DHAT reports that when compiling the Spidermonkey Sightglass benchmark, there are over 100k of these Vec allocations, averaging less than 4 bytes, and with an average lifetime of only about 500 instructions. This function is only called from one place, which immediately converts it into an iterator. So this commit just returns the iterator that was previously being collected into a Vec. The iterator has to borrow from the DataFlowGraph, so this would change borrow-check results, but in the one caller that turns out to be okay. (That sole caller is in cranelift/codegen/src/machinst/lower.rs, in Lower::lower().) According to Sightglass, this is a compile-time improvement of between 2% and 12% on the Spidermonkey benchmark: instantiation :: nanoseconds :: benchmarks/spidermonkey/benchmark.wasm Δ = 14628.76 ± 10318.59 (confidence = 99%) main-0e6ffd024.so is 0.87x to 0.98x faster than no-small-vecs.so! no-small-vecs.so is 1.02x to 1.14x faster than main-0e6ffd024.so! [142023 187464.24 301522] main-0e6ffd024.so [103742 172835.48 263917] no-small-vecs.so compilation :: nanoseconds :: benchmarks/spidermonkey/benchmark.wasm Δ = 362392705.93 ± 267070467.06 (confidence = 99%) main-0e6ffd024.so is 0.89x to 0.98x faster than no-small-vecs.so! no-small-vecs.so is 1.02x to 1.12x faster than main-0e6ffd024.so! [3655734131 5522594697.83 6471126699] main-0e6ffd024.so [3278129811 5160201991.90 5810600015] no-small-vecs.so
wasmtime
A standalone runtime for WebAssembly
A Bytecode Alliance project
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
-
Fast. Wasmtime is built on the optimizing Cranelift code generator to quickly generate high-quality machine code either at runtime or ahead-of-time. Wasmtime's runtime is also optimized for cases such as efficient instantiation, low-overhead transitions between the embedder and wasm, and scalability of concurrent instances.
-
Secure. Wasmtime's development is strongly focused on the correctness of its implementation with 24/7 fuzzing donated by Google's OSS Fuzz, leveraging Rust's API and runtime safety guarantees, careful design of features and APIs through an RFC process, a security policy in place for when things go wrong, and a release policy for patching older versions as well. We follow best practices for defense-in-depth and known protections and mitigations for issues like Spectre. Finally, we're working to push the state-of-the-art by collaborating with academic researchers to formally verify critical parts of Wasmtime and Cranelift.
-
Configurable. Wastime supports a rich set of APIs and build time configuration to provide many options such as further means of restricting WebAssembly beyond its basic guarantees such as its CPU and Memory consumption. Wasmtime also runs in tiny environments all the way up to massive servers with many concurrent instances.
-
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:
- Rust - the
wasmtimecrate - C - the
wasm.h,wasi.h, andwasmtime.hheaders, CMake orwasmtimeConan package - C++ - the
wasmtime-cpprepository or usewasmtime-cppConan package - Python - the
wasmtimePyPI package - .NET - the
WasmtimeNuGet package - Go - the
wasmtime-gorepository
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.