This PR adds the Cosmopolitan Libc platform enabling compatibility with multiple
x86_64 operating systems with the same binary. The platform is similar to the
Linux platform, but for now only x86_64 with interpreter modes are supported.
The only major change to the core is `posix.c/convert_errno()` was rewritten to use
a switch statement. With Cosmopolitan errno values depend on the currently
running operating system, and so they are non-constant and cannot be used in array
designators. However, the `cosmocc` compiler allows non-constant case labels in
switch statements, enabling the new version.
And updated wamr-test-suites script to add `-j <platform>` option. The spec tests
can be ran via `CC=cosmocc ./test_wamr.sh -j cosmopolitan -t classic-interp`
or `CC=cosmocc ./test_wamr.sh -j cosmopolitan -t fast-interp`.
To make it clearer to users when synchronization behaviour is not
supported, return ENOTSUP when O_RSYNC, O_DSYNC or O_SYNC are
respectively not defined. Linux also doesn't support O_RSYNC despite the
O_RSYNC flag being defined.
There doesn't appear to be a clear reason not to support this behavior.
It seems it was disallowed previously as a precaution. See
67e2e57b02
for more context.
Return a WASI error code (rather than a host POSIX one). In addition,
there is no need to return an error in the case that the provided buffer
is too large.
The WASI docs allow for fewer rights to be applied to an fd than requested but
not more. This behavior is also asserted in the rust WASI tests, so it's necessary
for those to pass as well.
Send a signal whose handler is no-op to a blocking thread to wake up
the blocking syscall with either EINTR equivalent or partial success.
Unlike the approach taken in the `dev/interrupt_block_insn` branch (that is,
signal + longjmp similarly to `OS_ENABLE_HW_BOUND_CHECK`), this PR
does not use longjmp because:
* longjmp from signal handler doesn't work on nuttx
refer to https://github.com/apache/nuttx/issues/10326
* the singal+longjmp approach may be too difficult for average programmers
who might implement host functions to deal with
See also https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/1910
Add API wasm_runtime_terminate to terminate a module instance
by setting "terminated by user" exception to the module instance.
And update the product-mini of posix platforms.
Note: this doesn't work for some situations like blocking system calls.
Preserve errno because this function is often used like
the following. The caller wants to report the error from the main
operation (`lseek` in this example), not from fd_object_release.
```
off_t ret = lseek(fd_number(fo), offset, nwhence);
fd_object_release(fo);
if (ret < 0)
return convert_errno(errno);
```
Introduce module instance context APIs which can set one or more contexts created
by the embedder for a wasm module instance:
```C
wasm_runtime_create_context_key
wasm_runtime_destroy_context_key
wasm_runtime_set_context
wasm_runtime_set_context_spread
wasm_runtime_get_context
```
And make libc-wasi use it and set wasi context as the first context bound to the wasm
module instance.
Also add samples.
Refer to https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/2460.
While wasi proc exit is not a real trap, what the runtime does on it is mostly same as
real traps. That is, kill the siblings threads and represent the exit/trap as the result of
the "process" to the user api. There seems no reason to distinguish it from real traps
here.
Note that:
- The target thread either doesn't care the specific exception type or ignore wasi
proc exit by themselves. (clear_wasi_proc_exit_exception)
- clear_wasi_proc_exit_exception only clears local exception.
Add simple infrastructure to add more unit tests in the future. At the moment tests
are only executed on Linux, but can be extended to other platforms if needed.
Use https://github.com/google/googletest/ as a framework.
As a part of stress-testing we want to ensure that mutex implementation is working
correctly and protecting shared resource to be allocated from other threads when
mutex is locked.
This test covers the most common situations that happen when some program uses
mutexes like locks from various threads, locks from the same thread etc.
We need to apply some bug fixes that were merged to wasi-libc because wasi-sdk-20
is about half a year old.
It is a temporary solution and the code will be removed when wasi-sdk 21 is released.
- Inherit shared memory from the parent instance, instead of
trying to look it up by the underlying module. The old method
works correctly only when every cluster uses different module.
