Files
wasmtime/crates/fuzzing/wasm-spec-interpreter/src/with_library.rs
Andrew Brown a7f592a026 Add a crate to interface with the WebAssembly spec interpreter
The WebAssembly spec interpreter is written in OCaml and the new crate
uses `ocaml-interop` along with a small OCaml wrapper to interpret Wasm
modules in-process. The build process for this crate is currently
Linux-specific: it requires several OCaml packages (e.g. `apt install -y
ocaml-nox ocamlbuild`) as well as `make`, `cp`, and `ar`.
2021-08-10 11:56:07 -07:00

99 lines
3.8 KiB
Rust

//! Interpret WebAssembly modules using the OCaml spec interpreter.
//! ```
//! # use wasm_spec_interpreter::{Value, interpret};
//! let module = wat::parse_file("tests/add.wat").unwrap();
//! let parameters = vec![Value::I32(42), Value::I32(1)];
//! let results = interpret(&module, parameters).unwrap();
//! assert_eq!(results, &[Value::I32(43)]);
//! ```
use crate::Value;
use lazy_static::lazy_static;
use ocaml_interop::{OCamlRuntime, ToOCaml};
use std::sync::Mutex;
lazy_static! {
static ref INTERPRET: Mutex<()> = Mutex::new(());
}
/// Interpret the first function in the passed WebAssembly module (in Wasm form,
/// currently, not WAT) with the given parameters.
pub fn interpret(module: &[u8], parameters: Vec<Value>) -> Result<Vec<Value>, String> {
// The OCaml runtime is not re-entrant
// (https://ocaml.org/manual/intfc.html#ss:parallel-execution-long-running-c-code).
// We need to make sure that only one Rust thread is executing at a time
// (using this lock) or we can observe `SIGSEGV` failures while running
// `cargo test`.
let _lock = INTERPRET.lock().unwrap();
// Here we use an unsafe approach to initializing the `OCamlRuntime` based
// on the discussion in https://github.com/tezedge/ocaml-interop/issues/35.
// This was the recommendation to resolve seeing errors like `boxroot is not
// setup` followed by a `SIGSEGV`; this is similar to the testing approach
// in
// https://github.com/tezedge/ocaml-interop/blob/master/testing/rust-caller/src/lib.rs
// and is only as safe as the OCaml code running underneath.
OCamlRuntime::init_persistent();
let ocaml_runtime = unsafe { OCamlRuntime::recover_handle() };
// Parse and execute, returning results converted to Rust.
let module = module.to_boxroot(ocaml_runtime);
let parameters = parameters.to_boxroot(ocaml_runtime);
let results = ocaml_bindings::interpret(ocaml_runtime, &module, &parameters);
results.to_rust(ocaml_runtime)
}
// Here we declare which functions we will use from the OCaml library. See
// https://docs.rs/ocaml-interop/0.8.4/ocaml_interop/index.html#example.
mod ocaml_bindings {
use super::*;
use ocaml_interop::{
impl_conv_ocaml_variant, ocaml, OCamlBytes, OCamlInt32, OCamlInt64, OCamlList,
};
// Using this macro converts the enum both ways: Rust to OCaml and OCaml to
// Rust. See
// https://docs.rs/ocaml-interop/0.8.4/ocaml_interop/macro.impl_conv_ocaml_variant.html.
impl_conv_ocaml_variant! {
Value {
Value::I32(i: OCamlInt32),
Value::I64(i: OCamlInt64),
Value::F32(i: OCamlInt32),
Value::F64(i: OCamlInt64),
}
}
// These functions must be exposed from OCaml with:
// `Callback.register "interpret" interpret`
//
// In Rust, this function becomes:
// `pub fn interpret(_: &mut OCamlRuntime, ...: OCamlRef<...>) -> BoxRoot<...>;`
ocaml! {
pub fn interpret(module: OCamlBytes, params: OCamlList<Value>) -> Result<OCamlList<Value>, String>;
}
}
#[cfg(test)]
mod tests {
use super::*;
#[test]
fn multiple() {
let module = wat::parse_file("tests/add.wat").unwrap();
let parameters = vec![Value::I32(42), Value::I32(1)];
let results1 = interpret(&module, parameters.clone()).unwrap();
let results2 = interpret(&module, parameters.clone()).unwrap();
assert_eq!(results1, results2);
let results3 = interpret(&module, parameters).unwrap();
assert_eq!(results2, results3);
}
#[test]
fn oob() {
let module = wat::parse_file("tests/oob.wat").unwrap();
let parameters = vec![];
let results = interpret(&module, parameters);
assert_eq!(
results,
Err("Error(_, \"out of bounds memory access\")".to_string())
);
}
}