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wasmtime/
config.rs

1use crate::Engine;
2use crate::prelude::*;
3use alloc::sync::Arc;
4use bitflags::Flags;
5use core::fmt;
6use core::num::{NonZeroU32, NonZeroUsize};
7use core::str::FromStr;
8#[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
9use std::path::Path;
10pub use wasmparser::WasmFeatures;
11#[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
12use wasmtime_environ::FlagValue;
13use wasmtime_environ::{ConfigTunables, OperatorCost, OperatorCostStrategy, TripleExt, Tunables};
14
15#[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
16use crate::memory::MemoryCreator;
17#[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
18use crate::profiling_agent::{self, ProfilingAgent};
19#[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
20use crate::runtime::vm::{
21    GcRuntime, InstanceAllocator, OnDemandInstanceAllocator, RuntimeMemoryCreator,
22};
23#[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
24use crate::trampoline::MemoryCreatorProxy;
25
26#[cfg(feature = "async")]
27use crate::stack::{StackCreator, StackCreatorProxy};
28#[cfg(feature = "async")]
29use wasmtime_fiber::RuntimeFiberStackCreator;
30
31#[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
32pub use crate::runtime::code_memory::CustomCodeMemory;
33#[cfg(feature = "cache")]
34pub use wasmtime_cache::{Cache, CacheConfig};
35#[cfg(all(feature = "incremental-cache", feature = "cranelift"))]
36pub use wasmtime_environ::CacheStore;
37pub use wasmtime_environ::Inlining;
38
39pub(crate) const DEFAULT_WASM_BACKTRACE_MAX_FRAMES: NonZeroUsize = NonZeroUsize::new(20).unwrap();
40
41/// Represents the module instance allocation strategy to use.
42#[derive(Clone)]
43#[non_exhaustive]
44pub enum InstanceAllocationStrategy {
45    /// The on-demand instance allocation strategy.
46    ///
47    /// Resources related to a module instance are allocated at instantiation time and
48    /// immediately deallocated when the `Store` referencing the instance is dropped.
49    ///
50    /// This is the default allocation strategy for Wasmtime.
51    OnDemand,
52    /// The pooling instance allocation strategy.
53    ///
54    /// A pool of resources is created in advance and module instantiation reuses resources
55    /// from the pool. Resources are returned to the pool when the `Store` referencing the instance
56    /// is dropped.
57    ///
58    /// When GC is enabled, the pooling allocator requires that the GC heap
59    /// configuration matches the linear memory configuration (i.e.,
60    /// `gc_heap_reservation` must equal `memory_reservation`, etc.). By
61    /// default, if no `gc_heap_*` tunables are explicitly configured, they
62    /// automatically inherit the `memory_*` values.
63    #[cfg(feature = "pooling-allocator")]
64    Pooling(PoolingAllocationConfig),
65}
66
67impl InstanceAllocationStrategy {
68    /// The default pooling instance allocation strategy.
69    #[cfg(feature = "pooling-allocator")]
70    pub fn pooling() -> Self {
71        Self::Pooling(Default::default())
72    }
73}
74
75impl Default for InstanceAllocationStrategy {
76    fn default() -> Self {
77        Self::OnDemand
78    }
79}
80
81#[cfg(feature = "pooling-allocator")]
82impl From<PoolingAllocationConfig> for InstanceAllocationStrategy {
83    fn from(cfg: PoolingAllocationConfig) -> InstanceAllocationStrategy {
84        InstanceAllocationStrategy::Pooling(cfg)
85    }
86}
87
88#[derive(Clone)]
89/// Configure the strategy used for versioning in serializing and deserializing [`crate::Module`].
90pub enum ModuleVersionStrategy {
91    /// Use the wasmtime crate's Cargo package version.
92    WasmtimeVersion,
93    /// Use a custom version string. Must be at most 255 bytes.
94    Custom(String),
95    /// Emit no version string in serialization, and accept all version strings in deserialization.
96    None,
97}
98
99impl Default for ModuleVersionStrategy {
100    fn default() -> Self {
101        ModuleVersionStrategy::WasmtimeVersion
102    }
103}
104
105impl core::hash::Hash for ModuleVersionStrategy {
106    fn hash<H: core::hash::Hasher>(&self, hasher: &mut H) {
107        match self {
108            Self::WasmtimeVersion => env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION").hash(hasher),
109            Self::Custom(s) => s.hash(hasher),
110            Self::None => {}
111        };
112    }
113}
114
115impl ModuleVersionStrategy {
116    /// Get the string-encoding version of the module.
117    pub fn as_str(&self) -> &str {
118        match &self {
119            Self::WasmtimeVersion => env!("CARGO_PKG_VERSION_MAJOR"),
120            Self::Custom(c) => c,
121            Self::None => "",
122        }
123    }
124}
125
126/// Configuration for record/replay
127#[derive(Clone)]
128#[non_exhaustive]
129pub enum RRConfig {
130    #[cfg(feature = "rr")]
131    /// Recording on store is enabled
132    Recording,
133    #[cfg(feature = "rr")]
134    /// Replaying on store is enabled
135    Replaying,
136    /// No record/replay is enabled
137    None,
138}
139
140/// Global configuration options used to create an [`Engine`]
141/// and customize its behavior.
142///
143/// This structure exposed a builder-like interface and is primarily consumed by
144/// [`Engine::new()`].
145///
146/// The validation of `Config` is deferred until the engine is being built, thus
147/// a problematic config may cause [`Engine::new`] to fail.
148///
149/// # Defaults
150///
151/// The `Default` trait implementation and the return value from
152/// [`Config::new()`] are the same and represent the default set of
153/// configuration for an engine. The exact set of defaults will differ based on
154/// properties such as enabled Cargo features at compile time and the configured
155/// target (see [`Config::target`]). Configuration options document their
156/// default values and what the conditional value of the default is where
157/// applicable.
158#[derive(Clone)]
159pub struct Config {
160    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
161    compiler_config: Option<CompilerConfig>,
162    target: Option<target_lexicon::Triple>,
163    #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
164    collector: Collector,
165    profiling_strategy: ProfilingStrategy,
166    tunables: ConfigTunables,
167
168    #[cfg(feature = "cache")]
169    pub(crate) cache: Option<Cache>,
170    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
171    pub(crate) mem_creator: Option<Arc<dyn RuntimeMemoryCreator>>,
172    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
173    pub(crate) custom_code_memory: Option<Arc<dyn CustomCodeMemory>>,
174    pub(crate) allocation_strategy: InstanceAllocationStrategy,
175    pub(crate) max_wasm_stack: usize,
176    /// Explicitly enabled features via `Config::wasm_*` methods. This is a
177    /// signal that the embedder specifically wants something turned on
178    /// regardless of the defaults that Wasmtime might otherwise have enabled.
179    ///
180    /// Note that this, and `disabled_features` below, start as the empty set of
181    /// features to only track explicit user requests.
182    pub(crate) enabled_features: WasmFeatures,
183    /// Same as `enabled_features`, but for those that are explicitly disabled.
184    pub(crate) disabled_features: WasmFeatures,
185    pub(crate) wasm_backtrace_details_env_used: bool,
186    pub(crate) wasm_backtrace_max_frames: Option<NonZeroUsize>,
187    pub(crate) native_unwind_info: Option<bool>,
188    pub(crate) async_stack_size: usize,
189    pub(crate) async_stack_zeroing: bool,
190    #[cfg(feature = "async")]
191    pub(crate) stack_creator: Option<Arc<dyn RuntimeFiberStackCreator>>,
192    pub(crate) module_version: ModuleVersionStrategy,
193    pub(crate) parallel_compilation: bool,
194    pub(crate) memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size: u64,
195    pub(crate) force_memory_init_memfd: bool,
196    pub(crate) wmemcheck: bool,
197    #[cfg(feature = "coredump")]
198    pub(crate) coredump_on_trap: bool,
199    pub(crate) macos_use_mach_ports: bool,
200    pub(crate) detect_host_feature: Option<fn(&str) -> Option<bool>>,
201    pub(crate) x86_float_abi_ok: Option<bool>,
202    pub(crate) shared_memory: bool,
203    pub(crate) rr_config: RRConfig,
204}
205
206/// User-provided configuration for the compiler.
207#[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
208#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
209struct CompilerConfig {
210    strategy: Option<Strategy>,
211    settings: crate::hash_map::HashMap<String, (String, UserSpecified)>,
212    flags: crate::hash_map::HashMap<String, UserSpecified>,
213    #[cfg(all(feature = "incremental-cache", feature = "cranelift"))]
214    cache_store: Option<Arc<dyn CacheStore>>,
215    clif_dir: Option<std::path::PathBuf>,
216    wmemcheck: bool,
217}
218
219#[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
220#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
221enum UserSpecified {
222    Yes,
223    No,
224}
225
226#[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
227impl CompilerConfig {
228    fn new() -> Self {
229        Self {
230            strategy: Strategy::Auto.not_auto(),
231            settings: Default::default(),
232            flags: Default::default(),
233            #[cfg(all(feature = "incremental-cache", feature = "cranelift"))]
234            cache_store: None,
235            clif_dir: None,
236            wmemcheck: false,
237        }
238    }
239
240    /// Ensures that the key is not set or equals to the given value.
241    /// If the key is not set, it will be set to the given value.
242    ///
243    /// # Returns
244    ///
245    /// Returns true if successfully set or already had the given setting
246    /// value, or false if the setting was explicitly set to something
247    /// else previously.
248    fn ensure_setting_unset_or_given(&mut self, k: &str, v: &str) -> bool {
249        if let Some((value, _)) = self.settings.get(k) {
250            if value != v {
251                return false;
252            }
253        } else {
254            self.settings
255                .insert(k.to_string(), (v.to_string(), UserSpecified::No));
256        }
257        true
258    }
259}
260
261#[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
262impl Default for CompilerConfig {
263    fn default() -> Self {
264        Self::new()
265    }
266}
267
268impl Config {
269    /// Creates a new configuration object with the default configuration
270    /// specified.
271    pub fn new() -> Self {
272        let mut ret = Self {
273            tunables: ConfigTunables::default(),
274            #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
275            compiler_config: Some(CompilerConfig::default()),
276            target: None,
277            #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
278            collector: Collector::default(),
279            #[cfg(feature = "cache")]
280            cache: None,
281            profiling_strategy: ProfilingStrategy::None,
282            #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
283            mem_creator: None,
284            #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
285            custom_code_memory: None,
286            allocation_strategy: InstanceAllocationStrategy::OnDemand,
287            // 512k of stack -- note that this is chosen currently to not be too
288            // big, not be too small, and be a good default for most platforms.
289            // One platform of particular note is Windows where the stack size
290            // of the main thread seems to, by default, be smaller than that of
291            // Linux and macOS. This 512k value at least lets our current test
292            // suite pass on the main thread of Windows (using `--test-threads
293            // 1` forces this), or at least it passed when this change was
294            // committed.
