MVP was a term used by WebAssembly insiders when ramping up to the 1.0 spec. While these folks still use that term it is confusing and unnecessary way to qualify a W3C version. Here are some of the problems: * MVP does not match a W3C published URL * MVP does not match a git tag on the spec repo * MVP was a work in progress, so there are text that say "not in MVP" which ended up in 1.0 (as MVP became more than it was). * MVP is jargon to people who don't know that stands for Minimum Viable Product. This stops this practice and instead uses the W3C 1.0 Draft version instead: 20191205 Signed-off-by: Adrian Cole <adrian@tetrate.io>
10 lines
411 B
Go
10 lines
411 B
Go
package binary
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// Magic is the 4 byte preamble (literally "\0asm") of the binary format
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// See https://www.w3.org/TR/2019/REC-wasm-core-1-20191205/#binary-magic
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var Magic = []byte{0x00, 0x61, 0x73, 0x6D}
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// version is format version and doesn't change between known specification versions
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// See https://www.w3.org/TR/2019/REC-wasm-core-1-20191205/#binary-version
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var version = []byte{0x01, 0x00, 0x00, 0x00}
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