Calling `__wasi_sock_addr_resolve` syscall causes native stack overflow.
Given this is a standard function available in WAMR, we should have at least
the default stack size large enough to handle this case.
The socket tests were updated so they also run in separate thread, but
the simple retro program is:
```C
void *th(void *p)
{
struct addrinfo *res;
getaddrinfo("amazon.com", NULL, NULL, &res);
return NULL;
}
int main(int argc, char **argv)
{
pthread_t pt;
pthread_create(&pt, NULL, th, NULL);
pthread_join(pt, NULL);
return 0;
}
```
`wasi-sdk-20` pre-release can be used to avoid building `wasi-libc` to enable threads.
It's not possible to use `wasi-sdk-20` pre-release on Ubuntu 20.04 because of
incompatibility with the glibc version:
```bash
/opt/wasi-sdk/bin/clang: /lib/x86_64-linux-gnu/libc.so.6: version `GLIBC_2.34' not found
(required by /opt/wasi-sdk/bin/clang)
```
Add a couple of socket examples that can be used with WAMR:
- The `timeout_client` and `timeout_server` examples demonstrate socket
send and receive timeouts using the socket options
- The `multicast_client` and `multicast_server` examples demonstrate receiving
multicast packets in WASM
And add several macro controls for `socket_opts` example.
While compiling the file wasi_socket_ext.c with pedantic options (typically
`-Wimplicit-int-conversion` and `-Wmissing-prototypes`), some warnings are raised.
This PR addresses those warnings by adding missing static statements before
functions and explicitly casting a narrowing conversion.
And fix the error handling after calling getpeername.
The function was introduced to WASI about half a year ago after it already
existed in WAMR.
It caused problems with compiling `wasi_socket_ext.c` with the wasi-sdk
that already had this hostcall exported (wasi-sdk >= 15).
The approach we take is the following:
- we update WASI interface to be compatible with the wasi_snapshot_preview1
- compilation with `wasi_socket_ext.c` supports both wasi_sdk >= 15 and wasi_sdk < 15
(although we intend to drop support for < 15 at one point of time)
- we override `accept()` from wasi-libc - we do that because `accept()` in `wasi-libc`
doesn't support returning address (as it doesn't have `getpeername()` implemented),
so `wasi_socket_ext.c` offers more functionality right now
Resolves#1167 and #1528.
[1] https://github.com/WebAssembly/WASI/blob/main/phases/snapshot/witx/wasi_snapshot_preview1.witx
Implement more socket APIs, refer to #1336 and below PRs:
- Implement wasi_addr_resolve function (#1319)
- Fix socket-api byte order issue when host/network order are the same (#1327)
- Enhance sock_addr_local syscall (#1320)
- Implement sock_addr_remote syscall (#1360)
- Add support for IPv6 in WAMR (#1411)
- Implement ns lookup allowlist (#1420)
- Implement sock_send_to and sock_recv_from system calls (#1457)
- Added http downloader and multicast socket options (#1467)
- Fix `bind()` calls to receive the correct size of `sockaddr` structure (#1490)
- Assert on correct parameters (#1505)
- Copy only received bytes from socket recv buffer into the app buffer (#1497)
Co-authored-by: Marcin Kolny <mkolny@amazon.com>
Co-authored-by: Marcin Kolny <marcin.kolny@gmail.com>
Co-authored-by: Callum Macmillan <callumimacmillan@gmail.com>
Refer to [Networking API design](https://github.com/WebAssembly/WASI/issues/370)
and [feat(socket): berkeley socket API v2](https://github.com/WebAssembly/WASI/pull/459):
- Support the socket API of synchronous mode, including `socket/bind/listen/accept/send/recv/close/shutdown`,
the asynchronous mode isn't supported yet.
- Support adding `--addr-pool=<pool1,pool2,..>` argument for command line to identify the valid ip address range
- Add socket-api sample and update the document