in parallel (or skipping
function validation entirely in the case of a cache hit). Otherwise from
a user-facing perspective nothing should be that different.
This commit does mean that cranelift's translation now inherently
validates the input wasm module. This means that the Spidermonkey
integration of cranelift-wasm will also be validating the function as
it's being translated with cranelift. The associated PR for wasmparser
(bytecodealliance/wasmparser#62) provides the necessary tools to create
a `FuncValidator` for Gecko, but this is something I'll want careful
review for before landing!
* Read function operators until EOF
This way we can let the validator take care of any issues with
mismatched `end` instructions and/or trailing operators/bytes.
* Don't substract 1 from end_addr in line program writing
Fixes#2173
* add testcase for end_sequence having offset past retq (#1)
* Update tests/all/debug/translate.rs
Co-authored-by: Gabor Greif <ggreif@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Gabor Greif <ggreif@gmail.com>
The fundamental problem is that the target distance of jump-like operations may change in the DWARF expression translation process. Intervening DW_OP_deref will expand to about 10 bytes, for example.
So the jumps must be relocated. We approach this task by inserting artificial LandingPad markers (new CompiledExpressionParts constructors) into the parsed vector at actual Jump targets.
LandingPads are identified by JumpTargetMarker tokens which are generated on the fly.
Additionally we now parse the Jump instructions. These also get their corresponding JumpTargetMarker token.
We bail in two situations:
frame_base is too complicated (i.e. itself contains Jump)
some jump distance in the original expression is fishy.