- Sort by generated-code offset to maintain invariant and avoid gimli
panic.
- Fix srcloc interaction with branch peephole optimization in
MachBuffer: if a srcloc range overlaps with a branch that is
truncated, remove that srcloc range.
These issues were found while fuzzing the new backend (#2453); I suspect
that they arise with the new backend because we can sink instructions
(e.g. loads or extends) in more interesting ways than before, but I'm
not entirely sure.
Test coverage will be via the fuzz corpus once #2453 lands.
A dynamic heap address computation may create up to two conditional
branches: the usual bounds-check, but also (in some cases) an
offset-addition overflow check.
The x64 backend had reversed the condition code for this check,
resulting in an always-trapping execution for a valid offset. I'm
somewhat surprised this has existed so long, but I suppose the
particular conditions (large offset, small offset guard, dynamic heap)
have been somewhat rare in our testing so far.
Found via fuzzing in #2453.
CentOS 6 just went EOL at the end of November 2020; as of today, the
repository seems to have disappeared, so our CI builds are failing. This
PR updates us to CentOS 7, which should be usable until June 30, 2024.
* Provide filename/line number information in `Trap`
This commit extends the `Trap` type and `Store` to retain DWARF debug
information found in a wasm file unconditionally, if it's present. This
then enables us to print filenames and line numbers which point back to
actual source code when a trap backtrace is printed. Additionally the
`FrameInfo` type has been souped up to return filename/line number
information as well.
The implementation here is pretty simplistic currently. The meat of all
the work happens in `gimli` and `addr2line`, and otherwise wasmtime is
just schlepping around bytes of dwarf debuginfo here and there!
The general goal here is to assist with debugging when using wasmtime
because filenames and line numbers are generally orders of magnitude
better even when you already have a stack trace. Another nicety here is
that backtraces will display inlined frames (learned through debug
information), improving the experience in release mode as well.
An example of this is that with this file:
```rust
fn main() {
panic!("hello");
}
```
we get this stack trace:
```
$ rustc foo.rs --target wasm32-wasi -g
$ cargo run foo.wasm
Finished dev [unoptimized + debuginfo] target(s) in 0.16s
Running `target/debug/wasmtime foo.wasm`
thread 'main' panicked at 'hello', foo.rs:2:5
note: run with `RUST_BACKTRACE=1` environment variable to display a backtrace
Error: failed to run main module `foo.wasm`
Caused by:
0: failed to invoke command default
1: wasm trap: unreachable
wasm backtrace:
0: 0x6c1c - panic_abort::__rust_start_panic::abort::h2d60298621b1ccbf
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/panic_abort/src/lib.rs:77:17
- __rust_start_panic
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/panic_abort/src/lib.rs:32:5
1: 0x68c7 - rust_panic
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panicking.rs:626:9
2: 0x65a1 - std::panicking::rust_panic_with_hook::h2345fb0909b53e12
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panicking.rs:596:5
3: 0x1436 - std::panicking::begin_panic::{{closure}}::h106f151a6db8c8fb
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panicking.rs:506:9
4: 0xda8 - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_end_short_backtrace::he55aa13f22782798
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:153:18
5: 0x1324 - std::panicking::begin_panic::h1727e7d1d719c76f
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panicking.rs:505:12
6: 0xfde - foo::main::h2db1313a64510850
at /Users/acrichton/code/wasmtime/foo.rs:2:5
7: 0x11d5 - core::ops::function::FnOnce::call_once::h20ee1cc04aeff1fc
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:227:5
8: 0xddf - std::sys_common::backtrace::__rust_begin_short_backtrace::h054493e41e27e69c
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/sys_common/backtrace.rs:137:18
9: 0x1d5a - std::rt::lang_start::{{closure}}::hd83784448d3fcb42
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/rt.rs:66:18
10: 0x69d8 - core::ops::function::impls::<impl core::ops::function::FnOnce<A> for &F>::call_once::h564d3dad35014917
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/core/src/ops/function.rs:259:13
- std::panicking::try::do_call::hdca4832ace5a8603
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panicking.rs:381:40
- std::panicking::try::ha8624a1a6854b456
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panicking.rs:345:19
- std::panic::catch_unwind::h71421f57cf2bc688
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/panic.rs:382:14
- std::rt::lang_start_internal::h260050c92cd470af
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/rt.rs:51:25
11: 0x1d0c - std::rt::lang_start::h0b4bcf3c5e498224
at /rustc/7eac88abb2e57e752f3302f02be5f3ce3d7adfb4/library/std/src/rt.rs:65:5
12: 0xffc - <unknown>!__original_main
13: 0x393 - __muloti4
at /cargo/registry/src/github.com-1ecc6299db9ec823/compiler_builtins-0.1.35/src/macros.rs:269
```
This is relatively noisy by default but there's filenames and line
numbers! Additionally frame 10 can be seen to have lots of frames
inlined into it. All information is always available to the embedder but
we could try to handle the `__rust_begin_short_backtrace` and
`__rust_end_short_backtrace` markers to trim the backtrace by default as
well.
