Implement the first version of Python language binding Co-authored-by: liang.he <liang.he@intel.com>
27 KiB
how to implement a python binding of WAMR
A python language binding of Wasm runtime allows its users to call a set of APIs of the runtime from the python world. Those APIs maybe implemented in C, C++, or Rust.
In the WAMR case, a python binding allows APIs in core/iwasm/include/wasm_c_api.h
to be used in the python scripts. To achieve that, we will create two kinds
of stuff: wrappers of structured data types and wrappers of functions under the
help of ctypes.
Cyptes is a tool in the standard library for creating Python bindings. It provides a low-level toolset for loading shared libraries and marshaling data between Python and C. Other options include cffi, pybind11, cpython and so on. Because we tend to make the binding depending on least items. The built-in module, ctypes, is a good choice.
General rules to marshal
The core of the idea of a language binding is how to translate different representations of types in different language.
load libraries
The ctypes
supports locating a dynamic link library in a way similar to the
compiler does.
Currently, ctypes.LoadLibrary
supports:
CDLL
. Those libraries use the standard C calling conversion.OleDLL
andWinDLL
. Those libraries use thestdcall
calling conversion on Windows only
fundamental datatypes
ctypes provides primitive C compatiable data types.
Like c_bool
, c_byte
, c_int
, c_long
and so on.
c_int
represents the Csigned int
datatype. On platforms wheresizeof(int) == sizeof(long)
it is an alias toc_long
.
c datatypes | ctypes |
---|---|
bool | c_bool |
byte_t | c_ubyte |
char | c_char |
float32_t | c_float |
float64_t | c_double |
int32_t | c_int32 |
int64_t | c_int64 |
intptr_t | c_void_p |
size_t | c_size_t |
uint8_t | c_uint8 |
uint32_t | c_uint32 |
void | None |
wasm_byte_t | c_ubyte |
wasm_externkind_t | c_uint8 |
wasm_memory_pages_t | c_uint32 |
wasm_mutability_t | c_bool |
wasm_table_size_t | c_uint32 |
wasm_valkind_t | c_uint8 |
wasm_data_type* | POINTER(wasm_data_type) |
c_void_p
only representsvoid *
onlyNone
representsvoid
in function parameter lists and return lists
structured datatypes
Create a corresponding concept for every native structured data type includes
enum
, struct
and union
, in the python world.
Enum types
For example, if there is a enum wams_mutability_enum
in native.
typedef uint8_t wams_mutability_t;
enum wams_mutability_enum {
WASM_CONST,
WASM_VAR
};
Use ctypes.int
(or any integer types in ctypes) to represents its value directly.
# represents enum wams_mutability_enum
wasm_mutability_t = c_uint8
WASM_CONST = 0
WASM_VAR = 1
C standard only requires "Each enumerated type shall be compatible with char, a signed integer type, or an unsigned integer type. The choice of the integer type is implementation-defined, but shall be capable of representing the values of all the members of the enumeration.
Struct types
If there is a struct wasm_byte_vec_t
in native(in C).
typedef struct wasm_byte_vec_t {
size_t size;
wasm_byte_t *data;
size_t num_elems;
size_t size_of_elem;
} wasm_byte_vec_t;
Use ctypes.Structure
to create its corresponding data type in python.
class wasm_byte_vec_t(ctypes.Structure):
_fileds_ = [
("size", ctypes.c_size_t),
("data", ctypes.POINTER(c_ubyte)),
("num_elems", ctypes.c_size_t),
("size_of_elem", ctypes.c_size_t),
]
a list of Structures
name |
---|
wasm_engine_t |
wasm_store_t |
wasm_limits_t |
wasm_valtype_t |
wasm_functype_t |
wasm_globaltype_t |
wasm_tabletype_t |
wasm_memorytype_t |
wasm_externtype_t |
wasm_importtype_t |
wasm_exporttype_t |
wasm_ref_t |
wasm_ref_t |
wasm_frame_t |
wasm_trap_t |
wasm_foreign_t |
WASMModuleCommon |
WASMModuleCommon |
wasm_func_t |
wasm_global_t |
wasm_table_t |
wasm_memory_t |
wasm_extern_t |
wasm_instance_t |
not supported struct
- wasm_config_t
If there is an anonymous union
in native.
