- For Windows, llvm libs need to cache more directories, so use a multi-line
environment variable for paths
- Remove conditionally build directories `win32build`, just use `build` for all platform
- Add Windows wamrc and iwasm(disable lib pthread semaphore and fast jit for now)
build in release CI
- Clear some compile warnings
- Fix some typos
- Fix llvm LICENSE link error
- Remove unused aot file and binarydump bin
- Add checks when loading AOT exports
The default iwasm building in Windows MSVC enables libc-uvwasi because
libc-wasi isn't supported at the beginning. Since libc-wasi had been refactored
and is supported in Windows msys2 building, and libc-wasi supports more
functionalities(e.g. sockets) than libc-uvwasi, this PR fixes some issues to
enable libc-wasi in windows MSVC buidlings.
Add table64 extension(in Memory64 proposal) support in classic-interp
and AOT running modes, currently still use uint32 to represent table's
initial and maximum size to keep AOT ABI unchanged.
Currently, the open-source builds of wamrc set WASM_ENABLE_DUMP_CALL_STACK,
which causes these two fields to be emitted. They are required by aot_emit_exception.c.
Internally at Google, we don't enable call stack dumps, so we've been using the
attached patch to make sure the fields are emitted anyway.
Add no_resolve to LoadArgs and wasm_runtime_resolve_symbols so one can
delay resolving of symbols.
This is useful for inspecting the module between loading and instantiating.
Enable dynamic aot debug feature which debugs the aot file
and is able to set the break point and do single step. Refer to
the README for the detailed steps.
Signed-off-by: zhangliangyu3 <zhangliangyu3@xiaomi.com>
This was originally fixed in #3655, but regressed in #3762 which removed
the `-fvisibility=hidden` flag from the CMakeLists.txt file.
This also removes extraneous ending whitespace from the file.
Now that WAMR supports multiple memory instances, this PR adds some APIs
to access them in a standard way.
This involves moving some existing utility functions out from the
`WASM_ENABLE_MULTI_MODULE` blocks they were nested in, but multi-memory
and multi-module seem independent as far as I can tell so I assume that's okay.
APIs added:
```C
wasm_runtime_lookup_memory
wasm_runtime_get_default_memory
wasm_runtime_get_memory
wasm_memory_get_cur_page_count
wasm_memory_get_max_page_count
wasm_memory_get_bytes_per_page
wasm_memory_get_shared
wasm_memory_get_base_address
wasm_memory_enlarge
```
I'm not sure we want to use C99 %tu here.
While C99 %zu is more widely used in WAMR, %tu is rare (if any)
and I'm not sure if it's ubiquitously implemented in platforms
we support.
- Implement TINY / STANDARD frame modes - tiny mode is only able to keep track on the IP
and func idx, STANDARD mode provides more capabilities (parameters, stack pointer etc.).
- Implement FRAME_PER_FUNCTION / FRAME_PER_CALL modes - frame per function adds
code at the beginning and at the end of each function for allocating / deallocating stack frame,
whereas in per-call mode the frame is allocated before each call. The exception is call to
the imported function, where frame-per-function mode also allocates the stack before the
`call` instruction (as it can't instrument the imported function).
At the moment TINY + FRAME_PER_FUNCTION is automatically enabled in case GC and perf
profiling are disabled and `values` call stack feature is not requested. In all the other cases
STANDARD + FRAME_PER_CALL is used.
STANDARD + FRAME_PER_FUNCTION and TINY + FRAME_PER_CALL are currently not
implemented but possible, and might be enabled in the future.
ps. https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/3758