Files
wasmtime/cranelift
Nick Fitzgerald 937601c7c3 Cranelift: GVN spectre guards and run redundant load elimination twice (#5517)
* Cranelift: Make spectre guards GVN-able

While these instructions have a side effect that is otherwise invisible to the
optimizer, the side effect in question is idempotent, so it can be de-duplicated
by GVN.

* Cranelift: Run redundant load replacement and GVN twice

This allows us to actually replace redundant Wasm loads with dynamic memories.

While this improves our hand-crafted test sequences, it doesn't seem to have any
improvement on sightglass benchmarks run with dynamic memories, however it also
isn't a hit to compilation times, so seems generally good to land anyways:

```
$ cargo run --release -- benchmark -e ~/scratch/once.so -e ~/scratch/twice.so -m insts-retired --processes 20 --iterations-per-process 3 --engine-flags="--static-memory-maximum-size 0" -- benchmarks/default.suite
compilation :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/spidermonkey/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [683595240 683768610.53 684097577] once.so
  [683597068 700115966.83 1664907164] twice.so

instantiation :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/spidermonkey/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [44107 60411.07 92785] once.so
  [44138 59552.32 92097] twice.so

compilation :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/bz2/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [17369916 17404839.78 17471458] once.so
  [17369935 17625713.87 30700150] twice.so

compilation :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/pulldown-cmark/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [126523640 126566170.80 126648265] once.so
  [126523076 127174580.30 163145149] twice.so

instantiation :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/pulldown-cmark/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [34569 35686.25 36513] once.so
  [34651 35749.97 36953] twice.so

instantiation :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/bz2/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [35146 36639.10 37707] once.so
  [34472 36580.82 38431] twice.so

execution :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/spidermonkey/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [7055720115 7055841324.82 7056180024] once.so
  [7055717681 7055877095.85 7056225217] twice.so

execution :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/pulldown-cmark/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [46436881 46437081.28 46437691] once.so
  [46436883 46437127.68 46437766] twice.so

execution :: instructions-retired :: benchmarks/bz2/benchmark.wasm

  No difference in performance.

  [653010530 653010533.27 653010539] once.so
  [653010531 653010532.95 653010538] twice.so
```
2023-01-04 20:05:43 +00:00
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Cranelift Code Generator

A Bytecode Alliance project

Cranelift is a low-level retargetable code generator. It translates a target-independent intermediate representation into executable machine code.

Build Status Chat Minimum rustc 1.37 Documentation Status

For more information, see the documentation.

For an example of how to use the JIT, see the JIT Demo, which implements a toy language.

For an example of how to use Cranelift to run WebAssembly code, see Wasmtime, which implements a standalone, embeddable, VM using Cranelift.

Status

Cranelift currently supports enough functionality to run a wide variety of programs, including all the functionality needed to execute WebAssembly (MVP and various extensions like SIMD), although it needs to be used within an external WebAssembly embedding such as Wasmtime to be part of a complete WebAssembly implementation. It is also usable as a backend for non-WebAssembly use cases: for example, there is an effort to build a Rust compiler backend using Cranelift.

Cranelift is production-ready, and is used in production in several places, all within the context of Wasmtime. It is carefully fuzzed as part of Wasmtime with differential comparison against V8 and the executable Wasm spec, and the register allocator is separately fuzzed with symbolic verification. There is an active effort to formally verify Cranelift's instruction-selection backends. We take security seriously and have a security policy as a part of Bytecode Alliance.

Cranelift has three backends: x86-64, aarch64 (aka ARM64), and s390x (aka IBM Z). All three backends fully support enough functionality for Wasm MVP, and x86-64 and aarch64 fully support SIMD as well. On x86-64, Cranelift supports both the System V AMD64 ABI calling convention used on many platforms and the Windows x64 calling convention. On aarch64, Cranelift supports the standard Linux calling convention and also has specific support for macOS (i.e., M1 / Apple Silicon).

Cranelift's code quality is within range of competitiveness to browser JIT engines' optimizing tiers. A recent paper includes third-party benchmarks of Cranelift, driven by Wasmtime, against V8 and an LLVM-based Wasm engine, WAVM (Fig 22). The speed of Cranelift's generated code is ~2% slower than that of V8 (TurboFan), and ~14% slower than WAVM (LLVM). Its compilation speed, in the same paper, is measured as approximately an order of magnitude faster than WAVM (LLVM). We continue to work to improve both measures.

The core codegen crates have minimal dependencies and are carefully written to handle malicious or arbitrary compiler input: in particular, they do not use callstack recursion.

Cranelift performs some basic mitigations for Spectre attacks on heap bounds checks, table bounds checks, and indirect branch bounds checks; see #1032 for more.

Cranelift's APIs are not yet considered stable, though we do follow semantic-versioning (semver) with minor-version patch releases.

Cranelift generally requires the latest stable Rust to build as a policy, and is tested as such, but we can incorporate fixes for compilation with older Rust versions on a best-effort basis.

Contributing

If you're interested in contributing to Cranelift: thank you! We have a contributing guide which will help you getting involved in the Cranelift project.

Planned uses

Cranelift is designed to be a code generator for WebAssembly, but it is general enough to be useful elsewhere too. The initial planned uses that affected its design were:

  • Wasmtime non-Web wasm engine.
  • Debug build backend for the Rust compiler.
  • WebAssembly compiler for the SpiderMonkey engine in Firefox (currently not planned anymore; SpiderMonkey team may re-assess in the future).
  • Backend for the IonMonkey JavaScript JIT compiler in Firefox (currently not planned anymore; SpiderMonkey team may re-assess in the future).

Building Cranelift

Cranelift uses a conventional Cargo build process.

Cranelift consists of a collection of crates, and uses a Cargo Workspace, so for some cargo commands, such as cargo test, the --all is needed to tell cargo to visit all of the crates.

test-all.sh at the top level is a script which runs all the cargo tests and also performs code format, lint, and documentation checks.

Log configuration

Cranelift uses the log crate to log messages at various levels. It doesn't specify any maximal logging level, so embedders can choose what it should be; however, this can have an impact of Cranelift's code size. You can use log features to reduce the maximum logging level. For instance if you want to limit the level of logging to warn messages and above in release mode:

[dependency.log]
...
features = ["release_max_level_warn"]

Editor Support

Editor support for working with Cranelift IR (clif) files: