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`.
This commit updates to the 0.9 version of the witx crate implemented in
WebAssembly/wasi#395. This new version drastically changes code
generation and how we interface with the crate. The intention is to
abstract the code generation aspects and allow code generators to
implement much more low-level instructions to enable more flexible APIs
in the future. Additionally a bunch of `*.witx` files were updated in
the WASI repository.
It's worth pointing out, however, that `wasi-common` does not change as
a result of this change. The shape of the APIs that we need to implement
are effectively the same and the only difference is that the shim
functions generated by wiggle are a bit different.
* Add support for the experimental wasi-crypto APIs
The sole purpose of the implementation is to allow bindings and
application developers to test the proposed APIs.
Rust and AssemblyScript bindings are also available as examples.
Like `wasi-nn`, it is currently disabled by default, and requires
the `wasi-crypto` feature flag to be compiled in.
* Rename the wasi-crypto/spec submodule
* Add a path dependency into the submodule for wasi-crypto
* Tell the publish script to vendor wasi-crypto
* Add an initial wasi-nn implementation for Wasmtime
This change adds a crate, `wasmtime-wasi-nn`, that uses `wiggle` to expose the current state of the wasi-nn API and `openvino` to implement the exposed functions. It includes an end-to-end test demonstrating how to do classification using wasi-nn:
- `crates/wasi-nn/tests/classification-example` contains Rust code that is compiled to the `wasm32-wasi` target and run with a Wasmtime embedding that exposes the wasi-nn calls
- the example uses Rust bindings for wasi-nn contained in `crates/wasi-nn/tests/wasi-nn-rust-bindings`; this crate contains code generated by `witx-bindgen` and eventually should be its own standalone crate
* Test wasi-nn as a CI step
This change adds:
- a GitHub action for installing OpenVINO
- a script, `ci/run-wasi-nn-example.sh`, to run the classification example
* Move back to only one WASI submodule
This commit fixes the issue where we have two WASI submodules for build
reasons in this repository. The fix was to place the submodule in the
`wasi-common` crate, and then anyone using the `wig` crate has to be
sure to define a `WASI_ROOT` env var in a build script to be able to
parse witx files.
With all that in place `wasi-common` becomes the source of truth for the
witx files we're parsing, and crates like `wasmtime-wasi` use
build-scripts shenanigans to read the same witx files. This should
hopefully get us so we're compatible with publishing and still only have
one submodule!
* rustfmt
* Publishing fixes.
* Make WASI a symlink.
* More fixes.
* Cargo doesn't allow dev-dependencies to have optional features.
* Remove the symlink.
* Add WASI as another git submodule.
* Move all examples to a top-level directory
This commit moves all API examples (Rust and C) to a top-level
`examples` directory. This is intended to make it more discoverable and
conventional as to where examples are located. Additionally all examples
are now available in both Rust and C to see how to execute the example
in the language you're familiar with. The intention is that as more
languages are supported we'd add more languages as examples here too.
Each example is also accompanied by either a `*.wat` file which is
parsed as input, or a Rust project in a `wasm` folder which is compiled
as input.
A simple driver crate was also added to `crates/misc` which executes all
the examples on CI, ensuring the C and Rust examples all execute
successfully.
* Move the C API to a separate crate
This commit moves the C API from `crates/api/src/wasm.rs` to
`crates/capi/src/lib.rs` to be located in a separate crate. There's a
number of reasons for this:
* When a Rust program depends on the `wasmtime` crate, there's no need
to compile in the C API.
* This should improve compile times of the `wasmtime` crate since it's
not producing artifacts which aren't always used.
* The development of the C API can be guaranteed to only use the public
API of the `wasmtime` crate itself.
Some CI pieces are tweaked and this overall shouldn't have much impact
on users, it's intended that it's a cleanup/speedup for developers!
* Disable rustdoc/tests for capi
* Review feedback
* Add back in accidentally deleted comment
* More renamings
* Try to fix dotnet build
* Initial checkin.
* Update to rust-lang libc.
* Add a .gitignore file.
* Factor out functions for cleaning up files and directories.
* Fix a typo in a comment.
* Print a "Success!" message if all tests passed.
* Factor out code for creating directories.
* Add wrappers around WASI functions.
These wrappers handle converting from &str to pointer+length and handle
unsafe.
* More refactoring.
* Refactor a fd_close helper.
* Move utility functions into a separate file.
* cargo update
* Add a basic test for random_get.
* Test that directories aren't resizable.
* Test clearing __WASI_RIGHT_PATH_FILESTAT_SET_SIZE.
Ensure that clearing __WASI_RIGHT_PATH_FILESTAT_SET_SIZE succeeds before
testing file truncation.
