This PR follows @hafeidejiangyou advice to not only enable end users to
avoid reflection when calling host functions, but also use that approach
ourselves internally. The performance results are staggering and will be
noticable in high performance applications.
Before
```
BenchmarkHostCall/Call
BenchmarkHostCall/Call-16 1000000 1050 ns/op
Benchmark_EnvironGet/environGet
Benchmark_EnvironGet/environGet-16 525492 2224 ns/op
```
Now
```
BenchmarkHostCall/Call
BenchmarkHostCall/Call-16 14807203 83.22 ns/op
Benchmark_EnvironGet/environGet
Benchmark_EnvironGet/environGet-16 951690 1054 ns/op
```
To accomplish this, this PR consolidates code around host function
definition and enables a fast path for functions where the user takes
responsibility for defining its WebAssembly mappings. Existing users
will need to change their code a bit, as signatures have changed.
For example, we are now more strict that all host functions require a
context parameter zero. Also, we've replaced
`HostModuleBuilder.ExportFunction` and `ExportFunctions` with a new type
`HostFunctionBuilder` that consolidates the responsibility and the
documentation.
```diff
ctx := context.Background()
-hello := func() {
+hello := func(context.Context) {
fmt.Fprintln(stdout, "hello!")
}
-_, err := r.NewHostModuleBuilder("env").ExportFunction("hello", hello).Instantiate(ctx, r)
+_, err := r.NewHostModuleBuilder("env").
+ NewFunctionBuilder().WithFunc(hello).Export("hello").
+ Instantiate(ctx, r)
```
Power users can now use `HostFunctionBuilder` to define functions that
won't use reflection. There are two choices of interfaces to use
depending on if that function needs access to the calling module or not:
`api.GoFunction` and `api.GoModuleFunction`. Here's an example defining
one.
```go
builder.WithGoFunction(api.GoFunc(func(ctx context.Context, params []uint64) []uint64 {
x, y := uint32(params[0]), uint32(params[1])
sum := x + y
return []uint64{sum}
}, []api.ValueType{api.ValueTypeI32, api.ValueTypeI32}, []api.ValueType{api.ValueTypeI32})
```
As you'll notice and as documented, this approach is more verbose and
not for everyone. If you aren't making a low-level library, you are
likely able to afford the 1us penalty for the convenience of reflection.
However, we are happy to enable this option for foundational libraries
and those with high performance requirements (like ourselves)!
Fixes#825
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This adds an experimental package gojs which implements the host side of Wasm compiled by GOARCH=wasm GOOS=js go build -o X.wasm X.go
This includes heavy disclaimers, in part inherited by Go's comments https://github.com/golang/go/blob/go1.19/src/syscall/js/js.go#L10-L11
Due to this many will still use TinyGo instead.
That said, this is frequently asked for and has interesting features including reflection and HTTP client support.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>