295            max_wasm_stack: 512 * 1024,
296            wasm_backtrace_details_env_used: false,
297            wasm_backtrace_max_frames: Some(DEFAULT_WASM_BACKTRACE_MAX_FRAMES),
298            native_unwind_info: None,
299            enabled_features: WasmFeatures::empty(),
300            disabled_features: WasmFeatures::empty(),
301            async_stack_size: 2 << 20,
302            async_stack_zeroing: false,
303            #[cfg(feature = "async")]
304            stack_creator: None,
305            module_version: ModuleVersionStrategy::default(),
306            parallel_compilation: !cfg!(miri),
307            memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size: 16 << 20,
308            force_memory_init_memfd: false,
309            wmemcheck: false,
310            #[cfg(feature = "coredump")]
311            coredump_on_trap: false,
312            macos_use_mach_ports: !cfg!(miri),
313            #[cfg(feature = "std")]
314            detect_host_feature: Some(detect_host_feature),
315            #[cfg(not(feature = "std"))]
316            detect_host_feature: None,
317            x86_float_abi_ok: None,
318            shared_memory: false,
319            rr_config: RRConfig::None,
320        };
321        ret.wasm_backtrace_details(WasmBacktraceDetails::Environment);
322        ret
323    }
324
325    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
326    pub(crate) fn has_compiler(&self) -> bool {
327        self.compiler_config.is_some()
328    }
329
330    #[track_caller]
331    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
332    fn compiler_config_mut(&mut self) -> &mut CompilerConfig {
333        self.compiler_config.as_mut().expect(
334            "cannot configure compiler settings for `Config`s \
335             created by `Config::without_compiler`",
336        )
337    }
338
339    /// Configure whether Wasm compilation is enabled.
340    ///
341    /// Disabling Wasm compilation will allow you to load and run
342    /// [pre-compiled][Engine::precompile_module] Wasm programs, but not
343    /// to compile and run new Wasm programs that have not already been
344    /// pre-compiled.
345    ///
346    /// Many compilation-related configuration methods will panic if compilation
347    /// has been disabled.
348    ///
349    /// Note that there are two ways to disable Wasm compilation:
350    ///
351    /// 1. Statically, by disabling the `"cranelift"` and `"winch"` cargo
352    ///    features when building Wasmtime. These builds of Wasmtime will have
353    ///    smaller code size, since they do not include any of the code to
354    ///    compile Wasm.
355    ///
356    /// 2. Dynamically, by passing `false` to this method at run-time when
357    ///    configuring Wasmtime. The Wasmtime binary will still include the code
358    ///    for compiling Wasm, it just won't be executed, so code size is larger
359    ///    than with the first approach.
360    ///
361    /// The static approach is better in most cases, however dynamically calling
362    /// `enable_compiler(false)` is useful whenever you create multiple
363    /// [`Engine`]s in the same process, some of which must be able to compile
364    /// Wasm and some of which should never do so. Tests are a common example of
365    /// such a situation, especially when there are multiple Rust binaries in
366    /// the same cargo workspace, and cargo's feature resolution enables the
367    /// `"cranelift"` or `"winch"` features across the whole workspace.
368    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
369    pub fn enable_compiler(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
370        match (enable, &self.compiler_config) {
371            (true, Some(_)) | (false, None) => {}
372            (true, None) => {
373                self.compiler_config = Some(CompilerConfig::default());
374            }
375            (false, Some(_)) => {
376                self.compiler_config = None;
377            }
378        }
379        self
380    }
381
382    /// Configures the target platform of this [`Config`].
383    ///
384    /// This method is used to configure the output of compilation in an
385    /// [`Engine`]. This can be used, for example, to
386    /// cross-compile from one platform to another. By default, the host target
387    /// triple is used meaning compiled code is suitable to run on the host.
388    ///
389    /// Note that the [`Module`](crate::Module) type can only be created if the
390    /// target configured here matches the host. Otherwise if a cross-compile is
391    /// being performed where the host doesn't match the target then
392    /// [`Engine::precompile_module`] must be used instead.
393    ///
394    /// Target-specific flags (such as CPU features) will not be inferred by
395    /// default for the target when one is provided here. This means that this
396    /// can also be used, for example, with the host architecture to disable all
397    /// host-inferred feature flags. Configuring target-specific flags can be
398    /// done with [`Config::cranelift_flag_set`] and
399    /// [`Config::cranelift_flag_enable`].
400    ///
401    /// # Errors
402    ///
403    /// This method will error if the given target triple is not supported.
404    pub fn target(&mut self, target: &str) -> Result<&mut Self> {
405        self.target =
406            Some(target_lexicon::Triple::from_str(target).map_err(|e| crate::format_err!(e))?);
407
408        Ok(self)
409    }
410
411    /// Enables the incremental compilation cache in Cranelift, using the provided `CacheStore`
412    /// backend for storage.
413    ///
414    /// # Panics
415    ///
416    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
417    #[cfg(all(feature = "incremental-cache", feature = "cranelift"))]
418    pub fn enable_incremental_compilation(
419        &mut self,
420        cache_store: Arc<dyn CacheStore>,
421    ) -> Result<&mut Self> {
422        self.compiler_config_mut().cache_store = Some(cache_store);
423        Ok(self)
424    }
425
426    #[doc(hidden)]
427    #[deprecated(note = "no longer has any effect")]
428    #[cfg(feature = "async")]
429    pub fn async_support(&mut self, _enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
430        self
431    }
432
433    /// Configures whether DWARF debug information will be emitted
434    /// during compilation for a native debugger on the Wasmtime
435    /// process to consume.
436    ///
437    /// Note that the `debug-builtins` compile-time Cargo feature must also be
438    /// enabled for native debuggers such as GDB or LLDB to be able to debug
439    /// guest WebAssembly programs.
440    ///
441    /// By default this option is `false`.
442    /// **Note** Enabling this option is not compatible with the Winch compiler.
443    pub fn debug_info(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
444        self.tunables.debug_native = Some(enable);
445        self
446    }
447
448    /// Whether or not symbols are located in generated compiled module
449    /// artifacts.
450    ///
451    /// Wasmtime's currently representation of compiled artifacts is an ELF
452    /// file. ELF files have symbol tables and such and this option enables
453    /// whether symbols are emitted for wasm functions. This utility can be
454    /// useful when profiling wasm modules (many profilers work with
455    /// ELF-in-memory by default without futher configuration), introspection of
456    /// a `*.cwasm` (e.g. the symbol table is what `wasmtime objdump` reads), or
457    /// just general binary analysis of the result ELF file. Large wasm modules
458    /// can have large symbol tables, however, and the symbols serve no purpose
459    /// at runtime meaning that they are pure overhead for minimal module as
460    /// well. This option can be used to disable these symbols which will reduce
461    /// the debuggability of modules but will also reduce their size.
462    ///
463    /// Note that the ELF file representation is considered an implementation
464    /// detail of Wasmtime and embedders should not rely on this format.
465    /// Wasmtime may change the format of artifacts in the future.
466    ///
467    /// This option is `true` by default.
468    ///
469    /// This option is required if [`Config::debug_info`] is enabled.
470    pub fn debug_symbols(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
471        self.tunables.debug_symbols = Some(enable);
472        self
473    }
474
475    /// Configures whether compiled guest code will be instrumented to
476    /// provide debugging at the Wasm VM level.
477    ///
478    /// This is required in order to enable a guest-level debugging
479    /// API that can precisely examine Wasm VM state and (eventually,
480    /// once it is complete) set breakpoints and watchpoints and step
481    /// through code.
482    ///
483    /// Without this enabled, debugging can only be done via a native
484    /// debugger operating on the compiled guest code (see
485    /// [`Config::debug_info`] and is "best-effort": we may be able to
486    /// recover some Wasm locals or operand stack values, but it is
487    /// not guaranteed, even when optimizations are disabled.
488    ///
489    /// When this is enabled, additional instrumentation is inserted
490    /// that directly tracks the Wasm VM state at every step. This has
491    /// some performance impact, but allows perfect debugging
492    /// fidelity.
493    ///
494    /// Breakpoints, watchpoints, and stepping are not yet supported,
495    /// but will be added in a future version of Wasmtime.
496    ///
497    /// This enables use of the [`crate::FrameHandle`] API which is
498    /// provided by [`crate::Caller::debug_exit_frames`] or
499    /// [`crate::Store::debug_exit_frames`].
500    ///
501    /// ***Note*** Enabling this option is not compatible with the
502    /// Winch compiler.
503    #[cfg(feature = "debug")]
504    pub fn guest_debug(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
505        self.tunables.debug_guest = Some(enable);
506        self
507    }
508
509    /// Configures whether [`WasmBacktrace`] will be present in the context of
510    /// errors returned from Wasmtime.
511    ///
512    /// This method is deprecated in favor of
513    /// [`Config::wasm_backtrace_max_frames`]. Calling `wasm_backtrace(false)`
514    /// is equivalent to `wasm_backtrace_max_frames(None)`, and
515    /// `wasm_backtrace(true)` will leave `wasm_backtrace_max_frames` unchanged
516    /// if the value is `Some` and will otherwise restore the default `Some`
517    /// value.
518    ///
519    /// [`WasmBacktrace`]: crate::WasmBacktrace
520    #[deprecated = "use `wasm_backtrace_max_frames` instead"]
521    pub fn wasm_backtrace(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
522        match (enable, self.wasm_backtrace_max_frames) {
523            (false, _) => self.wasm_backtrace_max_frames = None,
524            // Wasm backtraces were disabled; enable them with the
525            // default maximum number of frames to capture.
526            (true, None) => {
527                self.wasm_backtrace_max_frames = Some(DEFAULT_WASM_BACKTRACE_MAX_FRAMES)
528            }
529            // Wasm backtraces are already enabled; keep the existing
530            // max-frames configuration.
531            (true, Some(_)) => {}
532        }
533        self
534    }
535
536    /// Configures whether backtraces in `Trap` will parse debug info in the wasm file to
537    /// have filename/line number information.
538    ///
539    /// When enabled this will causes modules to retain debugging information
540    /// found in wasm binaries. This debug information will be used when a trap
541    /// happens to symbolicate each stack frame and attempt to print a
542    /// filename/line number for each wasm frame in the stack trace.
543    ///
544    /// By default this option is `WasmBacktraceDetails::Environment`, meaning
545    /// that wasm will read `WASMTIME_BACKTRACE_DETAILS` to indicate whether
546    /// details should be parsed. Note that the `std` feature of this crate must
547    /// be active to read environment variables, otherwise this is disabled by
548    /// default.
549    pub fn wasm_backtrace_details(&mut self, enable: WasmBacktraceDetails) -> &mut Self {
550        self.wasm_backtrace_details_env_used = false;
551        self.tunables.parse_wasm_debuginfo = match enable {
552            WasmBacktraceDetails::Enable => Some(true),
553            WasmBacktraceDetails::Disable => Some(false),
554            WasmBacktraceDetails::Environment => {
555                #[cfg(feature = "std")]
556                {
557                    self.wasm_backtrace_details_env_used = true;
558                    std::env::var("WASMTIME_BACKTRACE_DETAILS")
559                        .map(|s| Some(s == "1"))
560                        .unwrap_or(Some(false))
561                }
562                #[cfg(not(feature = "std"))]
563                {
564                    Some(false)
565                }
566            }
567        };
568        self
569    }
570
571    /// Configures the maximum number of WebAssembly frames to collect in
572    /// backtraces.
