Commit Graph

18 Commits

Author SHA1 Message Date
Pauan
7bc9147258
Improving the code generation for catch (#2098)
* Improving the code generation for catch

* Fixing newlines

* Running rustfmt

* Updating unit tests

* Fixing build error
2020-04-22 09:14:00 -05:00
a1trl9
ad85de50c6
try to fix global / modulaized import ns conflict (#2057)
* use global import map for rename

* fix same ns import

* cargo fmt

* add basic test

* move generate_identifier, add comments, add tests

* remove leading &mut

* remove unnecessary bail

* use import_name for global and some refine

* Add back in error handling, clean up instruction iteration

* Remove unnecessary patch statements

Co-authored-by: Alex Crichton <alex@alexcrichton.com>
2020-04-15 08:28:29 -05:00
Alex Crichton
ceac51f260 Fix a test for upstream changes 2020-03-17 07:02:50 -07:00
Timothy McCallum
0f3c53b5a5
Create JavaScript array without using new keyword. (#1987)
* Create JavaScript array without using `new` keyword.

At present [this line of code](https://github.com/rustwasm/wasm-bindgen/blob/master/crates/cli-support/src/js/mod.rs#L747) creates the heap using JavaScript's new keyword.
```
//Line 747
self.global(&format!("const heap = new Array({});", INITIAL_HEAP_OFFSET));
self.global("heap.fill(undefined);");
```
Assuming that the `INITIAL_HEAP_OFFSET` is always 32 (because it is set as a constant in the Rust code), below is the equivalent of what this code will produce; an Array Object with 32 items which are all undefined.
```
const heap = new Array(32);
//(32) [empty × 32]
//Where
var zero_element = heap[0];
//undefined
var one_element = heap[1];
//undefined
```
I believe that this is the desired outcome for the program. All good.

### Suggestion to consider

I am always reminded **not** to use the `new` keyword. Mainly by reading or listening to JavaScript ["The Good Parts"](https://youtu.be/XFTOG895C7c?t=1654). 

For example if the `INITIAL_HEAP_OFFSET` was ever anything but one number, the heap would be created in a different way. For example if two numbers are passed in, then an array of size 2 would be created; where both items in the array are individual numbers.
```
const heap = new Array(32, 32);
var zero_element = heap[0];
var one_element = heap[1];
//32
//32
```
I know that this is highly unlikely, due to the fact that the `INITIAL_HEAP_OFFSET` is set as a `const` in the Rust. But thought that I would put out the following suggestion for consideration anyway. This comes from a place of just wanting to contribute in a way that could make this already awesome program a little better. :)

### Suggested update
The heap array could be created using the following code
```
const heap = [];
heap.length = INITIAL_HEAP_OFFSET;
heap[0]
heap[1]
//undefined
//undefined
```
This would create a JavaScript Array of length `INITIAL_HEAP_OFFSET`, where are items are `undefined`

The new code generates (in raw JavaScript)
```
const heap = [];
heap.length = 32;
```
Which produces
```
(32) [empty × 32]
```
In the same way that the original code does.

* Add closing parenthesis to close out self.global

* Adding files which were altered by the BLESS=1 system variable. Essentially updating generated files that are used for testing.

* Adding code generated wat file, by way of running tests using BLESS=1

* Adding table.wat that was generated by running the  tests with BLESS=1 set

* Update code that creates heap array line 747 mod.rs

* Updating files that are automatically generated when using BLESS=1
2020-02-06 19:00:15 -06:00
Mario Reder
34eb8a8516 fix: ignore non dependency keys in package json (#1969)
resolves #1921
2020-01-21 13:04:40 -06:00
Alex Crichton
c5c7acc766
Preserve the function table explicitly (#1970)
The main gc pass of unused items in wasm-bindgen was accidentally
removing the function table because we weren't properly rooting it in
the auxiliary section which has a few ways that imports can reference
the function table via intrinsics and closures.

