Fix the errors reported in the sanitizer test of nightly run CI.
When the stack is in polymorphic state, the stack operands may be changed
after pop and push operations (e.g. stack is empty but pop op can succeed
in polymorphic, and the push op can push a new operand to stack), this may
impact the following checks to other target blocks of the br_table opcode.
Implement the GC (Garbage Collection) feature for interpreter mode,
AOT mode and LLVM-JIT mode, and support most features of the latest
spec proposal, and also enable the stringref feature.
Use `cmake -DWAMR_BUILD_GC=1/0` to enable/disable the feature,
and `wamrc --enable-gc` to generate the AOT file with GC supported.
And update the AOT file version from 2 to 3 since there are many AOT
ABI breaks, including the changes of AOT file format, the changes of
AOT module/memory instance layouts, the AOT runtime APIs for the
AOT code to invoke and so on.
This PR adds the initial support for WASM exception handling:
* Inside the classic interpreter only:
* Initial handling of Tags
* Initial handling of Exceptions based on W3C Exception Proposal
* Import and Export of Exceptions and Tags
* Add `cmake -DWAMR_BUILD_EXCE_HANDLING=1/0` option to enable/disable
the feature, and by default it is disabled
* Update the wamr-test-suites scripts to test the feature
* Additional CI/CD changes to validate the exception spec proposal cases
Refer to:
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/1884587513f3c68bebfe9ad759bccdfed8
Signed-off-by: Ricardo Aguilar <ricardoaguilar@siemens.com>
Co-authored-by: Chris Woods <chris.woods@siemens.com>
Co-authored-by: Rene Ermler <rene.ermler@siemens.com>
Co-authored-by: Trenner Thomas <trenner.thomas@siemens.com>
The content in custom name section is changed after loaded since the strings
are adjusted with '\0' appended, the emitted AOT file then cannot be loaded.
The PR disables changing the content for AOT compiler to resolve it.
And disable emitting custom name section for `wamrc --enable-dump-call-stack`,
instead, use `wamrc --emit-custom-sections=name` to emit it.
Allow to invoke the quick call entry wasm_runtime_quick_invoke_c_api_import to
call the wasm-c-api import functions to speedup the calling process, which reduces
the data copying.
Use `wamrc --invoke-c-api-import` to generate the optimized AOT code, and set
`jit_options->quick_invoke_c_api_import` true in wasm_engine_new when LLVM JIT
is enabled.
In some scenarios there may be lots of callings to AOT/JIT functions from the
host embedder, which expects good performance for the calling process, while
in the current implementation, runtime calls the wasm_runtime_invoke_native
to prepare the array of registers and stacks for the invokeNative assemble code,
and the latter then puts the elements in the array to physical registers and
native stacks and calls the AOT/JIT function, there may be many data copying
and handlings which impact the performance.
This PR registers some quick AOT/JIT entries for some simple wasm signatures,
and let runtime call the entry to directly invoke the AOT/JIT function instead of
calling wasm_runtime_invoke_native, which speedups the calling process.
We may extend the mechanism next to allow the developer to register his quick
AOT/JIT entries to speedup the calling process of invoking the AOT/JIT functions
for some specific signatures.
And refactor the original perf support
- use WAMR_BUILD_LINUX_PERF as the cmake compilation control
- use WASM_ENABLE_LINUX_PERF as the compiler macro
- use `wamrc --enable-linux-perf` to generate aot file which contains fp operations
- use `iwasm --enable-linux-perf` to create perf map for `perf record`
According to the specification:
```
When instantiating a module which is expected to run
with `wasi-threads`, the WASI host must first allocate shared memories to
satisfy the module's imports.
```
Currently, if a test from the spec is executed while having the `multi-module`
feature enabled, WAMR fails with `WASM module load failed: unknown import`.
That happens because spec tests use memory like this:
`(memory (export "memory") (import "foo" "bar") 1 1 shared)`
and WAMR tries to find a registered module named `foo`.