573    ///
574    /// A backtrace may be collected whenever an error is returned from a host
575    /// function call through to WebAssembly or when WebAssembly itself hits a
576    /// trap condition, such as an out-of-bounds memory access. This flag
577    /// indicates, in these conditions, whether the backtrace is collected or
578    /// not and how many frames should be collected.
579    ///
580    /// Currently wasm backtraces are implemented through frame pointer walking.
581    /// This means that collecting a backtrace is expected to be a fast and
582    /// relatively cheap operation. Additionally backtrace collection is
583    /// suitable in concurrent environments since one thread capturing a
584    /// backtrace won't block other threads.
585    ///
586    /// Collected backtraces are attached via
587    /// [`Error::context`](crate::Error::context) to errors returned from host
588    /// functions. The [`WasmBacktrace`] type can be acquired via
589    /// [`Error::downcast_ref`](crate::Error::downcast_ref) to inspect the
590    /// backtrace. When this option is set to `None` then this context is never
591    /// applied to errors coming out of wasm.
592    ///
593    /// The default value is 20.
594    ///
595    /// [`WasmBacktrace`]: crate::WasmBacktrace
596    pub fn wasm_backtrace_max_frames(&mut self, limit: Option<NonZeroUsize>) -> &mut Self {
597        self.wasm_backtrace_max_frames = limit;
598        self
599    }
600
601    /// Configures whether to generate native unwind information
602    /// (e.g. `.eh_frame` on Linux).
603    ///
604    /// This configuration option only exists to help third-party stack
605    /// capturing mechanisms, such as the system's unwinder or the `backtrace`
606    /// crate, determine how to unwind through Wasm frames. It does not affect
607    /// whether Wasmtime can capture Wasm backtraces or not. The presence of
608    /// [`WasmBacktrace`] is controlled by the
609    /// [`Config::wasm_backtrace_max_frames`] option.
610    ///
611    /// Native unwind information is included:
612    /// - When targeting Windows, since the Windows ABI requires it.
613    /// - By default.
614    ///
615    /// Note that systems loading many modules may wish to disable this
616    /// configuration option instead of leaving it on-by-default. Some platforms
617    /// exhibit quadratic behavior when registering/unregistering unwinding
618    /// information which can greatly slow down the module loading/unloading
619    /// process.
620    ///
621    /// [`WasmBacktrace`]: crate::WasmBacktrace
622    pub fn native_unwind_info(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
623        self.native_unwind_info = Some(enable);
624        self
625    }
626
627    /// Configures whether execution of WebAssembly will "consume fuel" to
628    /// either halt or yield execution as desired.
629    ///
630    /// This can be used to deterministically prevent infinitely-executing
631    /// WebAssembly code by instrumenting generated code to consume fuel as it
632    /// executes. When fuel runs out a trap is raised, however [`Store`] can be
633    /// configured to yield execution periodically via
634    /// [`crate::Store::fuel_async_yield_interval`].
635    ///
636    /// Note that a [`Store`] starts with no fuel, so if you enable this option
637    /// you'll have to be sure to pour some fuel into [`Store`] before
638    /// executing some code.
639    ///
640    /// By default this option is `false`.
641    ///
642    /// **Note** Enabling this option is not compatible with the Winch compiler.
643    ///
644    /// [`Store`]: crate::Store
645    pub fn consume_fuel(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
646        self.tunables.consume_fuel = Some(enable);
647        self
648    }
649
650    /// Configures the fuel cost of each WebAssembly operator.
651    ///
652    /// This is only relevant when [`Config::consume_fuel`] is enabled.
653    pub fn operator_cost(&mut self, cost: OperatorCost) -> &mut Self {
654        self.tunables.operator_cost = Some(OperatorCostStrategy::table(cost));
655        self
656    }
657
658    /// Enables epoch-based interruption.
659    ///
660    /// When executing code in async mode, we sometimes want to
661    /// implement a form of cooperative timeslicing: long-running Wasm
662    /// guest code should periodically yield to the executor
663    /// loop. This yielding could be implemented by using "fuel" (see
664    /// [`consume_fuel`](Config::consume_fuel)). However, fuel
665    /// instrumentation is somewhat expensive: it modifies the
666    /// compiled form of the Wasm code so that it maintains a precise
667    /// instruction count, frequently checking this count against the
668    /// remaining fuel. If one does not need this precise count or
669    /// deterministic interruptions, and only needs a periodic
670    /// interrupt of some form, then It would be better to have a more
671    /// lightweight mechanism.
672    ///
673    /// Epoch-based interruption is that mechanism. There is a global
674    /// "epoch", which is a counter that divides time into arbitrary
675    /// periods (or epochs). This counter lives on the
676    /// [`Engine`] and can be incremented by calling
677    /// [`Engine::increment_epoch`].
678    /// Epoch-based instrumentation works by setting a "deadline
679    /// epoch". The compiled code knows the deadline, and at certain
680    /// points, checks the current epoch against that deadline. It
681    /// will yield if the deadline has been reached.
682    ///
683    /// The idea is that checking an infrequently-changing counter is
684    /// cheaper than counting and frequently storing a precise metric
685    /// (instructions executed) locally. The interruptions are not
686    /// deterministic, but if the embedder increments the epoch in a
687    /// periodic way (say, every regular timer tick by a thread or
688    /// signal handler), then we can ensure that all async code will
689    /// yield to the executor within a bounded time.
690    ///
691    /// The deadline check cannot be avoided by malicious wasm code. It is safe
692    /// to use epoch deadlines to limit the execution time of untrusted
693    /// code.
694    ///
695    /// The [`Store`](crate::Store) tracks the deadline, and controls
696    /// what happens when the deadline is reached during
697    /// execution. Several behaviors are possible:
698    ///
699    /// - Trap if code is executing when the epoch deadline is
700    ///   met. See
701    ///   [`Store::epoch_deadline_trap`](crate::Store::epoch_deadline_trap).
702    ///
703    /// - Call an arbitrary function. This function may chose to trap or
704    ///   increment the epoch. See
705    ///   [`Store::epoch_deadline_callback`](crate::Store::epoch_deadline_callback).
706    ///
707    /// - Yield to the executor loop, then resume when the future is
708    ///   next polled. See
709    ///   [`Store::epoch_deadline_async_yield_and_update`](crate::Store::epoch_deadline_async_yield_and_update).
710    ///
711    /// Trapping is the default. The yielding behaviour may be used for
712    /// the timeslicing behavior described above.
713    ///
714    /// This feature is available with or without async support.
715    /// However, without async support, the timeslicing behaviour is
716    /// not available. This means epoch-based interruption can only
717    /// serve as a simple external-interruption mechanism.
718    ///
719    /// An initial deadline must be set before executing code by calling
720    /// [`Store::set_epoch_deadline`](crate::Store::set_epoch_deadline). If this
721    /// deadline is not configured then wasm will immediately trap.
722    ///
723    /// ## Interaction with blocking host calls
724    ///
725    /// Epochs (and fuel) do not assist in handling WebAssembly code blocked in
726    /// a call to the host. For example if the WebAssembly function calls
727    /// `wasi:io/poll.poll` to sleep epochs will not assist in waking this up or
728    /// timing it out. Epochs intentionally only affect running WebAssembly code
729    /// itself and it's left to the embedder to determine how best to wake up
730    /// indefinitely blocking code in the host.
731    ///
732    /// The typical solution for this, however, is to use the `async` variant of
733    /// WASI host functions. This models computation as a Rust `Future` which
734    /// means that when blocking happens the future is only suspended and
735    /// control yields back to the main event loop. This gives the embedder the
736    /// opportunity to use `tokio::time::timeout` for example on a wasm
737    /// computation and have the desired effect of cancelling a blocking
738    /// operation when a timeout expires.
739    ///
740    /// ## When to use fuel vs. epochs
741    ///
742    /// In general, epoch-based interruption results in faster
743    /// execution. This difference is sometimes significant: in some
744    /// measurements, up to 2-3x. This is because epoch-based
745    /// interruption does less work: it only watches for a global
746    /// rarely-changing counter to increment, rather than keeping a
747    /// local frequently-changing counter and comparing it to a
748    /// deadline.
749    ///
750    /// Fuel, in contrast, should be used when *deterministic*
751    /// yielding or trapping is needed. For example, if it is required
752    /// that the same function call with the same starting state will
753    /// always either complete or trap with an out-of-fuel error,
754    /// deterministically, then fuel with a fixed bound should be
755    /// used.
756    ///
757    /// **Note** Enabling this option is not compatible with the Winch compiler.
758    ///
759    /// # See Also
760    ///
761    /// - [`Store::set_epoch_deadline`](crate::Store::set_epoch_deadline)
762    /// - [`Store::epoch_deadline_trap`](crate::Store::epoch_deadline_trap)
763    /// - [`Store::epoch_deadline_callback`](crate::Store::epoch_deadline_callback)
764    /// - [`Store::epoch_deadline_async_yield_and_update`](crate::Store::epoch_deadline_async_yield_and_update)
765    pub fn epoch_interruption(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
766        self.tunables.epoch_interruption = Some(enable);
767        self
768    }
769
770    /// XXX: For internal fuzzing and debugging use only!
771    #[doc(hidden)]
772    pub fn gc_zeal_alloc_counter(&mut self, counter: Option<NonZeroU32>) -> Result<&mut Self> {
773        #[cfg(not(gc_zeal))]
774        {
775            let _ = counter;
776            bail!(
777                "cannot set `gc_zeal_alloc_counter` because Wasmtime was not built with `cfg(gc_zeal)`"
778            );
779        }
780
781        #[cfg(gc_zeal)]
782        {
783            self.tunables.gc_zeal_alloc_counter = Some(counter);
784            Ok(self)
785        }
786    }
787
788    /// Configures the maximum amount of stack space available for
789    /// executing WebAssembly code.
790    ///
791    /// WebAssembly has well-defined semantics on stack overflow. This is
792    /// intended to be a knob which can help configure how much stack space
793    /// wasm execution is allowed to consume. Note that the number here is not
794    /// super-precise, but rather wasm will take at most "pretty close to this
795    /// much" stack space.
796    ///
797    /// If a wasm call (or series of nested wasm calls) take more stack space
798    /// than the `size` specified then a stack overflow trap will be raised.
799    ///
800    /// Caveat: this knob only limits the stack space consumed by wasm code.
801    /// More importantly, it does not ensure that this much stack space is
802    /// available on the calling thread stack. Exhausting the thread stack
803    /// typically leads to an **abort** of the process.
804    ///
805    /// Here are some examples of how that could happen:
806    ///
807    /// - Let's assume this option is set to 2 MiB and then a thread that has
808    ///   a stack with 512 KiB left.
809    ///
810    ///   If wasm code consumes more than 512 KiB then the process will be aborted.