Closes #1967
2020-01-21 13:02:13 -06:00
Alex Crichton
6c27376ac2 Run rustfmt 2020-01-07 08:16:25 -08:00
Alex Crichton
c564eb72b1
Use *.wat instead of *.wit for text files (#1901)
The `*.wit` extension is actually intended to mean "WebAssembly Instance
Type", not "WebAssembly Interface Types". The `*.wat` text format
already will have support for annotations, and wasm interface types are
just an extension of that!
2019-12-11 16:22:35 -08:00
Alex Crichton
057c9157b3
Add test for consuming interface types inputs (#1900)
This commit adds a test suite for consuming interface types modules as
input and producing a JS polyfill output. The tests are relatively
simple today and don't exercise a ton of functionality, but they should
hopefully cover the breadth of at least some basics of what wasm
interface types supports today.

A few small fixes were applied along the way, such as:

* Don't require modules to have a stack pointer

* Allow passing `*.wat`, `*.wit`, or `*.wasm` files as input to
  `wasm-bindgen` instead of always requiring `*.wasm`.
2019-12-04 22:39:57 -06:00
Alex Crichton
203d86f343
Add tests for the interface types output of wasm-bindgen (#1898)
* Add tests for the interface types output of wasm-bindgen

This commit expands the test suite with assertions about the output of
the interface types pass in wasm-bindgen. The goal here is to actually
assert that we produce the right output and have a suite of reference
files to show how the interface types output is changing over time.

The `reference` test suite added in the previous PR has been updated to
work for interface types as well, generating `*.wit` file assertions
which are printed via the `wit-printer` crate on crates.io.

Along the way a number of bugs were fixed with the interface types
output, such as:

* Non-determinism in output caused by iteration of a `HashMap`

* Avoiding JS generation entirely in interface types mode, ensuring that
  we don't export extraneous intrinsics that aren't otherwise needed.

* Fixing location of the stack pointer for modules where it's GC'd out.
  It's now rooted in the aux section of wasm-bindgen so it's available
  to later passes, like the multi-value pass.

* Interface types emission now works in debug mode, meaning the
  `--release` flag is no longer required. This previously did not work
  because the `__wbindgen_throw` intrinsic was required in debug mode.
  This comes about because of the `malloc_failure` and `internal_error`
  functions in the anyref pass. The purpose of these functions is to
  signal fatal runtime errors, if any, in a way that's usable to the
  user. For wasm interface types though we can replace calls to these
  functions with `unreachable` to avoid needing to import the
  intrinsic. This has the accidental side effect of making
  `wasm_bindgen::throw_str` "just work" with wasm interface types by
  aborting the program, but that's not actually entirely intended. It's
  hoped that a split of a `wasm-bindgen-core` crate would solve this
  issue for the future.

* Run the wasm interface types validator in tests

* Add more gc roots for adapter gc

* Improve stack pointer detection

The stack pointer is never initialized to zero, but some other mutable
globals are (TLS, thread ID, etc), so let's filter those out.
2019-12-04 15:19:48 -06:00
Alex Crichton
d7a4a772cf
Add reference output tests for JS operations (#1894)
* Add reference output tests for JS operations

This commit starts adding a test suite which checks in, to the
repository, test assertions for both the JS and wasm file outputs of a
Rust crate compiled with `#[wasm_bindgen]`. These aren't intended to be
exhaustive or large scale tests, but rather micro-tests to help observe
the changes in `wasm-bindgen`'s output over time.

The motivation for this commit is basically overhauling how all the GC
passes work in `wasm-bindgen` today. The reorganization is also included
in this commit as well.

Previously `wasm-bindgen` would, in an ad-hoc fashion, run the GC passes
of `walrus` in a bunch of places to ensure that less "garbage" was seen
by future passes. This not only was a source of slowdown but it also was
pretty brittle since `wasm-bindgen` kept breaking if extra iteams leaked
through.

The strategy taken in this commit is to have one precise location for a
GC pass, and everything goes through there. This is achieved by:

* All internal exports are removed immediately when generating the
  nonstandard wasm interface types section. Internal exports,
  intrinsics, and runtime support are all referenced by the various
  instructions and/or sections that use them. This means that we now
  have precise tracking of what an adapter uses.