typedef struct wasm_val_t {
wasm_valkind_t kind;
union {
int32_t i32;
int64_t i64;
float32_t f32;
float64_t f64;
} of;
} wasm_val_t;
Use ctypes.Union
to create its corresponding data type in python.
class _OF(ctypes.Union):
_fields_ = [
("i32", ctypes.c_int32),
("i64", ctypes.c_int64),
("f32", ctypes.c_float),
("f64", ctypes.c_double),
]
class wasm_val_t(ctypes.Structure):
_anonymous_ = ("of",)
_fields_ = [
("kind", ctypes.c_uint8)
("of", _OF)
]
wrappers of functions
Foreign functions (C functions) can be accessed as attributes of loaded shared libraries or an instance of function prototypes. Callback functions(python functions) can only be accessed by instantiating function prototypes.
For example,
void wasm_name_new(wasm_name_t* out, size_t len, wasm_byte_t [] data);
Assume there are:
class wasm_name_t
of python representswasm_name_t
of Clibiwasm
represents loaded libiwasm.so
If to access a c function like an attribute,
def wasm_name_new(out, len, data):
_wasm_name_new = libiwasm.wasm_name_new
_wasm_name_new.argtypes = (ctypes.POINTER(wasm_name_t), ctypes.c_size_t, ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_ubyte))
_wasm_name_new.restype = None
return _wasm_name_new(out, len, data)
Or to instantiate a function prototype,
def wasm_name_new(out, len, data):
return ctypes.CFUNCTYPE(None, (ctypes.POINTER(wasm_name_t), ctypes.c_size_t, ctypes.POINTER(ctypes.c_ubyte)))(
("wasm_name_new", libiwasm), out, len, data)
Now it is able to create a wasm_name_t
with wasm_name_new()
in python.
Sometimes, need to create a python function as a callback of c.
wasm_trap_t* (*wasm_func_callback_t)(wasm_val_vec_t* args, wasm_val_vec_t *results);
Use cyptes.CFUNCTYPE
to create a pointer of function
def hello(args, results):
print("hello from a callback")
wasm_func_callback_t = ctypes.CFUNCTYPE(c_size_t, POINTER(wasm_val_vec_t), POINTER(wasm_val_vec_t))
hello_callback = wasm_func_callback_t(hello)
or with a decorator
def wasm_func_cb_decl(func):
return @ctypes.CFUNCTYPE(ctypes.POINTER(wasm_trap_t), (ctypes.POINTER(wasm_val_vec_t), ctypes.POINTER(wasm_val_vec_t)))(func)
@wasm_func_cb_decl
def hello(args, results):
print("hello from a callback")
programming tips
struct
and ctypes.Structure
There are two kinds of cytes.Structure
in binding.py
.
- has
__field__
definition. likeclass wasm_byte_vec_t(Structure)
- doesn't have
__field__
definition. likeclass wasm_config_t(Structure)
Since, ctypes
will create its C world mirror variable according to __field__
information, wasm_config_t()
will only create a python instance without binding
to any C variable. wasm_byte_vec_t()
will return a python instance with an internal
C variable.
That is why pointer(wasm_config_t())
is a NULL pointer which can not be dereferenced.
deal with pointers
byref()
and pointer()
are two functions can return a pointer.
x = ctypes.c_int(2)
# use pointer() to creates a new pointer instance which would later be used in Python
x_ptr = ctypes.pointer(x)
...
struct_use_pointer = Mystruct()
struct_use_pointer.ptr = x_ptr
# use byref() pass a pointer to an object to a foreign function call
func(ctypes.byref(x))
The main difference is that pointer()
does a lot more work since it
constructs a real pointer object. It is faster to use byref(
) if don't need
the pointer object in Python itself(e.g. only use it as an argument to pass
to a function).