811    ///
812    /// - Assuming the same conditions, but this time wasm code does not consume
813    ///   any stack but calls into a host function. The host function consumes
814    ///   more than 512 KiB of stack space. The process will be aborted.
815    ///
816    /// There's another gotcha related to recursive calling into wasm: the stack
817    /// space consumed by a host function is counted towards this limit. The
818    /// host functions are not prevented from consuming more than this limit.
819    /// However, if the host function that used more than this limit and called
820    /// back into wasm, then the execution will trap immediately because of
821    /// stack overflow.
822    ///
823    /// When the `async` feature is enabled, this value cannot exceed the
824    /// `async_stack_size` option. Be careful not to set this value too close
825    /// to `async_stack_size` as doing so may limit how much stack space
826    /// is available for host functions.
827    ///
828    /// By default this option is 512 KiB.
829    ///
830    /// # Errors
831    ///
832    /// The [`Engine::new`] method will fail if the `size` specified here is
833    /// either 0 or larger than the [`Config::async_stack_size`] configuration.
834    pub fn max_wasm_stack(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
835        self.max_wasm_stack = size;
836        self
837    }
838
839    /// Configures the size of the stacks used for asynchronous execution.
840    ///
841    /// This setting configures the size of the stacks that are allocated for
842    /// asynchronous execution. The value cannot be less than `max_wasm_stack`.
843    ///
844    /// The amount of stack space guaranteed for host functions is
845    /// `async_stack_size - max_wasm_stack`, so take care not to set these two values
846    /// close to one another; doing so may cause host functions to overflow the
847    /// stack and abort the process.
848    ///
849    /// By default this option is 2 MiB.
850    ///
851    /// # Errors
852    ///
853    /// The [`Engine::new`] method will fail if the value for this option is
854    /// smaller than the [`Config::max_wasm_stack`] option.
855    pub fn async_stack_size(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
856        self.async_stack_size = size;
857        self
858    }
859
860    /// Configures whether or not stacks used for async futures are zeroed
861    /// before (re)use.
862    ///
863    /// When the [`call_async`] variant of calling WebAssembly is used
864    /// then Wasmtime will create a separate runtime execution stack for each
865    /// future produced by [`call_async`]. By default upon allocation, depending
866    /// on the platform, these stacks might be filled with uninitialized
867    /// memory. This is safe and correct because, modulo bugs in Wasmtime,
868    /// compiled Wasm code will never read from a stack slot before it
869    /// initializes the stack slot.
870    ///
871    /// However, as a defense-in-depth mechanism, you may configure Wasmtime to
872    /// ensure that these stacks are zeroed before they are used. Notably, if
873    /// you are using the pooling allocator, stacks can be pooled and reused
874    /// across different Wasm guests; ensuring that stacks are zeroed can
875    /// prevent data leakage between Wasm guests even in the face of potential
876    /// read-of-stack-slot-before-initialization bugs in Wasmtime's compiler.
877    ///
878    /// Stack zeroing can be a costly operation in highly concurrent
879    /// environments due to modifications of the virtual address space requiring
880    /// process-wide synchronization. It can also be costly in `no-std`
881    /// environments that must manually zero memory, and cannot rely on an OS
882    /// and virtual memory to provide zeroed pages.
883    ///
884    /// This option defaults to `false`.
885    ///
886    /// [`call_async`]: crate::TypedFunc::call_async
887    pub fn async_stack_zeroing(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
888        self.async_stack_zeroing = enable;
889        self
890    }
891
892    /// Explicitly enables (and un-disables) a given set of [`WasmFeatures`].
893    ///
894    /// Note: this is a low-level method that does not necessarily imply that
895    /// wasmtime _supports_ a feature. It should only be used to _disable_
896    /// features that callers want to be rejected by the parser or _enable_
897    /// features callers are certain that the current configuration of wasmtime
898    /// supports.
899    ///
900    /// Feature validation is deferred until an engine is being built, thus by
901    /// enabling features here a caller may cause
902    /// [`Engine::new`] to fail later, if the feature
903    /// configuration isn't supported.
904    pub fn wasm_features(&mut self, flag: WasmFeatures, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
905        self.enabled_features.set(flag, enable);
906        self.disabled_features.set(flag, !enable);
907        self
908    }
909
910    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly tail calls proposal will be enabled
911    /// for compilation or not.
912    ///
913    /// The [WebAssembly tail calls proposal] introduces the `return_call` and
914    /// `return_call_indirect` instructions. These instructions allow for Wasm
915    /// programs to implement some recursive algorithms with *O(1)* stack space
916    /// usage.
917    ///
918    /// This is `true` by default except when the Winch compiler is enabled.
919    ///
920    /// [WebAssembly tail calls proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/tail-call
921    pub fn wasm_tail_call(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
922        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::TAIL_CALL, enable);
923        self
924    }
925
926    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly [branch-hinting] proposal is enabled.
927    ///
928    /// When enabled, the `metadata.code.branch_hint` custom section is parsed
929    /// and used to lay out cold code paths during compilation. The hints are
930    /// advisory and never affect execution semantics.
931    ///
932    /// This is `false` by default until the proposal has been fuzzed.
933    ///
934    /// [branch-hinting]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/branch-hinting
935    pub fn wasm_branch_hinting(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
936        self.tunables.branch_hinting = Some(enable);
937        self
938    }
939
940    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly custom-page-sizes proposal will be
941    /// enabled for compilation or not.
942    ///
943    /// The [WebAssembly custom-page-sizes proposal] allows a memory to
944    /// customize its page sizes. By default, Wasm page sizes are 64KiB
945    /// large. This proposal allows the memory to opt into smaller page sizes
946    /// instead, allowing Wasm to run in environments with less than 64KiB RAM
947    /// available, for example.
948    ///
949    /// Note that the page size is part of the memory's type, and because
950    /// different memories may have different types, they may also have
951    /// different page sizes.
952    ///
953    /// Currently the only valid page sizes are 64KiB (the default) and 1
954    /// byte. Future extensions may relax this constraint and allow all powers
955    /// of two.
956    ///
957    /// Support for this proposal is disabled by default.
958    ///
959    /// [WebAssembly custom-page-sizes proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/custom-page-sizes
960    pub fn wasm_custom_page_sizes(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
961        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CUSTOM_PAGE_SIZES, enable);
962        self
963    }
964
965    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly [threads] proposal will be enabled
966    /// for compilation.
967    ///
968    /// This feature gates items such as shared memories and atomic
969    /// instructions. Note that the threads feature depends on the bulk memory
970    /// feature, which is enabled by default. Additionally note that while the
971    /// wasm feature is called "threads" it does not actually include the
972    /// ability to spawn threads. Spawning threads is part of the [wasi-threads]
973    /// proposal which is a separately gated feature in Wasmtime.
974    ///
975    /// Embeddings of Wasmtime are able to build their own custom threading
976    /// scheme on top of the core wasm threads proposal, however.
977    ///
978    /// The default value for this option is whether the `threads`
979    /// crate feature of Wasmtime is enabled or not. By default this crate
980    /// feature is enabled.
981    ///
982    /// [threads]: https://github.com/webassembly/threads
983    /// [wasi-threads]: https://github.com/webassembly/wasi-threads
984    #[cfg(feature = "threads")]
985    pub fn wasm_threads(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
986        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::THREADS, enable);
987        self
988    }
989
990    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly [shared-everything-threads] proposal
991    /// will be enabled for compilation.
992    ///
993    /// This feature gates extended use of the `shared` attribute on items other
994    /// than memories, extra atomic instructions, and new component model
995    /// intrinsics for spawning threads. It depends on the
996    /// [`wasm_threads`][Self::wasm_threads] being enabled.
997    ///
998    /// [shared-everything-threads]:
999    ///     https://github.com/webassembly/shared-everything-threads
1000    pub fn wasm_shared_everything_threads(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1001        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::SHARED_EVERYTHING_THREADS, enable);
1002        self
1003    }
1004
1005    /// Configures whether the [WebAssembly reference types proposal][proposal]
1006    /// will be enabled for compilation.
1007    ///
1008    /// This feature gates items such as the `externref` and `funcref` types as
1009    /// well as allowing a module to define multiple tables.
1010    ///
1011    /// Note that the reference types proposal depends on the bulk memory proposal.
1012    ///
1013    /// This feature is `true` by default.
1014    ///
1015    /// # Errors
1016    ///
1017    /// The validation of this feature are deferred until the engine is being built,
1018    /// and thus may cause [`Engine::new`] fail if the `bulk_memory` feature is disabled.
1019    ///
1020    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/reference-types
1021    #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
1022    pub fn wasm_reference_types(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1023        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::REFERENCE_TYPES, enable);
1024        self
1025    }
1026
1027    /// Configures whether the [WebAssembly function references
1028    /// proposal][proposal] will be enabled for compilation.
1029    ///
1030    /// This feature gates non-nullable reference types, function reference
1031    /// types, `call_ref`, `ref.func`, and non-nullable reference related
1032    /// instructions.
1033    ///
1034    /// Note that the function references proposal depends on the reference
1035    /// types proposal.
1036    ///
1037    /// This feature is `true` by default.
1038    ///
1039    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/function-references
1040    #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
1041    pub fn wasm_function_references(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1042        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::FUNCTION_REFERENCES, enable);
1043        self
1044    }
1045
1046    /// Configures whether the [WebAssembly wide-arithmetic][proposal] will be
1047    /// enabled for compilation.
1048    ///
1049    /// This feature is `false` by default.
1050    ///
1051    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/wide-arithmetic
1052    pub fn wasm_wide_arithmetic(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1053        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::WIDE_ARITHMETIC, enable);
1054        self
1055    }
1056
1057    /// Configures whether the [WebAssembly Garbage Collection
1058    /// proposal][proposal] will be enabled for compilation.
1059    ///
1060    /// This feature gates `struct` and `array` type definitions and references,
1061    /// the `i31ref` type, and all related instructions.
1062    ///
1063    /// Note that the function references proposal depends on the typed function
1064    /// references proposal.
1065    ///
1066    /// This feature is `true` by default.
1067    ///
1068    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/gc
1069    pub fn wasm_gc(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1070        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::GC, enable);
1071        self
1072    }
1073
1074    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly SIMD proposal will be
1075    /// enabled for compilation.
1076    ///
1077    /// The [WebAssembly SIMD proposal][proposal]. This feature gates items such
1078    /// as the `v128` type and all of its operators being in a module. Note that
1079    /// this does not enable the [relaxed simd proposal].
1080    ///
1081    /// **Note**
1082    ///
1083    /// On x86_64 platforms the base CPU feature requirement for SIMD
1084    /// is SSE2 for the Cranelift compiler and AVX for the Winch compiler.
1085    ///
1086    /// This is `true` by default.
1087    ///
1088    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/simd
1089    /// [relaxed simd proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/relaxed-simd
1090    pub fn wasm_simd(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1091        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::SIMD, enable);
1092        self
1093    }
1094
1095    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly Relaxed SIMD proposal will be
1096    /// enabled for compilation.