At the moment, there is no specific module name that can be used to identify
that the memory is imported because using WASI threads:
https://github.com/WebAssembly/wasi-threads/issues/33,
so this PR only avoids treating the submodule dependency not being found
as a failure.
A wasm module can be either a command or a reactor, so it can export
either `_start` or `_initialize`. Currently, if a command module is run,
`iwasm` still looks for `_initialize`, resulting in the warning:
`can not find an export 0 named _initialize in the module`.
Change to look for `_initialize` only if `_start` not found to resolve the issue.
- Fix op_br_table arity type check when the dest block is loop block
- Fix op_drop issue when the stack is polymorphic and it is to drop
an ANY type value in the stack
* Empty names are spec-wise valid.
* As we ignore unknown custom sections anyway, it's safe to
accept empty names here.
* Currently, the problem is not exposed on our CI because
the wabt version used there is a bit old.
Avoid repeatedly initializing the shared memory data when creating the child
thread in lib-pthread or lib-wasi-threads.
Add shared memory lock when accessing some fields of the memory instance
if the memory instance is shared.
Init shared memory's memory_data_size/memory_data_end fields according to
the current page count but not max page count.
Add wasm_runtime_set_mem_bound_check_bytes, and refine the error message
when shared memory flag is found but the feature isn't enabled.
When labels-as-values is enabled in a target which doesn't support
unaligned address access, 16-bit offset is used to store the relative
offset between two opcode labels. But it is a little small and the loader
may report "pre-compiled label offset out of range" error.
Emitting 32-bit data instead to resolve the issue: emit label address in
32-bit target and emit 32-bit relative offset in 64-bit target.
See also:
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/2635
Support muti-module for AOT mode, currently only implement the
multi-module's function import feature for AOT, the memory/table/
global import are not implemented yet.
And update wamr-test-suites scripts, multi-module sample and some
CIs accordingly.
`wasm_loader_push_pop_frame_offset` may pop n operands by using
`loader_ctx->stack_cell_num` to check whether the operand can be
popped or not. While `loader_ctx->stack_cell_num` is updated in the
later `wasm_loader_push_pop_frame_ref`, the check may fail if the stack
is in polymorphic state and lead to `ctx->frame_offset` underflow.
Fix issue #2577 and #2586.
Segue is an optimization technology which uses x86 segment register to store
the WebAssembly linear memory base address, so as to remove most of the cost
of SFI (Software-based Fault Isolation) base addition and free up a general
purpose register, by this way it may:
- Improve the performance of JIT/AOT
- Reduce the footprint of JIT/AOT, the JIT/AOT code generated is smaller
- Reduce the compilation time of JIT/AOT
This PR uses the x86-64 GS segment register to apply the optimization, currently
it supports linux and linux-sgx platforms on x86-64 target. By default it is disabled,
developer can use the option below to enable it for wamrc and iwasm(with LLVM
JIT enabled):
```bash
wamrc --enable-segue=[<flags>] -o output_file wasm_file
iwasm --enable-segue=[<flags>] wasm_file [args...]
```
`flags` can be:
i32.load, i64.load, f32.load, f64.load, v128.load,
i32.store, i64.store, f32.store, f64.store, v128.store
Use comma to separate them, e.g. `--enable-segue=i32.load,i64.store`,
and `--enable-segue` means all flags are added.
Acknowledgement:
Many thanks to Intel Labs, UC San Diego and UT Austin teams for introducing this
technology and the great support and guidance!
Signed-off-by: Wenyong Huang <wenyong.huang@intel.com>
Co-authored-by: Vahldiek-oberwagner, Anjo Lucas <anjo.lucas.vahldiek-oberwagner@intel.com>
When ref.func opcode refers to a function whose function index no smaller than
current function, the destination func should be forward-declared: it is declared
in the table element segments, or is declared in the export list.