There is no doubt that wasm_xxx_new()
which return type is ctypes.POINTER
can return a pointer. Plus, the return value of wasm_xxx_t()
can also be
used as a pointer without casting by byref
or pointer
.
array
In ctypes document, it states that "The recommended way to create array types is by multiplying a data type with a positive integer". So multiplying a data type should be a better way to create arrays
from ctypes import *
class POINT(Structure):
_fields_ = ("x", c_int), ("y", c_int)
# multiplying a data type
# type(TenPointsArrayType) is <class '_ctypes.PyCArrayType'>
TenPointsArrayType = POINT * 10
# Instances are created in the usual way, by calling the class:
arr = TenPointsArrayType()
arr[0] = POINT(3,2)
for pt in arr:
print(pt.x, pt.y)
On both sides, it is OK to assign an array to a pointer.
char buf[128] = {0};
char *ptr = buf;
binary = wasm_byte_vec_t()
binary.data = (ctypes.c_ubyte * len(wasm)).from_buffer_copy(wasm)
exceptions and traps
Interfaces of wasm-c-api have their return values to represent failures. The python binding should just keep and transfer them to callers instead of raising any additional exception.
The python binding should raise exceptions when the python partial is failed.
readonly buffer
with open("hello.wasm", "rb") as f:
wasm = f.read()
binary = wasm_byte_vec_t()
wasm_byte_vec_new_uninitialized(byref(binary), len(wasm))
# create a ctypes instance (byte[] in c) and copy the content
# from wasm(bytearray in python)
binary.data = (ctypes.c_ubyte * len(wasm)).from_buffer_copy(wasm)
in the above example, wasm
is a python-created readable buffer. It is not
writable and needs to be copied into a ctype array.
variable arguments
A function with variable arugments makes it hard to specify the required argument types for the function prototype. It leaves us one way to call it directly without any arguments type checking.
libc.printf(b"Hello, an int %d, a float %f, a string %s\n", c_int(1), c_doulbe(3.14), "World!")
Use c_bool
to represent wasm_mutability_t
True
forWASM_CONST
False
forWASM_VALUE
customize class builtins
__eq__
for comparation.__repr__
for printing.
bindgen.py
bindge.py
is a tool to create WAMR python binding automatically. binding.py
is generated. We should avoid modification on it. Additional helpers should go
to ffi.py
.
bindgen.py
uses pycparser. Visit the AST of core/iwasm/include/wasm_c_api.h
created by gcc and generate necessary wrappers.
from pycparser import c_ast
class Visitor(c_ast.NodeVisitor):
def visit_Struct(self, node):
pass
def visit_Union(self, node):
pass
def visit_TypeDef(self, node):
pass
def visit_FuncDecl(self, node):
pass
ast = parse_file(...)
v = Visitor()
v.visit(ast)
Before running bindgen.py, the shared library libiwasm.so should be generated.
$ cd /path/to/wamr/repo
$ # if it is in linux
$ pushd product-mini/platforms/linux/
$ cmake -S . -B build ..
$ cmake --build build --target iwasm
$ popd
$ cd binding/python
$ python utils/bindgen.py
wasm_frame_xxx
and wasm_trap_xxx
only work well when enabling WAMR_BUILD_DUMP_CALL_STACK
.
$ cmake -S . -B build -DWAMR_BUILD_DUMP_CALL_STACK=1 ..
OOP wrappers
Based on the above general rules, there will be corresponding python
APIs for every C API in wasm_c_api.h
with same name. Users can do procedural
programming with those.