1097    ///
1098    /// The relaxed SIMD proposal adds new instructions to WebAssembly which,
1099    /// for some specific inputs, are allowed to produce different results on
1100    /// different hosts. More-or-less this proposal enables exposing
1101    /// platform-specific semantics of SIMD instructions in a controlled
1102    /// fashion to a WebAssembly program. From an embedder's perspective this
1103    /// means that WebAssembly programs may execute differently depending on
1104    /// whether the host is x86_64 or AArch64, for example.
1105    ///
1106    /// By default Wasmtime lowers relaxed SIMD instructions to the fastest
1107    /// lowering for the platform it's running on. This means that, by default,
1108    /// some relaxed SIMD instructions may have different results for the same
1109    /// inputs across x86_64 and AArch64. This behavior can be disabled through
1110    /// the [`Config::relaxed_simd_deterministic`] option which will force
1111    /// deterministic behavior across all platforms, as classified by the
1112    /// specification, at the cost of performance.
1113    ///
1114    /// This is `true` by default.
1115    ///
1116    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/relaxed-simd
1117    pub fn wasm_relaxed_simd(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1118        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::RELAXED_SIMD, enable);
1119        self
1120    }
1121
1122    /// This option can be used to control the behavior of the [relaxed SIMD
1123    /// proposal's][proposal] instructions.
1124    ///
1125    /// The relaxed SIMD proposal introduces instructions that are allowed to
1126    /// have different behavior on different architectures, primarily to afford
1127    /// an efficient implementation on all architectures. This means, however,
1128    /// that the same module may execute differently on one host than another,
1129    /// which typically is not otherwise the case. This option is provided to
1130    /// force Wasmtime to generate deterministic code for all relaxed simd
1131    /// instructions, at the cost of performance, for all architectures. When
1132    /// this option is enabled then the deterministic behavior of all
1133    /// instructions in the relaxed SIMD proposal is selected.
1134    ///
1135    /// This is `false` by default.
1136    ///
1137    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/relaxed-simd
1138    pub fn relaxed_simd_deterministic(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1139        self.tunables.relaxed_simd_deterministic = Some(enable);
1140        self
1141    }
1142
1143    /// Configures whether the [WebAssembly bulk memory operations
1144    /// proposal][proposal] will be enabled for compilation.
1145    ///
1146    /// This feature gates items such as the `memory.copy` instruction, passive
1147    /// data/table segments, etc, being in a module.
1148    ///
1149    /// This is `true` by default.
1150    ///
1151    /// Feature `reference_types`, which is also `true` by default, requires
1152    /// this feature to be enabled. Thus disabling this feature must also disable
1153    /// `reference_types` as well using [`wasm_reference_types`](crate::Config::wasm_reference_types).
1154    ///
1155    /// # Errors
1156    ///
1157    /// Disabling this feature without disabling `reference_types` will cause
1158    /// [`Engine::new`] to fail.
1159    ///
1160    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/bulk-memory-operations
1161    pub fn wasm_bulk_memory(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1162        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::BULK_MEMORY, enable);
1163        self
1164    }
1165
1166    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly multi-value [proposal] will
1167    /// be enabled for compilation.
1168    ///
1169    /// This feature gates functions and blocks returning multiple values in a
1170    /// module, for example.
1171    ///
1172    /// This is `true` by default.
1173    ///
1174    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/multi-value
1175    pub fn wasm_multi_value(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1176        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::MULTI_VALUE, enable);
1177        self
1178    }
1179
1180    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly multi-memory [proposal] will
1181    /// be enabled for compilation.
1182    ///
1183    /// This feature gates modules having more than one linear memory
1184    /// declaration or import.
1185    ///
1186    /// This is `true` by default.
1187    ///
1188    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/multi-memory
1189    pub fn wasm_multi_memory(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1190        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::MULTI_MEMORY, enable);
1191        self
1192    }
1193
1194    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly memory64 [proposal] will
1195    /// be enabled for compilation.
1196    ///
1197    /// Note that this the upstream specification is not finalized and Wasmtime
1198    /// may also have bugs for this feature since it hasn't been exercised
1199    /// much.
1200    ///
1201    /// This is `false` by default.
1202    ///
1203    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/memory64
1204    pub fn wasm_memory64(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1205        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::MEMORY64, enable);
1206        self
1207    }
1208
1209    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly extended-const [proposal] will
1210    /// be enabled for compilation.
1211    ///
1212    /// This is `true` by default.
1213    ///
1214    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/extended-const
1215    pub fn wasm_extended_const(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1216        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::EXTENDED_CONST, enable);
1217        self
1218    }
1219
1220    /// Configures whether the [WebAssembly stack switching
1221    /// proposal][proposal] will be enabled for compilation.
1222    ///
1223    /// This feature gates the use of control tags.
1224    ///
1225    /// This feature depends on the `function_reference_types` and
1226    /// `exceptions` features.
1227    ///
1228    /// This feature is `false` by default.
1229    ///
1230    /// # Errors
1231    ///
1232    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/stack-switching
1233    pub fn wasm_stack_switching(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1234        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING, enable);
1235        self
1236    }
1237
1238    /// Configures whether the WebAssembly component-model [proposal] will
1239    /// be enabled for compilation.
1240    ///
1241    /// This flag can be used to blanket disable all components within Wasmtime.
1242    /// Otherwise usage of components requires statically using
1243    /// [`Component`](crate::component::Component) instead of
1244    /// [`Module`](crate::Module) for example anyway.
1245    ///
1246    /// The default value for this option is whether the `component-model`
1247    /// crate feature of Wasmtime is enabled or not. By default this crate
1248    /// feature is enabled.
1249    ///
1250    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/webassembly/component-model
1251    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
1252    pub fn wasm_component_model(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1253        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::COMPONENT_MODEL, enable);
1254        self
1255    }
1256
1257    /// Configures whether components support the async ABI [proposal] for
1258    /// lifting and lowering functions, as well as `stream`, `future`, and
1259    /// `error-context` types.
1260    ///
1261    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1262    /// incomplete.
1263    ///
1264    /// [proposal]:
1265    ///     https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/blob/main/design/mvp/Concurrency.md
1266    #[cfg(feature = "component-model-async")]
1267    pub fn wasm_component_model_async(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1268        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC, enable);
1269        self
1270    }
1271
1272    /// This corresponds to the 🚝 emoji in the component model specification.
1273    ///
1274    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1275    /// incomplete.
1276    ///
1277    /// [proposal]:
1278    ///     https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/blob/main/design/mvp/Concurrency.md
1279    #[cfg(feature = "component-model-async")]
1280    pub fn wasm_component_model_more_async_builtins(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1281        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_MORE_ASYNC_BUILTINS, enable);
1282        self
1283    }
1284
1285    /// This corresponds to the 🚟 emoji in the component model specification.
1286    ///
1287    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1288    /// incomplete.
1289    ///
1290    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/blob/main/design/mvp/Concurrency.md
1291    #[cfg(feature = "component-model-async")]
1292    pub fn wasm_component_model_async_stackful(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1293        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC_STACKFUL, enable);
1294        self
1295    }
1296
1297    /// This corresponds to the 🧵 emoji in the component model specification.
1298    ///
1299    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1300    /// incomplete.
1301    ///
1302    /// [proposal]:
1303    ///     https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/pull/557
1304    #[cfg(feature = "component-model-async")]
1305    pub fn wasm_component_model_threading(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1306        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_THREADING, enable);
1307        self
1308    }
1309
1310    /// This corresponds to the 📝 emoji in the component model specification.
1311    ///
1312    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1313    /// incomplete.
1314    ///
1315    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/blob/main/design/mvp/Concurrency.md
1316    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
1317    pub fn wasm_component_model_error_context(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1318        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_ERROR_CONTEXT, enable);
1319        self
1320    }
1321
1322    /// Configures whether the [GC extension to the component-model
1323    /// proposal][proposal] is enabled or not.
1324    ///
1325    /// This corresponds to the 🛸 emoji in the component model specification.
1326    ///
1327    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1328    /// incomplete.
1329    ///
1330    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/component-model/issues/525
1331    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
1332    pub fn wasm_component_model_gc(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1333        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_GC, enable);
1334        self
1335    }
1336
1337    /// Configures whether the component model map type is enabled or not.
1338    ///
1339    /// This is part of the component model specification and enables the
1340    /// `map<k, v>` type in WIT and the component binary format.
1341    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
1342    pub fn wasm_component_model_map(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1343        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_MAP, enable);
1344        self
1345    }
1346
1347    /// This corresponds to the 🔧 emoji in the component model specification.
1348    ///
1349    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is _very_
1350    /// incomplete.
1351    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
1352    pub fn wasm_component_model_fixed_length_lists(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1353        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_FIXED_LENGTH_LISTS, enable);
1354        self
1355    }
1356
1357    /// This corresponds to the 🏷️ emoji in the component model specification.
1358    ///
1359    /// Please note that Wasmtime's support for this feature is a work in
1360    /// progress.
1361    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
1362    pub fn wasm_component_model_implements(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1363        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::CM_IMPLEMENTS, enable);
1364        self
1365    }
1366
1367    /// Configures whether the [Exception-handling proposal][proposal] is enabled or not.
1368    ///
1369    /// This is `true` by default.
1370    ///
1371    /// [proposal]: https://github.com/WebAssembly/exception-handling
1372    #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
1373    pub fn wasm_exceptions(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1374        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::EXCEPTIONS, enable);
1375        self
1376    }
1377
1378    #[doc(hidden)] // FIXME(#3427) - if/when implemented then un-hide this
1379    #[deprecated = "This configuration option only exists for internal \
1380                    usage with the spec testsuite. It may be removed at \
1381                    any time and without warning. Do not rely on it!"]
1382    pub fn wasm_legacy_exceptions(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1383        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::LEGACY_EXCEPTIONS, enable);
1384        self
1385    }
1386
1387    /// Configures which compilation strategy will be used for wasm modules.
1388    ///
1389    /// This method can be used to configure which compiler is used for wasm
1390    /// modules, and for more documentation consult the [`Strategy`] enumeration
1391    /// and its documentation.
1392    ///
1393    /// The default value for this is `Strategy::Auto`.
1394    ///
1395    /// # Panics
1396    ///
1397    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1398    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1399    pub fn strategy(&mut self, strategy: Strategy) -> &mut Self {
1400        self.compiler_config_mut().strategy = strategy.not_auto();
1401        self
1402    }
1403
1404    /// Configures which garbage collector will be used for Wasm modules.
1405    ///
1406    /// This method can be used to configure which garbage collector
1407    /// implementation is used for Wasm modules. For more documentation, consult
1408    /// the [`Collector`] enumeration and its documentation.
1409    ///
1410    /// The default value for this is `Collector::Auto`.
1411    #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
1412    pub fn collector(&mut self, collector: Collector) -> &mut Self {
1413        self.collector = collector;
1414        self
1415    }
1416
1417    /// Configures the initial size, in bytes, of each store's GC heap.
