This adds `gojs.WithOSUser` which passes through current user IDs so
that GOOS=js compiled wasm can read them. This also adds support for
reading back the uid and gid on files. In summary, this passes
`os.TestChown` except on windows where it will not work due to lack of
support.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
In order to support more configuration, we should stop using context as
it is getting gnarly.
Signed-off-by: Takeshi Yoneda <takeshi@tetrate.io>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
When compiled to `GOOS=js`, wasm does not maintain the working
directory: it is defined by the host. While not explicitly documented,
`os.TestDirFSRootDir` in Go suggests the working directory must be valid
to pass (literally the directory holding the file).
This adds an experimental CLI flag that gives the initial working
directory. This is experimental because while GOOS=js uses this, current
WASI compilers will not, as they maintain working directory in code
managed by wasi-libc, or as a convention (e.g. in Zig).
It is not yet known if wasi-cli will maintain working directory
externally or not.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This allows you to specify multiple logging scopes, both in API and the CLI.
e.g for the CLI.
```bash
$ wazero run --hostlogging=crypto --hostlogging=filesystem --mount=.:/:ro cat.wasm
```
e.g. for Go
```go
loggingCtx := context.WithValue(testCtx, experimental.FunctionListenerFactoryKey{},
logging.NewHostLoggingListenerFactory(&log, logging.LogScopeCrypto|logging.LogScopeFilesystem))
```
Signed-off-by: Edoardo Vacchi <evacchi@users.noreply.github.com>
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
Co-authored-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This avoids logging activity on stdio file descriptors, in order to help
make troubleshooting easier. Usually, there isn't an issue in these, yet
wasm panics are harder to read if there is also logging of the ..
logging.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This adds writefs.FS, allowing functions to create and delete files.
This begins by implementing them on `GOARCH=js GOOS=wasm`. The current
status is a lot farther than before, even if completing write on WASI is
left for a later PR (possibly by another volunteer).
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This refactors GOOS and GOARCH specific code into their own packages.
This allows logging interceptors to be built without cyclic package
dependencies.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
We originally had a `context.Context` for anything that might be
traced, but it turned out to be only useful for lifecycle and host functions.
For instruction-scoped aspects like memory updates, a context parameter is too
fine-grained and also invisible in practice. For example, most users will use
the compiler engine, and its memory, global or table access will never use go's
context.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This switches to gofumpt and applies changes, as I've noticed working
in dapr (who uses this) that it finds some things that are annoying,
such as inconsistent block formatting in test tables.
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>