In next phase, we will create OOP APIs. Almost follow the C++ version of wasm_c_api
A big list
WASM Concept | Procedural APIs | OOP APIs | OOP APIs methods |
---|---|---|---|
XXX_vec | wasm_xxx_vec_new | list | |
wasm_xxx_vec_new_uninitialized | |||
wasm_xxx_vec_new_empty | |||
wasm_xxx_vec_copy | |||
wasm_xxx_vec_delete | |||
valtype | wasm_valtype_new | valtype | __init__ |
wasm_valtype_delete | __del__ | ||
wasm_valtype_kind | __eq__ | ||
wasm_valtype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
functype | wasm_functype_new | functype | |
wasm_functype_delete | |||
wasm_functype_params | |||
wasm_functype_results | |||
wasm_functype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
globaltype | wasm_globaltype_new | globaltype | __init__ |
wasm_globaltype_delete | __del__ | ||
wasm_globaltype_content | __eq__ | ||
wasm_globaltype_mutability | |||
wasm_globaltype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
tabletype | wasm_tabletype_new | tabletype | __init__ |
wasm_tabletype_delete | __del__ | ||
wasm_tabletype_element | __eq__ | ||
wasm_tabletype_limits | |||
wasm_tabletype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
memorytype | wasm_memorytype_new | memorytype | __init__ |
wasm_memorytype_delete | __del__ | ||
wasm_memorytype_limits | __eq__ | ||
wasm_memorytype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
externtype | wasm_externtype_as_XXX | externtype | |
wasm_XXX_as_externtype | |||
wasm_externtype_copy | |||
wasm_externtype_delete | |||
wasm_externtype_kind | |||
vector methods | |||
importtype | wasm_importtype_new | importtype | |
wasm_importtype_delete | |||
wasm_importtype_module | |||
wasm_importtype_name | |||
wasm_importtype_type | |||
wasm_importtype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
exportype | wasm_exporttype_new | exporttype | |
wasm_exporttype_delete | |||
wasm_exporttype_name | |||
wasm_exporttype_type | |||
wasm_exporttype_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
val | wasm_val_delete | val | |
wasm_val_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
frame | wasm_frame_delete | frame | |
wasm_frame_instance | |||
wasm_frame_func_index | |||
wasm_frame_func_offset | |||
wasm_frame_module_offset | |||
wasm_frame_copy | |||
vector methods | |||
trap | wasm_trap_new | trap | |
wasm_trap_delete | |||
wasm_trap_message | |||
wasm_trap_origin | |||
wasm_trap_trace | |||
vector methods | |||
foreign | wasm_foreign_new | foreign | |
wasm_foreign_delete | |||
vector methods | |||
engine | wasm_engine_new | engine | |
wasm_engine_new_with_args* | |||
wasm_engine_new_with_config | |||
wasm_engine_delete | |||
store | wasm_store_new | store | |
wasm_store_delete | |||
vector methods | |||
module | wasm_module_new | module | |
wasm_module_delete | |||
wasm_module_validate | |||
wasm_module_imports | |||
wasm_module_exports | |||
instance | wasm_instance_new | instance | |
wasm_instance_delete | |||
wasm_instance_new_with_args* | |||
wasm_instance_exports | |||
vector methods | |||
func | wasm_func_new | func | |
wasm_func_new_with_env | |||
wasm_func_delete | |||
wasm_func_type | |||
wasm_func_call | |||
wasm_func_param_arity | |||
wasm_func_result_arity | |||
vector methods | |||
global | wasm_global_new | global | |
wasm_global_delete | |||
wasm_global_type | |||
wasm_global_get | |||
wasm_global_set | |||
vector methods | |||
table | wasm_table_new | table | |
wasm_table_delete | |||
wasm_table_type | |||
wasm_table_get | |||
wasm_table_set | |||
wasm_table_size | |||
vector methods | |||
memory | wasm_memory_new | memory | |
wasm_memory_delete | |||
wasm_memory_type | |||
wasm_memory_data | |||
wasm_memory_data_size | |||
wasm_memory_size | |||
vector methods | |||
extern | wasm_extern_delete | extern | |
wasm_extern_as_XXX | |||
wasm_XXX_as_extern | |||
wasm_extern_kind | |||
wasm_extern_type | |||
vector methods |
not supported functions
- wasm_config_XXX
- wasm_module_deserialize
- wasm_module_serialize
- wasm_ref_XXX
- wasm_XXX_as_ref
- wasm_XXX_as_ref_const
- wasm_XXX_copy
- wasm_XXX_get_host_info
- wasm_XXX_set_host_info
test
there will be two kinds of tests in the project
- unit test. located in
./tests
. driven by unittest. run by$ python -m unittest
or$ make test
. - integration test. located in
./samples
.
