This commit moves `wasm-bindgen` the CLI tool from internally using
`parity-wasm` for wasm parsing/serialization to instead use `walrus`.
The `walrus` crate is something we've been working on recently with an
aim to replace the usage of `parity-wasm` in `wasm-bindgen` to make the
current CLI tool more maintainable as well as more future-proof.
The `walrus` crate provides a much nicer AST to work with as well as a
structured `Module`, whereas `parity-wasm` provides a very raw interface
to the wasm module which isn't really appropriate for our use case. The
many transformations and tweaks that wasm-bindgen does have a huge
amount of ad-hoc index management to carefully craft a final wasm
binary, but this is all entirely taken care for us with the `walrus`
crate.
Additionally, `wasm-bindgen` will ingest and rewrite the wasm file,
often changing the binary offsets of functions. Eventually with DWARF
debug information we'll need to be sure to preserve the debug
information throughout the transformations that `wasm-bindgen` does
today. This is practically impossible to do with the `parity-wasm`
architecture, but `walrus` was designed from the get-go to solve this
problem transparently in the `walrus` crate itself. (it doesn't today,
but this is planned work)
It is the intention that this does not end up regressing any
`wasm-bindgen` use cases, neither in functionality or in speed. As a
large change and refactoring, however, it's likely that at least
something will arise! We'll want to continue to remain vigilant to any
issues that come up with this commit.
Note that the `gc` crate has been deleted as part of this change, as the
`gc` crate is no longer necessary since `walrus` does it automatically.
Additionally the `gc` crate was one of the main problems with preserving
debug information as it often deletes wasm items!
Finally, this also starts moving crates to the 2018 edition where
necessary since `walrus` requires the 2018 edition, and in general it's
more pleasant to work within the 2018 edition!
This commit implements the first half of [RFC #5] where the `Deref`
trait is implemented for all imported types. The target of `Deref` is
either the first entry of the list of `extends` attribute or `JsValue`.
All examples using `.as_ref()` with various `web-sys` types have been
updated to the more ergonomic deref casts now. Additionally the
`web-sys` generation of the `extends` array has been fixed slightly to
explicitly list implementatoins in the hierarchy order to ensure the
correct target for `Deref` is chosen.
[RFC #5]: https://github.com/rustwasm/rfcs/blob/master/text/005-structural-and-deref.md
This commit makes the `to_idl_type` infallible, returning a new enum
variant, `UnknownInterface`, in the one location that we still return
`None`. By making this infallible we can ensure that expansion of unions
which have unknown types still generate methods for all the variants
which we actually have all the methods for!
This commit employs the strategy described in #908 to apply a
non-breaking change to fix WebIDL to be compatible with all browsers,
including Safari.
The problem here is that `BaseAudioContext` and `AudioScheduledSourceNode`
are not types in Safari, but they are types in Firefox/Chrome. The fix
here was to move the contents of these two interfaces into mixins, and
then include the mixins in all classes which inherit from these two
classes. That should have the same effect as defining the methods
inherently on the original interface.
Additionally a special `[RustDeprecated]` attribute to WebIDL was added
to signify interfaces this has happened to. Currently it's directly
tailored towards this case of "this intermediate class doesn't exist in
all browsers", but we may want to refine and extend the deprecation
message over time.
Although it's possible we could do this as a breaking change to
`web-sys` I'm hoping that we can do this as a non-breaking change for
now and then eventually on the next breaking release batch all these
changes together, deleting the intermediate classes. This is also
hopefully a good trial run for how stable web-sys can be when it's
actually stable!
cc #897
cc #908
Previously the "container attribute" were set to the attributes of the
mixin itself, but we want the container attributes to be that of the
type which includes the mixin (like `Window`) as those attributes
contain information about whether or not bindings are `structural`.
The end result with this is that the `structural` tag is now used for
properties on `Window`, correctly generating setters/getters.
Closes#904
* Regenerate the list of features for the crate given recent
improvements, enabling some more types to be bound.
* Add feature gates for the `css` and `console` namespaces (modules),
gating the APIs by default. Now `web_sys` has zero APIs unless they're
requested.
* Improved the "required feature" documentation for `struct` types to
not list parent classes and mention just the `struct` type instead.
This commit implements support for binding APIs that take
`Uint8ClampedArray` in JS. This is pretty rare but comes up in a
`web-sys` binding or two, and we're now able to bind these APIs instead
of having to omit the bindings.
The `Uint8ClampedArray` type is bound by using the `Clamped` marker
struct in Rust. For example this is declaring a JS API that takes
`Uint8ClampedArray`:
use wasm_bindgen::Clamped;
#[wasm_bindgen]
extern {
fn takes_clamped(a: Clamped<&[u8]>);
}
The `Clamped` type currently only works when wrapping the `&[u8]`, `&mut
[u8]`, and `Vec<u8>` types. Everything else will produce an error at
`wasm-bindgen` time.
Closes#421
Bind them all as `JsValue` as that's the "least common ancestor" we can
work with. Fixes up one location in WebIDL where `Option<JsValue>`
arose as we haven't implemented that.
Closes#817