1418    ///
1419    /// By default all GC heaps start out at 0 bytes in size and must grow
1420    /// upwards from there. Growth happens incrementally as GC pressure happens
1421    /// and memory runs out. The amount being grown by is additionally a
1422    /// heuristic of the size of the failed allocation. By providing an initial
1423    /// size of a store's GC heap embedders can more tightly control initial
1424    /// parameters to optimize workloads that might have a predictable pattern.
1425    /// For example if workloads frequently have less than a certain threshold
1426    /// of size then that could be configured as the initial size here to avoid
1427    /// growths happening over time.
1428    ///
1429    /// Note that like WebAssembly linear memories the GC heap does not start
1430    /// with committed memory equal to this size. Instead memory is reserved,
1431    /// but then lazily allocated by the OS on access. In other words it should
1432    /// be relatively cheap to increase this value to help amortize initial
1433    /// startup cost of wasm modules.
1434    ///
1435    /// The `bytes` size is rounded up to the GC heap's page size.
1436    ///
1437    /// This only configures the initially-allocated size of the GC heap; the
1438    /// heap can still grow beyond it on demand. It is separate from
1439    /// [`Config::gc_heap_reservation`], which configures the size of the
1440    /// virtual-memory reservation (and therefore how far the heap can grow
1441    /// in place).
1442    ///
1443    /// The default value for this is 0.
1444    pub fn gc_heap_initial_size(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
1445        self.tunables.gc_heap_initial_size = Some(bytes);
1446        self
1447    }
1448
1449    /// Creates a default profiler based on the profiling strategy chosen.
1450    ///
1451    /// Profiler creation calls the type's default initializer where the purpose is
1452    /// really just to put in place the type used for profiling.
1453    ///
1454    /// Some [`ProfilingStrategy`] require specific platforms or particular feature
1455    /// to be enabled, such as `ProfilingStrategy::JitDump` requires the `jitdump`
1456    /// feature.
1457    ///
1458    /// # Errors
1459    ///
1460    /// The validation of this field is deferred until the engine is being built, and thus may
1461    /// cause [`Engine::new`] fail if the required feature is disabled, or the platform is not
1462    /// supported.
1463    pub fn profiler(&mut self, profile: ProfilingStrategy) -> &mut Self {
1464        self.profiling_strategy = profile;
1465        self
1466    }
1467
1468    /// Configures whether the debug verifier of Cranelift is enabled or not.
1469    ///
1470    /// When Cranelift is used as a code generation backend this will configure
1471    /// it to have the `enable_verifier` flag which will enable a number of debug
1472    /// checks inside of Cranelift. This is largely only useful for the
1473    /// developers of wasmtime itself.
1474    ///
1475    /// The default value for this is `false`
1476    ///
1477    /// # Panics
1478    ///
1479    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1480    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1481    pub fn cranelift_debug_verifier(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1482        let val = if enable { "true" } else { "false" };
1483        self.compiler_config_mut().settings.insert(
1484            "enable_verifier".to_string(),
1485            (val.to_string(), UserSpecified::No),
1486        );
1487        self
1488    }
1489
1490    /// Configures whether extra debug checks are inserted into
1491    /// Wasmtime-generated code by Cranelift.
1492    ///
1493    /// The default value for this is `false`
1494    ///
1495    /// # Panics
1496    ///
1497    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1498    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1499    pub fn cranelift_wasmtime_debug_checks(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1500        unsafe { self.cranelift_flag_set("wasmtime_debug_checks", &enable.to_string()) }
1501    }
1502
1503    /// Configures the Cranelift code generator optimization level.
1504    ///
1505    /// When the Cranelift code generator is used you can configure the
1506    /// optimization level used for generated code in a few various ways. For
1507    /// more information see the documentation of [`OptLevel`].
1508    ///
1509    /// The default value for this is `OptLevel::Speed`.
1510    ///
1511    /// # Panics
1512    ///
1513    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1514    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1515    pub fn cranelift_opt_level(&mut self, level: OptLevel) -> &mut Self {
1516        let val = match level {
1517            OptLevel::None => "none",
1518            OptLevel::Speed => "speed",
1519            OptLevel::SpeedAndSize => "speed_and_size",
1520        };
1521        self.compiler_config_mut().settings.insert(
1522            "opt_level".to_string(),
1523            (val.to_string(), UserSpecified::No),
1524        );
1525        self
1526    }
1527
1528    /// Configures the regalloc algorithm used by the Cranelift code generator.
1529    ///
1530    /// Cranelift can select any of several register allocator algorithms. Each
1531    /// of these algorithms generates correct code, but they represent different
1532    /// tradeoffs between compile speed (how expensive the compilation process
1533    /// is) and run-time speed (how fast the generated code runs).
1534    /// For more information see the documentation of [`RegallocAlgorithm`].
1535    ///
1536    /// The default value for this is `RegallocAlgorithm::Backtracking`.
1537    ///
1538    /// # Panics
1539    ///
1540    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1541    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1542    pub fn cranelift_regalloc_algorithm(&mut self, algo: RegallocAlgorithm) -> &mut Self {
1543        let val = match algo {
1544            RegallocAlgorithm::Backtracking => "backtracking",
1545            RegallocAlgorithm::SinglePass => "single_pass",
1546        };
1547        self.compiler_config_mut().settings.insert(
1548            "regalloc_algorithm".to_string(),
1549            (val.to_string(), UserSpecified::No),
1550        );
1551        self
1552    }
1553
1554    /// Configures whether Cranelift should perform a NaN-canonicalization pass.
1555    ///
1556    /// When Cranelift is used as a code generation backend this will configure
1557    /// it to replace NaNs with a single canonical value. This is useful for
1558    /// users requiring entirely deterministic WebAssembly computation.  This is
1559    /// not required by the WebAssembly spec, so it is not enabled by default.
1560    ///
1561    /// Note that this option affects not only WebAssembly's `f32` and `f64`
1562    /// types but additionally the `v128` type. This option will cause
1563    /// operations using any of these types to have extra checks placed after
1564    /// them to normalize NaN values as needed.
1565    ///
1566    /// The default value for this is `false`
1567    ///
1568    /// # Panics
1569    ///
1570    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1571    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1572    pub fn cranelift_nan_canonicalization(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1573        let val = if enable { "true" } else { "false" };
1574        self.compiler_config_mut().settings.insert(
1575            "enable_nan_canonicalization".to_string(),
1576            (val.to_string(), UserSpecified::No),
1577        );
1578        self
1579    }
1580
1581    /// Allows setting a Cranelift boolean flag or preset. This allows
1582    /// fine-tuning of Cranelift settings.
1583    ///
1584    /// Since Cranelift flags may be unstable, this method should not be considered to be stable
1585    /// either; other `Config` functions should be preferred for stability.
1586    ///
1587    /// # Safety
1588    ///
1589    /// This is marked as unsafe, because setting the wrong flag might break invariants,
1590    /// resulting in execution hazards.
1591    ///
1592    /// # Errors
1593    ///
1594    /// The validation of the flags are deferred until the engine is being built, and thus may
1595    /// cause [`Engine::new`] fail if the flag's name does not exist, or the value is not appropriate
1596    /// for the flag type.
1597    ///
1598    /// # Panics
1599    ///
1600    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1601    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1602    pub unsafe fn cranelift_flag_enable(&mut self, flag: &str) -> &mut Self {
1603        self.compiler_config_mut()
1604            .flags
1605            .insert(flag.to_string(), UserSpecified::Yes);
1606        self
1607    }
1608
1609    /// Allows settings another Cranelift flag defined by a flag name and value. This allows
1610    /// fine-tuning of Cranelift settings.
1611    ///
1612    /// Since Cranelift flags may be unstable, this method should not be considered to be stable
1613    /// either; other `Config` functions should be preferred for stability.
1614    ///
1615    /// # Safety
1616    ///
1617    /// This is marked as unsafe, because setting the wrong flag might break invariants,
1618    /// resulting in execution hazards.
1619    ///
1620    /// # Errors
1621    ///
1622    /// The validation of the flags are deferred until the engine is being built, and thus may
1623    /// cause [`Engine::new`] fail if the flag's name does not exist, or incompatible with other
1624    /// settings.
1625    ///
1626    /// For example, feature `wasm_backtrace` will set `unwind_info` to `true`, but if it's
1627    /// manually set to false then it will fail.
1628    ///
1629    /// # Panics
1630    ///
1631    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
1632    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
1633    pub unsafe fn cranelift_flag_set(&mut self, name: &str, value: &str) -> &mut Self {
1634        self.compiler_config_mut()
1635            .settings
1636            .insert(name.to_string(), (value.to_string(), UserSpecified::Yes));
1637        self
1638    }
1639
1640    /// Set a custom [`Cache`].
1641    ///
1642    /// To load a cache configuration from a file, use [`Cache::from_file`]. Otherwise, you can
1643    /// create a new cache config using [`CacheConfig::new`] and passing that to [`Cache::new`].
1644    ///
1645    /// If you want to disable the cache, you can call this method with `None`.
1646    ///
1647    /// By default, new configs do not have caching enabled.
1648    /// Every call to [`Module::new(my_wasm)`][crate::Module::new] will recompile `my_wasm`,
1649    /// even when it is unchanged, unless an enabled `CacheConfig` is provided.
1650    ///
1651    /// This method is only available when the `cache` feature of this crate is
1652    /// enabled.
1653    ///
1654    /// [docs]: https://bytecodealliance.github.io/wasmtime/cli-cache.html
1655    #[cfg(feature = "cache")]
1656    pub fn cache(&mut self, cache: Option<Cache>) -> &mut Self {
1657        self.cache = cache;
1658        self
1659    }
1660
1661    /// Sets a custom memory creator.
1662    ///
1663    /// Custom memory creators are used when creating host `Memory` objects or when
1664    /// creating instance linear memories for the on-demand instance allocation strategy.
1665    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
1666    pub fn with_host_memory(&mut self, mem_creator: Arc<dyn MemoryCreator>) -> &mut Self {
1667        self.mem_creator = Some(Arc::new(MemoryCreatorProxy(mem_creator)));
1668        self
1669    }
1670
1671    /// Sets a custom stack creator.
1672    ///
1673    /// Custom memory creators are used when creating creating async instance stacks for
1674    /// the on-demand instance allocation strategy.
1675    #[cfg(feature = "async")]
1676    pub fn with_host_stack(&mut self, stack_creator: Arc<dyn StackCreator>) -> &mut Self {
1677        self.stack_creator = Some(Arc::new(StackCreatorProxy(stack_creator)));
1678        self
1679    }
1680
1681    /// Sets a custom executable-memory publisher.
1682    ///
1683    /// Custom executable-memory publishers are hooks that allow
1684    /// Wasmtime to make certain regions of memory executable when
1685    /// loading precompiled modules or compiling new modules
1686    /// in-process. In most modern operating systems, memory allocated
1687    /// for heap usage is readable and writable by default but not
1688    /// executable. To jump to machine code stored in that memory, we
1689    /// need to make it executable. For security reasons, we usually
1690    /// also make it read-only at the same time, so the executing code
1691    /// can't be modified later.