- Use reference count in WASMMemoryInstance/AOTMemoryInstance
to mark whether the memory is shared or not
- Retire WASMSharedMemNode
- For atomic opcode implementations in the interpreters, use
a global lock for now
- Update the internal API users
(wasi-threads, lib-pthread, wasm_runtime_spawn_thread)
Fixes https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/1962
- Avoid destroying module instance repeatedly in pthread_exit_wrapper and
wasm_thread_cluster_exit.
- Wait enough time in pthread_join_wrapper for target thread to exit and
destroy its resources.
We need to make a test that runs longer than the tests we had before to check
some problems that might happen after running for some time (e.g. memory
corruption or something else).
Tests were failing because the right permissions were not provided to iwasm.
Also, test failures didn't trigger build failure due to typo - also fixed in this change.
In addition to that, this PR fixes a few issues with the test itself:
* the `server_init_complete` was not reset early enough causing the client to occasionally
assume the server started even though it didn't yet
* set `SO_REUSEADDR` on the server socket so the port can be reused shortly after
closing the previous socket
* defined receive-send-receive sequence from server to make sure server is alive at the
time of sending message
We have observed a significant performance degradation after merging
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/pull/1991
Instead of protecting suspend flags with a mutex, we implement the flags
as atomic variable and only use mutex when atomics are not available
on a given platform.
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;
}
```
## Context
Currently, WAMR supports compiling iwasm with flag `WAMR_BUILD_WASI_NN`.
However, there are scenarios where the user might prefer having it as a shared library.
## Proposed Changes
Decouple wasi-nn context management by internally managing the context given
a module instance reference.
## Context
Path to models use `/assets` for testing inside docker. While testing directly from
the repo we are forced to use soft-links or modify the paths.
## Proposed Changes
Use relative path and adjust docker volumes in docs.
Major changes:
- Public headers inside `wasi-nn/include`
- Put cmake files in `cmake` folder
- Make linux iwasm link with `${WASI_NN_LIBS}` so iwasm can enable wasi-nn
This PR attempts to search for the system libuv and use it if found instead of
downloading it. As reported in #1831, this is needed because some tools
build in a sandbox and clear the extra sources.
For some platforms WAMR gets compiled with `CONFIG_HAS_CLOCK_NANOSLEEP=1`,
while `clock_nanosleep` is not present at the platform, which causes compilation error.
Add check for macro `DISABLE_CLOCK_NANOSLEEP` to resolve the issue, only when
the macro isn't defined can the macro `CONFIG_HAS_CLOCK_NANOSLEEP` take effect.
Add VX delegation as an external delegation of TFLite, so that several NPU/GPU
(from VeriSilicon, NXP, Amlogic) can be controlled via WASI-NN.
Test Code can work with the X86 simulator.
Fix issue reported in #2172: wasm-c-api `wasm_func_call` may use a wrong exec_env
when multi-threading is enabled, with error "invalid exec env" reported
Fix issue reported in #2149: main instance's `c_api_func_imports` are not passed to
the counterpart of new thread's instance in wasi-threads mode
Fix issue of invalid size calculated to copy `c_api_func_imports` in pthread mode
And refactor the code to use `wasm_cluster_dup_c_api_imports` to copy the
`c_api_func_imports` to new thread for wasi-threads mode and pthread mode.
Currently, if a thread is spawned and raises an exception after the main thread
has finished, iwasm returns with success instead of returning 1 (i.e. error).
Since wasm_runtime_get_wasi_exit_code waits for all threads to finish and only
returns the wasi exit code, this PR performs the exception check again and
returns error if an exception was raised.
Since the Tensorflow library is already installed in many cases(especially in the
case of the embedded system), move the installation code to find_package.
According to the 1999 ISO C standard (C99), size_t is an unsigned integer type of
at least 16 bit (see sections 7.17 and 7.18.3), it may be uint32 in 32-bit platforms:
https://en.cppreference.com/w/cpp/types/size_t
Calling function `size_t min(size_t, size_t)` with two uint64 arguments may get
invalid result.
Co-authored-by: Georgii Rylov <godjan@amazon.co.uk>