# Possible changes The following are a list of relatively straightforward changes to WASI core that should be considered. ## Split file/networking/random/clock from args/environ/exit. Currently everything is mixed together in one big "core" module. But we can split them out to allow minimal configurations that don't support this style of files and networking. ## Move higher-level and unused errno codes out of the core API. The core API currently defines errno codes such as `EDOM` which are not used for anything. POSIX requires them to be defined, however that can be done in the higher-level libraries, rather than in the WASI core API itself. ## Detecting EOF from read/recv explicitly. POSIX's `read` returns 0 if and only if it reaches the end of a file or stream. Say you have a read buffer of 1024 bytes, and are reading a file that happens to be 7 bytes long. The first `read` call will return 7, but unless you happen to know how big the file is supposed to be, you can't distinguish between that being all there is, and `read` getting interrupted and returning less data than you requested. Many applications today do an extra `read` when they encounter the end of a file, to ensure that they get a `read` that returns 0 bytes read, to confirm that they've reached the end of the file. If `read` instead had a way to indicate that it had reached the end, this extra call wouldn't be necessary. And, `read` on a socket is almost equivalent to `recv` with no flags -- except for one surprising special case: on a datagram socket, if there's a zero-length datagram, `read` can't consume it, while `recv` can. This is because `read` can't indicate that it successfully read 0 bytes, because it has overloaded the meaning of 0 to indicate eof-of-file. So, it would be tidier from multiple perspectives if `read` could indicate that it had reached the end of a file or stream, independently of how many bytes it has read. ## Merging read and recv These are very similar, and differ only in subtle ways. It'd make the API easier to understand if they were unified. ## Trap instead of returning EFAULT POSIX system calls return EFAULT when given invalid pointers, however from an application perspective, it'd be more natural for them to just segfault. ## More detailed capability error reporting Replace `__WASI_ENOTCAPABLE` with error codes that indicate *which* capabilities were required but not present. ## Split `__wasi_path_open` into `__wasi_path_open_file` and `__wasi_path_open_directory`? We could also split `__WASI_RIGHT_PATH_OPEN` into file vs directory, (obviating `__WASI_O_DIRECTORY`). ## Fix the y2556 bug In some places, timestamps are measured in nanoseconds since the UNIX epoch, so our calculations indicate a 64-bit counter will overflow on Sunday, July 21, 2554, at 11:34:33 pm UTC. These timestamps aren't used in that many places, so it wouldn't cost that much to widen these timestamps. We can either just extend the current type to 128 bits (two i64's in wasm) or move to a `timespec`-like `tv_sec`/`tv_nsec` pair. ## Remove `fd_allocate`? Darwin doesn't implement `fd_allocate`, despite it being a in POSIX since 2001. So we don't currently know any way to implement `fd_allocate` on Darwin that's safe from race conditions. Should we remove it from the API? ## Redesign `fstflags_t` The relationship between `*_SET_*TIM` and `*_SET_*TIM_NOW` is non-obvious. We should look at this again. ## readdir Truncating entries that don't fit into a buffer may be error-prone. Should we redesign how directory reading works? ## symlinks Symlinks are fairly UNIX-specific. Should we remove `__wasi_path_symlink` and `__wasi_path_readlink`? Also, symlink resolution doesn't benefit from libpreopen-style path translation. Should we move symlink resolution into the libpreopen layer and do it entirely in "userspace"? ## Remove the `path_len` argument from `__wasi_fd_prestat_dir_name` The buffer should be sized to the length returned from `__wasi_fd_prestat_get`, so it's not necessary to pass the length back into the runtime. ## Add a `__wasi_path_filestat_set_size` function? Along with libc/libpreopen support, this would enable implementing the POSIX `truncate` function. ## errno values returned by `path_open` We should specify the errno value returned when `path_open` is told to open a directory and `__WASI_LOOKUP_SYMLINK_FOLLOW` isn't set, and the path refers to a symbolic link.