WebAssembly Core Working Draft 1 recently came out. Before that, we had
a toe-hold feature bucked called FinishedFeatures. This replaces
`RuntimeConfig.WithFinishedFeatures` with `RuntimeConfig.WithWasmCore2`.
This also adds `WithWasmCore1` for those who want to lock into 1.0
features as opposed to relying on defaults.
This also fixes some design debt where we hadn't finished migrating
public types that require constructor functions (NewXxx) to interfaces.
By using interfaces, we prevent people from accidentally initializing
key configuration directly (via &Xxx), causing nil field refs. This also
helps prevent confusion about how to use the type (ex pointer or not) as
there's only one way (as an interface).
See https://github.com/tetratelabs/wazero/issues/516
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
This starts the process of removing all dependencies from wazero, by
isolating all assertions we use into a single file. This allows us to
port those assertions as we have time, and when twitchy is gone, the
project literally has no dependencies except go!
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
During #425, @neilalexander gave constructive feedback that the API is
both moving fast, and not good enough yet. This attempts to reduce the
incidental complexity at the cost of a little conflation.
### odd presence of `wasm` and `wasi` packages -> `api` package
We had public API packages in wasm and wasi, which helped us avoid
leaking too many internals as public. That these had names that look
like there should be implementations in them cause unnecessary
confusion. This squashes both into one package "api" which has no
package collission with anything.
We've long struggled with the poorly specified and non-uniformly
implemented WASI specification. Trying to bring visibility to its
constraints knowing they are routinely invalid taints our API for no
good reason. This removes all `WASI` commands for a default to invoke
the function `_start` if it exists. In doing so, there's only one path
to start a module.
Moreover, this puts all wasi code in a top-level package "wasi" as it
isn't re-imported by any internal types.
### Reuse of Module for pre and post instantiation to `Binary` -> `Module`
Module is defined by WebAssembly in many phases, from decoded to
instantiated. However, using the same noun in multiple packages is very
confusing. We at one point tried a name "DecodedModule" or
"InstantiatedModule", but this is a fools errand. By deviating slightly
from the spec we can make it unambiguous what a module is.
This make a result of compilation a `Binary`, retaining `Module` for an
instantiated one. In doing so, there's no longer any name conflicts
whatsoever.
### Confusion about config -> `ModuleConfig`
Also caused by splitting wasm into wasm+wasi is configuration. This
conflates both into the same type `ModuleConfig` as it is simpler than
trying to explain a "will never be finished" api of wasi snapshot-01 in
routine use of WebAssembly. In other words, this further moves WASI out
of the foreground as it has been nothing but burden.
```diff
--- a/README.md
+++ b/README.md
@@ -49,8 +49,8 @@ For example, here's how you can allow WebAssembly modules to read
-wm, err := r.InstantiateModule(wazero.WASISnapshotPreview1())
-defer wm.Close()
+wm, err := wasi.InstantiateSnapshotPreview1(r)
+defer wm.Close()
-sysConfig := wazero.NewSysConfig().WithFS(os.DirFS("/work/home"))
-module, err := wazero.StartWASICommandWithConfig(r, compiled, sysConfig)
+config := wazero.ModuleConfig().WithFS(os.DirFS("/work/home"))
+module, err := r.InstantiateModule(binary, config)
defer module.Close()
...
```
This flattens Memory and Table types, particularly making it a
compilation error to add multiple of either.
This also backfills binary encoding of Table.
Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>