YAMAMOTO Takashi ea408ab6c0 wasi-nn: add minimum serialization on WASINNContext (#4387)
currently this is not necessary because context (WASINNContext) is
local to instance. (wasm_module_instance_t)

i plan to make a context shared among instances in a cluster when
fixing https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/4313.
this is a preparation for that direction.

an obvious alternative is to tweak the module instance context APIs
to allow declaring some kind of contexts instance-local. but i feel,
in this particular case, it's more natural to make "wasi-nn handles"
shared among threads within a "process".

note that, spec-wise, how wasi-nn behaves wrt threads is not defined
at all because wasi officially doesn't have threads yet. i suppose, at
this point, that how wasi-nn interacts with wasi-threads is something
we need to define by ourselves, especially when we are using an outdated
wasi-nn version.

with this change, if a thread attempts to access a context while
another thread is using it, we simply make the operation fail with
the "busy" error. this is intended for the mimimum serialization to
avoid problems like crashes/leaks/etc. this is not intended to allow
parallelism or such.

no functional changes are intended at this point yet.

cf.
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/4313
https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasm-micro-runtime/issues/2430
2025-06-20 09:48:55 +08:00
2024-04-24 16:17:00 +08:00
2021-05-19 19:59:23 +08:00

WebAssembly Micro Runtime

A Bytecode Alliance project

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Build WAMR | Build AOT Compiler | Embed WAMR | Export Native API | Build Wasm Apps | Samples

WebAssembly Micro Runtime (WAMR) is a lightweight standalone WebAssembly (Wasm) runtime with small footprint, high performance and highly configurable features for applications cross from embedded, IoT, edge to Trusted Execution Environment (TEE), smart contract, cloud native and so on. It includes a few parts as below:

  • VMcore: A set of runtime libraries for loading and running Wasm modules. It supports rich running modes including interpreter, Ahead-of-Time compilation(AoT) and Just-in-Time compilation (JIT). WAMR supports two JIT tiers - Fast JIT, LLVM JIT, and dynamic tier-up from Fast JIT to LLVM JIT.
  • iwasm: The executable binary built with WAMR VMcore which supports WASI and command line interface.
  • wamrc: The AOT compiler to compile Wasm file into AOT file
  • Useful components and tools for building real solutions with WAMR vmcore:
    • App-framework: A framework for supporting APIs for the Wasm applications
    • App-manager: A framework for dynamical loading the Wasm module remotely
    • WAMR-IDE: An experimental VSCode extension for developping WebAssembly applications with C/C++

Key features

Wasm post-MVP features

Supported architectures and platforms

The WAMR VMcore supports the following architectures:

  • X86-64, X86-32
  • ARM, THUMB (ARMV7 Cortex-M7 and Cortex-A15 are tested)
  • AArch64 (Cortex-A57 and Cortex-A53 are tested)
  • RISCV64, RISCV32 (RISC-V LP64 and RISC-V LP64D are tested)
  • XTENSA, MIPS, ARC

The following platforms are supported, click each link below for how to build iwasm on that platform. Refer to WAMR porting guide for how to port WAMR to a new platform.

Getting started

Performance and memory

Project Technical Steering Committee

The WAMR PTSC Charter governs the operations of the project TSC. The current TSC members:

License

WAMR uses the same license as LLVM: the Apache 2.0 license with the LLVM exception. See the LICENSE file for details. This license allows you to freely use, modify, distribute and sell your own products based on WAMR. Any contributions you make will be under the same license.

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