The only gotcha here is that it looks like `__muloti4` is out of place.
That's because the libc that Rust ships with doesn't have dwarf
information, although I'm not sure why we land in that function for
symbolizing it...
* Add a configuration switch for debuginfo
* Control debuginfo by default with `WASM_BACKTRACE_DETAILS`
* Try cpp_demangle on demangling as well
* Rename to WASMTIME_BACKTRACE_DETAILS
This commit implements the interpretation necessary of the instance
section of the module linking proposal. Instantiating a module which
itself has nested instantiated instances will now instantiate the nested
instances properly. This isn't all that useful without the ability to
alias exports off the result, but we can at least observe the side
effects of instantiation through the `start` function.
cc #2094
Prior to this change, the interpreter would use an incorrect `FuncRef` for accessing functions from the function store. This is now clarified and fixed by a new type--`FuncIndex`.
Previously, getting or setting a value in a frame of the Cranelift interpreter involved a hash table lookup. Since the interpreter statically knows the number of slots necessary for each called frame, we can use a vector instead and save time on the hash lookup. This also has the advantage that we have a more stable ABI for switching between interpreted and code.
This commit deletes the old `snapshot_0` implementation of wasi-common,
along with the `wig` crate that was used to generate bindings for it.
This then reimplements `snapshot_0` in terms of
`wasi_snapshot_preview1`. There were very few changes between the two
snapshots:
* The `nlink` field of `FileStat` was increased from 32 to 64 bits.
* The `set` field of `whence` was reordered.
* Clock subscriptions in polling dropped their redundant userdata field.
This makes all of the syscalls relatively straightforward to simply
delegate to the next snapshot's implementation. Some trickery happens to
avoid extra cost when dealing with iovecs, but since the memory layout
of iovecs remained the same this should still work.
Now that `snapshot_0` is using wiggle we simply have a trait to
implement, and that's implemented for the same `WasiCtx` that has the
`wasi_snapshot_preview1` trait implemented for it as well. While this
theoretically means that you could share the file descriptor table
between the two snapshots that's not supported in the generated bindings
just yet. A separate `WasiCtx` will be created for each WASI module.
This makes the value of `state.reachable()` inaccurate when observing at
the tail of functions (in the post-function hook) after an ordinary
return instruction.
In some cases, it is useful to do some work at entry to or exit from a
Cranelift function translated from WebAssembly. This PR adds two
optional methods to the `FuncEnvironment` trait to do just this,
analogous to the pre/post-hooks on operators that already exist.
This PR also includes a drive-by compilation fix due to the latest
nightly wherein `.is_empty()` on a `Range` ambiguously refers to either
the `Range` impl or the `ExactSizeIterator` impl and can't resolve.
* Enhance wiggle to generate its UserErrorConverstion trait with a function that returns
a Result<abi_err, String>. This enhancement allows hostcall implementations using wiggle
to return an actionable error to the instance (the abi_err) or to terminate the instance
using the String as fatal error information.
* Enhance wiggle to generate its UserErrorConverstion trait with a function that returns
a Result<abi_err, String>. This enhancement allows hostcall implementations using wiggle
to return an actionable error to the instance (the abi_err) or to terminate the instance
using the String as fatal error information.
* Enhance the wiggle/wasmtime integration to leverage new work in ab7e9c6. Hostcall
implementations generated by wiggle now return an Result<abi_error, Trap>. As a
result, hostcalls experiencing fatal errors may trap, thereby terminating the
wasmtime instance. This enhancement has been performed for both wasi snapshot1
and wasi snapshot0.
* Update wasi-nn crate to reflect enhancement in issue #2418.
* Update wiggle test-helpers for wiggle enhancement made in issue #2418.
* Address PR feedback; omit verbose return statement.
* Address PR feedback; manually format within a proc macro.
* Address PR feedback; manually format proc macro.
* Restore return statements to wasi.rs.
* Restore return statements in funcs.rs.
* Address PR feedback; omit TODO and fix formatting.
* Ok-wrap error type in assert statement.
With the module linking proposal the field name on imports is now
optional, and only the module is required to be specified. This commit
propagates this API change to the boundary of wasmtime's API, ensuring
consumers are aware of what's optional with module linking and what
isn't. Note that it's expected that all existing users will either
update accordingly or unwrap the result since module linking is
presumably disabled.
AFAIK this isn't really necessary nowadays given the prevalence of
rustfmt, and for whatever reason the Rust plugin for vim uses this file
in lieu of all other options, meaning it doesn't pass `--edition 2018`
by default which has been causing issues as I've been working on `async`
stuff. In any case I don't think we need the file regardless, so this
commit deletes it.