1692    ///
1693    /// By default, Wasmtime will use the appropriate system calls on
1694    /// the host platform for this work. However, it also allows
1695    /// plugging in a custom implementation via this configuration
1696    /// option. This may be useful on custom or `no_std` platforms,
1697    /// for example, especially where virtual memory is not otherwise
1698    /// used by Wasmtime (no `signals-and-traps` feature).
1699    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
1700    pub fn with_custom_code_memory(
1701        &mut self,
1702        custom_code_memory: Option<Arc<dyn CustomCodeMemory>>,
1703    ) -> &mut Self {
1704        self.custom_code_memory = custom_code_memory;
1705        self
1706    }
1707
1708    /// Sets the instance allocation strategy to use.
1709    ///
1710    /// This is notably used in conjunction with
1711    /// [`InstanceAllocationStrategy::Pooling`] and [`PoolingAllocationConfig`].
1712    pub fn allocation_strategy(
1713        &mut self,
1714        strategy: impl Into<InstanceAllocationStrategy>,
1715    ) -> &mut Self {
1716        self.allocation_strategy = strategy.into();
1717        self
1718    }
1719
1720    /// Specifies the capacity of linear memories, in bytes, in their initial
1721    /// allocation.
1722    ///
1723    /// > Note: this value has important performance ramifications, be sure to
1724    /// > benchmark when setting this to a non-default value and read over this
1725    /// > documentation.
1726    ///
1727    /// This function will change the size of the initial memory allocation made
1728    /// for linear memories. This setting is only applicable when the initial
1729    /// size of a linear memory is below this threshold. Linear memories are
1730    /// allocated in the virtual address space of the host process with OS APIs
1731    /// such as `mmap` and this setting affects how large the allocation will
1732    /// be.
1733    ///
1734    /// ## Background: WebAssembly Linear Memories
1735    ///
1736    /// WebAssembly linear memories always start with a minimum size and can
1737    /// possibly grow up to a maximum size. The minimum size is always specified
1738    /// in a WebAssembly module itself and the maximum size can either be
1739    /// optionally specified in the module or inherently limited by the index
1740    /// type. For example for this module:
1741    ///
1742    /// ```wasm
1743    /// (module
1744    ///     (memory $a 4)
1745    ///     (memory $b 4096 4096 (pagesize 1))
1746    ///     (memory $c i64 10)
1747    /// )
1748    /// ```
1749    ///
1750    /// * Memory `$a` initially allocates 4 WebAssembly pages (256KiB) and can
1751    ///   grow up to 4GiB, the limit of the 32-bit index space.
1752    /// * Memory `$b` initially allocates 4096 WebAssembly pages, but in this
1753    ///   case its page size is 1, so it's 4096 bytes. Memory can also grow no
1754    ///   further meaning that it will always be 4096 bytes.
1755    /// * Memory `$c` is a 64-bit linear memory which starts with 640KiB of
1756    ///   memory and can theoretically grow up to 2^64 bytes, although most
1757    ///   hosts will run out of memory long before that.
1758    ///
1759    /// All operations on linear memories done by wasm are required to be
1760    /// in-bounds. Any access beyond the end of a linear memory is considered a
1761    /// trap.
1762    ///
1763    /// ## What this setting affects: Virtual Memory
1764    ///
1765    /// This setting is used to configure the behavior of the size of the linear
1766    /// memory allocation performed for each of these memories. For example the
1767    /// initial linear memory allocation looks like this:
1768    ///
1769    /// ```text
1770    ///              memory_reservation
1771    ///                    |
1772    ///          ◄─────────┴────────────────►
1773    /// ┌───────┬─────────┬──────────────────┬───────┐
1774    /// │ guard │ initial │ ... capacity ... │ guard │
1775    /// └───────┴─────────┴──────────────────┴───────┘
1776    ///  ◄──┬──►                              ◄──┬──►
1777    ///     │                                    │
1778    ///     │                             memory_guard_size
1779    ///     │
1780    ///     │
1781    ///  memory_guard_size (if guard_before_linear_memory)
1782    /// ```
1783    ///
1784    /// Memory in the `initial` range is accessible to the instance and can be
1785    /// read/written by wasm code. Memory in the `guard` regions is never
1786    /// accessible to wasm code and memory in `capacity` is initially
1787    /// inaccessible but may become accessible through `memory.grow` instructions
1788    /// for example.
1789    ///
1790    /// This means that this setting is the size of the initial chunk of virtual
1791    /// memory that a linear memory may grow into.
1792    ///
1793    /// ## What this setting affects: Runtime Speed
1794    ///
1795    /// This is a performance-sensitive setting which is taken into account
1796    /// during the compilation process of a WebAssembly module. For example if a
1797    /// 32-bit WebAssembly linear memory has a `memory_reservation` size of 4GiB
1798    /// then bounds checks can be elided because `capacity` will be guaranteed
1799    /// to be unmapped for all addressable bytes that wasm can access (modulo a
1800    /// few details).
1801    ///
1802    /// If `memory_reservation` was something smaller like 256KiB then that
1803    /// would have a much smaller impact on virtual memory but the compile code
1804    /// would then need to have explicit bounds checks to ensure that
1805    /// loads/stores are in-bounds.
1806    ///
1807    /// The goal of this setting is to enable skipping bounds checks in most
1808    /// modules by default. Some situations which require explicit bounds checks
1809    /// though are:
1810    ///
1811    /// * When `memory_reservation` is smaller than the addressable size of the
1812    ///   linear memory. For example if 64-bit linear memories always need
1813    ///   bounds checks as they can address the entire virtual address spacce.
1814    ///   For 32-bit linear memories a `memory_reservation` minimum size of 4GiB
1815    ///   is required to elide bounds checks.
1816    ///
1817    /// * When linear memories have a page size of 1 then bounds checks are
1818    ///   required. In this situation virtual memory can't be relied upon
1819    ///   because that operates at the host page size granularity where wasm
1820    ///   requires a per-byte level granularity.
1821    ///
1822    /// * Configuration settings such as [`Config::signals_based_traps`] can be
1823    ///   used to disable the use of signal handlers and virtual memory so
1824    ///   explicit bounds checks are required.
1825    ///
1826    /// * When [`Config::memory_guard_size`] is too small a bounds check may be
1827    ///   required. For 32-bit wasm addresses are actually 33-bit effective
1828    ///   addresses because loads/stores have a 32-bit static offset to add to
1829    ///   the dynamic 32-bit address. If the static offset is larger than the
1830    ///   size of the guard region then an explicit bounds check is required.
1831    ///
1832    /// ## What this setting affects: Memory Growth Behavior
1833    ///
1834    /// In addition to affecting bounds checks emitted in compiled code this
1835    /// setting also affects how WebAssembly linear memories are grown. The
1836    /// `memory.grow` instruction can be used to make a linear memory larger and
1837    /// this is also affected by APIs such as
1838    /// [`Memory::grow`](crate::Memory::grow).
1839    ///
1840    /// In these situations when the amount being grown is small enough to fit
1841    /// within the remaining capacity then the linear memory doesn't have to be
1842    /// moved at runtime. If the capacity runs out though then a new linear
1843    /// memory allocation must be made and the contents of linear memory is
1844    /// copied over.
1845    ///
1846    /// For example here's a situation where a copy happens:
1847    ///
1848    /// * The `memory_reservation` setting is configured to 128KiB.
1849    /// * A WebAssembly linear memory starts with a single 64KiB page.
1850    /// * This memory can be grown by one page to contain the full 128KiB of
1851    ///   memory.
1852    /// * If grown by one more page, though, then a 192KiB allocation must be
1853    ///   made and the previous 128KiB of contents are copied into the new
1854    ///   allocation.
1855    ///
1856    /// This growth behavior can have a significant performance impact if lots
1857    /// of data needs to be copied on growth. Conversely if memory growth never
1858    /// needs to happen because the capacity will always be large enough then
1859    /// optimizations can be applied to cache the base pointer of linear memory.
1860    ///
1861    /// When memory is grown then the
1862    /// [`Config::memory_reservation_for_growth`] is used for the new
1863    /// memory allocation to have memory to grow into.
1864    ///
1865    /// When using the pooling allocator via [`PoolingAllocationConfig`] then
1866    /// memories are never allowed to move so requests for growth are instead
1867    /// rejected with an error.
1868    ///
1869    /// ## When this setting is not used
1870    ///
1871    /// This setting is ignored and unused when the initial size of linear
1872    /// memory is larger than this threshold. For example if this setting is set
1873    /// to 1MiB but a wasm module requires a 2MiB minimum allocation then this
1874    /// setting is ignored. In this situation the minimum size of memory will be
1875    /// allocated along with [`Config::memory_reservation_for_growth`]
1876    /// after it to grow into.
1877    ///
1878    /// That means that this value can be set to zero. That can be useful in
1879    /// benchmarking to see the overhead of bounds checks for example.
1880    /// Additionally it can be used to minimize the virtual memory allocated by
1881    /// Wasmtime.
1882    ///
1883    /// ## Default Value
1884    ///
1885    /// The default value for this property depends on the host platform. For
1886    /// 64-bit platforms there's lots of address space available, so the default
1887    /// configured here is 4GiB. When coupled with the default size of
1888    /// [`Config::memory_guard_size`] this means that 32-bit WebAssembly linear
1889    /// memories with 64KiB page sizes will skip almost all bounds checks by
1890    /// default.
1891    ///
1892    /// For 32-bit platforms this value defaults to 10MiB. This means that
1893    /// bounds checks will be required on 32-bit platforms.
1894    pub fn memory_reservation(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
1895        self.tunables.memory_reservation = Some(bytes);
1896        self
1897    }
1898
1899    /// Indicates whether linear memories may relocate their base pointer at
1900    /// runtime.
1901    ///
1902    /// WebAssembly linear memories either have a maximum size that's explicitly
1903    /// listed in the type of a memory or inherently limited by the index type
1904    /// of the memory (e.g. 4GiB for 32-bit linear memories). Depending on how
1905    /// the linear memory is allocated (see [`Config::memory_reservation`]) it
1906    /// may be necessary to move the memory in the host's virtual address space
1907    /// during growth. This option controls whether this movement is allowed or
1908    /// not.
1909    ///
1910    /// An example of a linear memory needing to move is when
1911    /// [`Config::memory_reservation`] is 0 then a linear memory will be
1912    /// allocated as the minimum size of the memory plus
1913    /// [`Config::memory_reservation_for_growth`]. When memory grows beyond the
1914    /// reservation for growth then the memory needs to be relocated.
1915    ///
1916    /// When this option is set to `false` then it can have a number of impacts
1917    /// on how memories work at runtime:
1918    ///
1919    /// * Modules can be compiled with static knowledge the base pointer of
1920    ///   linear memory never changes to enable optimizations such as
1921    ///   loop invariant code motion (hoisting the base pointer out of a loop).
1922    ///
1923    /// * Memories cannot grow in excess of their original allocation. This
1924    ///   means that [`Config::memory_reservation`] and
1925    ///   [`Config::memory_reservation_for_growth`] may need tuning to ensure
1926    ///   the memory configuration works at runtime.