The whole project is under test-driven development. Every wrapper function will
have two kinds of test cases. The first kind is a positive case. It checks a
wrapper function with expected and safe arguments combinations. Its goal is the
function should work well with expected inputs. Another kind is a negative
case. It feeds unexpected arguments combinations into a wrapper function. Arguments
should include but not be limited to None
. It ensures that the function will
gracefully handle invalid input or unexpected behaviors.
distribution
package
Create a python package named wamr
. Users should import it after installation
just like any other python module.
from wamr import *
PyPI
Refer to tutorial provided by PyPA. Steps to publish WAMR Python library:
-
Creating
pyproject.toml
tells build tools (like pip and build) what is required to build a project. An example .toml file uses setuptools[build-system] requires = [ "setuptools>=42", "wheel" ] build-backend = "setuptools.build_meta"
-
Configuring metadata tells build tools about a package (such as the name and the version), as well as which code files to include
-
Static metadata (
setup.cfg
): guaranteed to be the same every time. It is simpler, easier to read, and avoids many common errors, like encoding errors. -
Dynamic metadata (
setup.py
): possibly non-deterministic. Any items that are dynamic or determined at install-time, as well as extension modules or extensions to setuptools, need to go into setup.py.
Static metadata should be preferred. Dynamic metadata should be used only as an escape hatch when necessary. setup.py used to be required, but can be omitted with newer versions of setuptools and pip.
-
-
Including other files in the distribution
-
For source distribution:
It's usually generated using
python setup.py sdist
, providing metadata and the essential source files needed for installing by a tool like pip, or for generating a Built Distribution.It includes our Python modules, pyproject.toml, metadata, README.md, LICENSE. If you want to control what goes in this explicitly, see Including files in source distributions with MANIFEST.in.
-
A Distribution format containing files and metadata that only need to be moved to the correct location on the target system, to be installed. e.g.
Wheel
It will have the Python files in the discovered or listed Python packages. If you want to control what goes here, such as to add data files, see Including Data Files from the setuptools docs.
-
-
Generating distribution archives. These are archives that are uploaded to the Python Package Index and can be installed by pip.
example using
setuptools
python3 -m pip install --upgrade build python3 -m build
generated files:
dist/ WAMR-package-0.0.1-py3-none-any.whl WAMR-package-0.0.1.tar.gz
The
tar.gz
file is a source archive whereas the.whl file
is a built distribution. Newer pip versions preferentially install built distributions but will fall back to source archives if needed. You should always upload a source archive and provide built archives for compatibility reasons. -
Uploading the distribution archives
-
Register an account on https://pypi.org.
-
To securely upload your project, you’ll need a PyPI API token. It can create at here, and the “Scope” the setting needs to be “Entire account”.
-
After registration, now twine can be used to upload the distribution packages.
# install twine python3 -m pip install --upgrade twine # --repository is https://pypi.org/ by default. # You will be prompted for a username and password. For the username, use __token__. For the password, use the token value, including the pypi- prefix. twine upload dist/*
-
after all, the python binding will be installed with
$ pip install wamr
PS: A example lifecycle of a python package
CI
There are several parts:
- code format check.
- test. include running all unit test cases and examples.
- publish built distribution.