Chris Fallin 548ce947bf ARM64 backend, part 4 / 11: ARM64 instruction definitions.
This patch provides the bottom layer of the ARM64 backend: it defines
the `Inst` type, which represents a single machine instruction, and
defines emission routines to produce machine code from a `VCode`
container of `Insts`. The backend cannot produce `Inst`s with just this
patch; that will come with later parts.

This patch contains code written by Julian Seward <jseward@acm.org> and
Benjamin Bouvier <public@benj.me>, originally developed on a side-branch
before rebasing and condensing into this patch series. See the `arm64`
branch at `https://github.com/cfallin/wasmtime` for original development
history.

This patch also contains code written by Joey Gouly
<joey.gouly@arm.com> and contributed to the above branch. These
contributions are "Copyright (c) 2020, Arm Limited."

Finally, a contribution from Joey Gouly contains the following notice:

    This is a port of VIXL's Assembler::IsImmLogical.

    Arm has the original copyright on the VIXL code this was ported from
    and is relicensing it under Apache 2 for Cranelift.

Co-authored-by: Julian Seward <jseward@acm.org>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Bouvier <public@benj.me>
Co-authored-by: Joey Gouly <joey.gouly@arm.com>
2020-04-11 17:51:45 -07:00
2020-04-03 13:13:37 -07:00
2020-02-28 09:16:05 -08:00
2019-11-08 17:15:19 -08:00
2020-03-31 11:35:26 -07:00
2020-04-03 13:13:37 -07:00
2020-02-28 09:16:05 -08:00

wasmtime

A standalone runtime for WebAssembly

A Bytecode Alliance project

build status zulip chat min rustc Documentation Status

Guide | Contributing | Website | Chat

Installation

The Wasmtime CLI can be installed on Linux and macOS with a small install script:

$ curl https://wasmtime.dev/install.sh -sSf | bash

Windows or otherwise interested users can download installers and binaries directly from the GitHub Releases page.

Example

If you've got the Rust compiler installed then you can take some Rust source code:

fn main() {
    println!("Hello, world!");
}

and compile/run it with:

$ rustup target add wasm32-wasi
$ rustc hello.rs --target wasm32-wasi
$ wasmtime hello.wasm
Hello, world!

Features

  • Lightweight. Wasmtime is a standalone runtime for WebAssembly that scales with your needs. It fits on tiny chips as well as makes use of huge servers. Wasmtime can be embedded into almost any application too.

  • Fast. Wasmtime is built on the optimizing Cranelift code generator to quickly generate high-quality machine code at runtime.

  • Configurable. Whether you need to precompile your wasm ahead of time, generate code blazingly fast with Lightbeam, or interpret it at runtime, Wasmtime has you covered for all your wasm-executing needs.

  • WASI. Wasmtime supports a rich set of APIs for interacting with the host environment through the WASI standard.

  • Standards Compliant. Wasmtime passes the official WebAssembly test suite, implements the official C API of wasm, and implements future proposals to WebAssembly as well. Wasmtime developers are intimately engaged with the WebAssembly standards process all along the way too.

Language Support

You can use Wasmtime from a variety of different languages through embeddings of the implementation:

Documentation

📚 Read the Wasmtime guide here! 📚

The wasmtime guide is the best starting point to learn about what Wasmtime can do for you or help answer your questions about Wasmtime. If you're curious in contributing to Wasmtime, it can also help you do that!.


It's Wasmtime.

Description
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Readme 125 MiB
Languages
Rust 77.8%
WebAssembly 20.6%
C 1.3%