Struct wasmtime_environ::ModuleTranslation
source · pub struct ModuleTranslation<'data> {
pub module: Module,
pub wasm: &'data [u8],
pub function_body_inputs: PrimaryMap<DefinedFuncIndex, FunctionBodyData<'data>>,
pub exported_signatures: Vec<ModuleInternedTypeIndex>,
pub debuginfo: DebugInfoData<'data>,
pub has_unparsed_debuginfo: bool,
pub data: Vec<Cow<'data, [u8]>>,
pub data_align: Option<u64>,
pub passive_data: Vec<&'data [u8]>,
/* private fields */
}
Expand description
The result of translating via ModuleEnvironment
. Function bodies are not
yet translated, and data initializers have not yet been copied out of the
original buffer.
Fields§
§module: Module
Module information.
wasm: &'data [u8]
The input wasm binary.
This can be useful, for example, when modules are parsed from a component and the embedder wants access to the raw wasm modules themselves.
function_body_inputs: PrimaryMap<DefinedFuncIndex, FunctionBodyData<'data>>
References to the function bodies.
exported_signatures: Vec<ModuleInternedTypeIndex>
A list of type signatures which are considered exported from this module, or those that can possibly be called. This list is sorted, and trampolines for each of these signatures are required.
debuginfo: DebugInfoData<'data>
DWARF debug information, if enabled, parsed from the module.
has_unparsed_debuginfo: bool
Set if debuginfo was found but it was not parsed due to Tunables
configuration.
data: Vec<Cow<'data, [u8]>>
List of data segments found in this module which should be concatenated together for the final compiled artifact.
These data segments, when concatenated, are indexed by the
MemoryInitializer
type.
data_align: Option<u64>
The desired alignment of data
in the final data section of the object
file that we’ll emit.
Note that this is 1 by default but MemoryInitialization::Static
might
switch this to a higher alignment to facilitate mmap-ing data from
an object file into a linear memory.
passive_data: Vec<&'data [u8]>
List of passive element segments found in this module which will get concatenated for the final artifact.
Implementations§
source§impl ModuleTranslation<'_>
impl ModuleTranslation<'_>
sourcepub fn try_static_init(
&mut self,
page_size: u64,
max_image_size_always_allowed: u64
)
pub fn try_static_init( &mut self, page_size: u64, max_image_size_always_allowed: u64 )
Attempts to convert segmented memory initialization into static initialization for the module that this translation represents.
If this module’s memory initialization is not compatible with paged
initialization then this won’t change anything. Otherwise if it is
compatible then the memory_initialization
field will be updated.
Takes a page_size
argument in order to ensure that all
initialization is page-aligned for mmap-ability, and
max_image_size_always_allowed
to control how we decide
whether to use static init.
We will try to avoid generating very sparse images, which are
possible if e.g. a module has an initializer at offset 0 and a
very high offset (say, 1 GiB). To avoid this, we use a dual
condition: we always allow images less than
max_image_size_always_allowed
, and the embedder of Wasmtime
can set this if desired to ensure that static init should
always be done if the size of the module or its heaps is
otherwise bounded by the system. We also allow images with
static init data bigger than that, but only if it is “dense”,
defined as having at least half (50%) of its pages with some
data.
We could do something slightly better by building a dense part and keeping a sparse list of outlier/leftover segments (see issue #3820). This would also allow mostly-static init of modules that have some dynamically-placed data segments. But, for now, this is sufficient to allow a system that “knows what it’s doing” to always get static init.
sourcepub fn try_func_table_init(&mut self)
pub fn try_func_table_init(&mut self)
Attempts to convert the module’s table initializers to FuncTable form where possible. This enables lazy table initialization later by providing a one-to-one map of initial table values, without having to parse all segments.