* cargo update
* Modularise tests for easier use with wasi-common crate
* Add a Code of Conduct and CONTRIBUTING.md.
* Fix typo
* Add testcase for fd_allocate
* Add positive test for fd_renumber
* Assert bufused in readlink_no_buffer testcase
* Add positive readlink testcase
* Add testcase for fd_seek and fd_tell
* Add fd_p{read, write} test
* Add README
* Add cases with trailing slashes to interesting_paths
* Split nofollow_errors testcase into two
* nofollow_errors now operators on symlinks to existing resources
* dangling_symlink covers danling symlinks tests
* Factor out a `create_file` helper function.
* Switch from the error crate to `std::io::Error::last_os_error()`.
* Use `create_file` in the readlink test too.
* Add a test for fd_filestat_set_*
* Minor refactoring
Add missing cleanup_file calls to file_pread_pwrite and
file_seek_tell.
* Add testcase for unbuffered fd_write; fixes#11
* Add testcase for path_rename
* Use the wasi crate.
Switch from depending on libc to depending on the new wasi crate to provide
the low-level WASI interfaces.
See also https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/pull/1461.
* Add a test for path_filestat_*
* Add a test for fd_readdir
* Use expect instead of unwrap
* Add a check for ino.
* Fix the build
* Don't assume a specific order of dirents
* Better test
* Test cookie value
* Fix file types
* Fix the test
* Fix the test
* Fix the test
* Cleanup
* Minor formatting tidying in README.md.
* Fix miscellaneous clippy warnings.
* Rename the crate to wasi-misc-tests.
* Update to wasi 0.7.0.
This switches from using the libc wasi bindings to using the wasi
crate's bindings. This eliminates a git dependency on libc, updates
to the new-style bindings which use Result where possible, and treats
functions that operate on raw file descriptors as unsafe.
* Add various tests for trailing-slash behavior.
* Sync new testcases with latest upstream
* Fix path_filestat testcase
* Add smoke test for fd_advise
This test is a true smoke test as it only tests whether issuing
an advise call to the host's kernel doesn't yield an error. The
consequence of issuing such a syscall is not tested.
* Check if CLOCK_MONOTONIC is actually monotonic
* Refactor the inequality assertions for more debuggable errors.
* Bump libc from 0.2.62 to 0.2.65
Bumps [libc](https://github.com/rust-lang/libc) from 0.2.62 to 0.2.65.
- [Release notes](https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/releases)
- [Commits](https://github.com/rust-lang/libc/compare/0.2.62...0.2.65)
Signed-off-by: dependabot-preview[bot] <support@dependabot.com>
* Fix compilation error
* Enable Actions and add rust.yml (#35)
* Enable Actions and add rust.yml
This commit enables Github Actions and adds corresponding configuration in rust.yml file.
* Update rust.yml
* Fix formatting
* Add empty .rustfmt.toml config file
* Add badge to README
* Update README
* Clean up Github Actions and README
* Add test case for `poll_oneoff` syscall (#38)
* Add test case for `poll_oneoff` syscall
This commit adds a test case for `poll_oneoff` syscall. In particular,
it builds on the excellent test use case provided by @dunnock in their
repo [poll_oneoff_tests] (thanks!), and tests:
* simple timeout
* stdin read with timeout
* fd read and fd write polls
[poll_oneoff_tests]: https://github.com/dunnock/poll_oneoff_tests
* Apply suggestions and negative test for bad fd
Co-authored-by: Maxim Vorobjov <maxim.vorobjov@gmail.com>
* Add smoke test for STDOUT/ERR readwrite poll
* Add comment on stdin/out/err
* Add a test for `*at`-style functions returning `ENOTDIR` when `dirfd` is not a dir.
* Remove misc_testsuite submodule
* Add "publish=false" to Cargo.toml; remove LICENSE
* Use generated type bindings.
Use the witx API descriptions to generate the bulk of the contents of
host.rs, wasi.rs, and wasi32.rs.
This also prunes out many of the miscellaneous libc definitions from
those files which aren't currently in use by wasi-common. If there's
anything removed that's still needed by someone, it's easy to add things
back in.
* Remove unneeded iovec conversion routines.
Now, test binaries are bundled with the repo, and
just like in CraneStation/wasmtime, the test cases
are generated automatically using build.rs. So all
it takes is to drop a new test binary in the
testsuite dir to get the test case for it generated
(with some caveats to do with handling preopens).
And lots of other miscellaneous changes. Rename InstanceWorld to
InstancePlus and reorganize its contents. This still isn't a great name,
but at least now it has a clear purpose.