Chris Fallin c392e461a3 egraphs: a few miscellaneous compile-time optimizations. (#5072)
* egraphs: a few miscellaneous compile-time optimizations.

These optimizations together are worth about a 2% compile-time
reduction, as measured on one core with spidermonkey.wasm as an input,
using `hyperfine` on `wasmtime compile`.

The changes included are:
- Some better pre-allocation (blockparams and side-effects concatenated
  list vecs);
- Avoiding the indirection of storing list-of-types for every Pure and
  Inst node, when almost all nodes produce only a single result;
  instead, store arity and single type if it exists, and allow result
  projection nodes to fill in types otherwise;
- Pack the `MemoryState` enum into one `u32` (this together with the
  above removal of the type slice allows `Node` to
  shrink from 48 bytes to 32 bytes);
- always-inline an accessor (`entry` on `CtxHash`) that wasn't
  (`always(inline)` appears to be load-bearing, rather than just
  `inline`);
- Split the update-analysis path into two hotpaths, one for the union
  case and one for the new-node case (and the former can avoid
  recomputing for the contained node when replacing a node with
  node-and-child eclass entry).

* Review feedback.

* Fix test build.

* Fix to lowering when unused output with invalid type is present.
2022-10-19 11:05:00 -07:00
2022-10-12 15:39:39 +00:00
2022-09-23 00:19:56 +00:00
2022-09-28 17:04:17 +00:00
2022-10-18 22:25:49 +00:00
2020-02-28 09:16:05 -08:00

wasmtime

A standalone runtime for WebAssembly

A Bytecode Alliance project

build status zulip chat supported rustc stable 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

  • 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 is optimized for efficient instantiation, low-overhead calls between the embedder and wasm, and scalability of concurrent instances.

  • Secure. Wasmtime's development is strongly focused on correctness and security. Building on top of Rust's runtime safety guarantees, each Wasmtime feature goes through careful review and consideration via an RFC process. Once features are designed and implemented, they undergo 24/7 fuzzing donated by Google's OSS Fuzz. As features stabilize they become part of a release, and when things go wrong we have a well-defined security policy in place to quickly mitigate and patch any issues. We follow best practices for defense-in-depth and integrate 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. Wasmtime uses sensible defaults, but can also be configured to provide more fine-grained control over things like CPU and memory consumption. Whether you want to run Wasmtime in a tiny environment or on massive servers with many concurrent instances, we've got you covered.

  • 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.

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WebAssembly 20.6%
C 1.3%