* This in turn enables us to implement the `add_gc_roots` function for
  `walrus` custom sections, which in turn allows walrus GC passes to do
  what `unexport_unused_intrinsics` did before. That function is now no
  longer necessary, but effectively works the same way. All intrinsics
  are unexported at the beginning and then they're selectively
  re-imported and re-exported through the JS glue generation pass as
  necessary and defined by the bindings.

* Passes like the `anyref` pass are now much more precise about the
  intrinsics that they work with. The `anyref` pass also deletes any
  internal intrinsics found and also does some rewriting of the adapters
  aftewards now to hook up calls to the heap count import to the heap
  count intrinsic in the wasm module.

* Fix handling of __wbindgen_realloc

The final user of the `require_internal_export` function was
`__wbindgen_realloc`. This usage has now been removed by updating how we
handle usage of the `realloc` function.

The wasm interface types standard doesn't have a `realloc` function
slot, nor do I think it ever will. This means that as a polyfill for
wasm interface types we'll always have to support the lack of `realloc`.
For direct Rust to JS, however, we can still optionally handle
`realloc`. This is all handled with a few internal changes.

* Custom `StringToMemory` instructions now exist. These have an extra
  `realloc` slot to store an intrinsic, if found.
* Our custom instructions are lowered to the standard instructions when
  generating an interface types section.
* The `realloc` function, if present, is passed as an argument like the
  malloc function when passing strings to wasm. If it's not present we
  use a slower fallback, but if it's present we use the faster
  implementation.

This should mean that there's little-to-no impact on existing users of
`wasm-bindgen`, but this should continue to still work for wasm
interface types polyfills and such. Additionally the GC passes now work
in that they don't delete `__wbindgen_realloc` which we later try to
reference.

* Add an empty test for the anyref pass

* Precisely track I32FromOptionAnyref's dependencies

This depends on the anyref table and a function to allocate an index if
the anyref pass is running, so be sure to track that in the instruction
itself for GC rooting.

* Trim extraneous exports from nop anyref module

Or if you're otherwise not using anyref slices, don't force some
intrinsics to exist.

* Remove globals from reference tests

Looks like these values adjust in slight but insignificant ways over
time

* Update the anyref xform tests
2019-12-04 12:01:39 -06:00
Alex Crichton
aa461c363b
Add one more webkit-specific whitelist in web-sys (#1865)
* Add one more webkit-specific whitelist in web-sys

* Run rustfmt
2019-11-21 09:30:08 -06:00
Alex Crichton
aca49e1a6e
Fix the anyref xform working on empty modules (#1861)
If there's no need for a transformation then there's no need to inject
anything, so make sure that wasm-bindgen with anyref passes enabled
works on non-wasm-bindgen blobs as well.

Closes bytecodealliance/cargo-wasi#16
2019-11-18 10:12:41 -06:00
Melody Horn
79cf4f6198 Add first-class support for binary crates (#1843)
* autodiscover an exported `main` if possible

this allows for first-class support of binary crates

* wrap `main` to zero out arguments and suppress return value

* add test for bin crate support

* process only the export of the generated main wrapper

* skip most of `export` since only one line of that is needed
2019-11-04 13:34:42 -06:00
Alex Crichton
2e03961ca1 Be sure to GC our imports as well as the module
After a module goes through its primary GC pass we need to look over the
set of remaining imports and use that to prune the set of imports that
we're binding.

Closes #1613
2019-06-23 08:16:11 -07:00
Alex Crichton
346868f78b Fix a failing CLI test 2019-06-05 07:52:14 -07:00
Alex Crichton
a6fe0cefa8 Migrate all crates to the 2018 edition
Most of the CLI crates were already in the 2018 edition, and it turns
out that one of the macro crates was already in the 2018 edition so we
may as well move everything to the 2018 edition!

Always nice to remove those `extern crate` statements nowadays!

This commit also does a `cargo fmt --all` to make sure we're conforming
with style again.
2019-03-26 08:10:53 -07:00
Alex Crichton
362777fc75 Start implementing a test suite for the CLI
We have very few tests today so this starts to add the basics of a test
suite which compiles Cargo projects on-the-fly which will hopefully help
us bolster the amount of assertions we can make about the output.
2019-03-22 11:32:03 -07:00