1927    ///
1928    /// The default value for this option is `true`.
1929    pub fn memory_may_move(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
1930        self.tunables.memory_may_move = Some(enable);
1931        self
1932    }
1933
1934    /// Configures the size, in bytes, of the guard region used at the end of a
1935    /// linear memory's address space reservation.
1936    ///
1937    /// > Note: this value has important performance ramifications, be sure to
1938    /// > understand what this value does before tweaking it and benchmarking.
1939    ///
1940    /// This setting controls how many bytes are guaranteed to be unmapped after
1941    /// the virtual memory allocation of a linear memory. When
1942    /// combined with sufficiently large values of
1943    /// [`Config::memory_reservation`] (e.g. 4GiB for 32-bit linear memories)
1944    /// then a guard region can be used to eliminate bounds checks in generated
1945    /// code.
1946    ///
1947    /// This setting additionally can be used to help deduplicate bounds checks
1948    /// in code that otherwise requires bounds checks. For example with a 4KiB
1949    /// guard region then a 64-bit linear memory which accesses addresses `x+8`
1950    /// and `x+16` only needs to perform a single bounds check on `x`. If that
1951    /// bounds check passes then the offset is guaranteed to either reside in
1952    /// linear memory or the guard region, resulting in deterministic behavior
1953    /// either way.
1954    ///
1955    /// ## How big should the guard be?
1956    ///
1957    /// In general, like with configuring [`Config::memory_reservation`], you
1958    /// probably don't want to change this value from the defaults. Removing
1959    /// bounds checks is dependent on a number of factors where the size of the
1960    /// guard region is only one piece of the equation. Other factors include:
1961    ///
1962    /// * [`Config::memory_reservation`]
1963    /// * The index type of the linear memory (e.g. 32-bit or 64-bit)
1964    /// * The page size of the linear memory
1965    /// * Other settings such as [`Config::signals_based_traps`]
1966    ///
1967    /// Embeddings using virtual memory almost always want at least some guard
1968    /// region, but otherwise changes from the default should be profiled
1969    /// locally to see the performance impact.
1970    ///
1971    /// ## Default
1972    ///
1973    /// The default value for this property is 32MiB on 64-bit platforms. This
1974    /// allows eliminating almost all bounds checks on loads/stores with an
1975    /// immediate offset of less than 32MiB. On 32-bit platforms this defaults
1976    /// to 64KiB.
1977    pub fn memory_guard_size(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
1978        self.tunables.memory_guard_size = Some(bytes);
1979        self
1980    }
1981
1982    /// Configures the size, in bytes, of the extra virtual memory space
1983    /// reserved after a linear memory is relocated.
1984    ///
1985    /// This setting is used in conjunction with [`Config::memory_reservation`]
1986    /// to configure what happens after a linear memory is relocated in the host
1987    /// address space. If the initial size of a linear memory exceeds
1988    /// [`Config::memory_reservation`] or if it grows beyond that size
1989    /// throughout its lifetime then this setting will be used.
1990    ///
1991    /// When a linear memory is relocated it will initially look like this:
1992    ///
1993    /// ```text
1994    ///            memory.size
1995    ///                 │
1996    ///          ◄──────┴─────►
1997    /// ┌───────┬──────────────┬───────┐
1998    /// │ guard │  accessible  │ guard │
1999    /// └───────┴──────────────┴───────┘
2000    ///                         ◄──┬──►
2001    ///                            │
2002    ///                     memory_guard_size
2003    /// ```
2004    ///
2005    /// where `accessible` needs to be grown but there's no more memory to grow
2006    /// into. A new region of the virtual address space will be allocated that
2007    /// looks like this:
2008    ///
2009    /// ```text
2010    ///                           memory_reservation_for_growth
2011    ///                                       │
2012    ///            memory.size                │
2013    ///                 │                     │
2014    ///          ◄──────┴─────► ◄─────────────┴───────────►
2015    /// ┌───────┬──────────────┬───────────────────────────┬───────┐
2016    /// │ guard │  accessible  │ .. reserved for growth .. │ guard │
2017    /// └───────┴──────────────┴───────────────────────────┴───────┘
2018    ///                                                     ◄──┬──►
2019    ///                                                        │
2020    ///                                               memory_guard_size
2021    /// ```
2022    ///
2023    /// This means that up to `memory_reservation_for_growth` bytes can be
2024    /// allocated again before the entire linear memory needs to be moved again
2025    /// when another `memory_reservation_for_growth` bytes will be appended to
2026    /// the size of the allocation.
2027    ///
2028    /// Note that this is a currently simple heuristic for optimizing the growth
2029    /// of dynamic memories, primarily implemented for the memory64 proposal
2030    /// where the maximum size of memory is larger than 4GiB. This setting is
2031    /// unlikely to be a one-size-fits-all style approach and if you're an
2032    /// embedder running into issues with growth and are interested in having
2033    /// other growth strategies available here please feel free to [open an
2034    /// issue on the Wasmtime repository][issue]!
2035    ///
2036    /// [issue]: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/new
2037    ///
2038    /// ## Default
2039    ///
2040    /// For 64-bit platforms this defaults to 2GiB, and for 32-bit platforms
2041    /// this defaults to 1MiB.
2042    pub fn memory_reservation_for_growth(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
2043        self.tunables.memory_reservation_for_growth = Some(bytes);
2044        self
2045    }
2046
2047    /// Configures the initial size, in bytes, to be allocated for GC heaps.
2048    ///
2049    /// This is similar to [`Config::memory_reservation`] but applies to the GC
2050    /// heap rather than to linear memories. See that method for more details
2051    /// on what "reservation" means and the implications of this setting.
2052    ///
2053    /// ## Default
2054    ///
2055    /// If none of the `gc_heap_*` tunables are explicitly configured, they
2056    /// default to the same values as their `memory_*` counterparts. Otherwise,
2057    /// the default value for this property depends on the host platform: for
2058    /// 64-bit platforms this defaults to 4GiB, and for 32-bit platforms this
2059    /// defaults to 10MiB.
2060    pub fn gc_heap_reservation(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
2061        self.tunables.gc_heap_reservation = Some(bytes);
2062        self
2063    }
2064
2065    /// Configures the size, in bytes, of the guard page region for GC heaps.
2066    ///
2067    /// This is similar to [`Config::memory_guard_size`] but applies to the GC
2068    /// heap rather than to linear memories. See that method for more details on
2069    /// what guard pages are and the implications of this setting.
2070    ///
2071    /// ## Default
2072    ///
2073    /// If none of the `gc_heap_*` tunables are explicitly configured, they
2074    /// default to the same values as their `memory_*` counterparts. Otherwise,
2075    /// the default value for this property is 32MiB on 64-bit platforms and
2076    /// 64KiB on 32-bit platforms.
2077    pub fn gc_heap_guard_size(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
2078        self.tunables.gc_heap_guard_size = Some(bytes);
2079        self
2080    }
2081
2082    /// Configures the size, in bytes, of the extra virtual memory space
2083    /// reserved after a GC heap is relocated.
2084    ///
2085    /// This is similar to [`Config::memory_reservation_for_growth`] but applies
2086    /// to the GC heap rather than to linear memories. See that method for more
2087    /// details.
2088    ///
2089    /// ## Default
2090    ///
2091    /// If none of the `gc_heap_*` tunables are explicitly configured, they
2092    /// default to the same values as their `memory_*` counterparts. Otherwise,
2093    /// for 64-bit platforms this defaults to 2GiB, and for 32-bit platforms
2094    /// this defaults to 1MiB.
2095    pub fn gc_heap_reservation_for_growth(&mut self, bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
2096        self.tunables.gc_heap_reservation_for_growth = Some(bytes);
2097        self
2098    }
2099
2100    /// Indicates whether GC heaps are allowed to be reallocated after initial
2101    /// allocation at runtime.
2102    ///
2103    /// This is similar to [`Config::memory_may_move`] but applies to the GC
2104    /// heap rather than to linear memories. See that method for more details.
2105    ///
2106    /// ## Default
2107    ///
2108    /// If none of the `gc_heap_*` tunables are explicitly configured, they
2109    /// default to the same values as their `memory_*` counterparts. Otherwise,
2110    /// the default value for this option is `true`.
2111    pub fn gc_heap_may_move(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
2112        self.tunables.gc_heap_may_move = Some(enable);
2113        self
2114    }
2115
2116    /// Indicates whether a guard region is present before allocations of
2117    /// linear memory.
2118    ///
2119    /// Guard regions before linear memories are never used during normal
2120    /// operation of WebAssembly modules, even if they have out-of-bounds
2121    /// loads. The only purpose for a preceding guard region in linear memory
2122    /// is extra protection against possible bugs in code generators like
2123    /// Cranelift. This setting does not affect performance in any way, but will
2124    /// result in larger virtual memory reservations for linear memories (it
2125    /// won't actually ever use more memory, just use more of the address
2126    /// space).
2127    ///
2128    /// The size of the guard region before linear memory is the same as the
2129    /// guard size that comes after linear memory, which is configured by
2130    /// [`Config::memory_guard_size`].
2131    ///
2132    /// ## Default
2133    ///
2134    /// This value defaults to `true`.
2135    pub fn guard_before_linear_memory(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
2136        self.tunables.guard_before_linear_memory = Some(enable);
2137        self
2138    }
2139
2140    /// Indicates whether to initialize tables lazily, so that instantiation
2141    /// is fast but indirect calls are a little slower. If false, tables
2142    /// are initialized eagerly during instantiation from any active element
2143    /// segments that apply to them.
2144    ///
2145    /// **Note** Disabling this option is not compatible with the Winch compiler.
2146    ///
2147    /// ## Default
2148    ///
2149    /// This value defaults to `true`.
2150    pub fn table_lazy_init(&mut self, table_lazy_init: bool) -> &mut Self {
2151        self.tunables.table_lazy_init = Some(table_lazy_init);
2152        self
2153    }
2154
2155    /// Configure the version information used in serialized and deserialized [`crate::Module`]s.
2156    /// This effects the behavior of [`crate::Module::serialize()`], as well as
2157    /// [`crate::Module::deserialize()`] and related functions.
2158    ///
2159    /// The default strategy is to use the wasmtime crate's Cargo package version.
2160    pub fn module_version(&mut self, strategy: ModuleVersionStrategy) -> Result<&mut Self> {
2161        match strategy {
2162            // This case requires special precondition for assertion in SerializedModule::to_bytes
2163            ModuleVersionStrategy::Custom(ref v) => {
2164                if v.as_bytes().len() > 255 {
2165                    bail!("custom module version cannot be more than 255 bytes: {v}");
2166                }
2167            }
2168            _ => {}
2169        }
2170        self.module_version = strategy;
2171        Ok(self)
2172    }
2173
2174    /// Configure whether wasmtime should compile a module using multiple
2175    /// threads.
2176    ///
2177    /// Disabling this will result in a single thread being used to compile
2178    /// the wasm bytecode.
2179    ///
2180    /// By default parallel compilation is enabled.
2181    #[cfg(feature = "parallel-compilation")]
2182    pub fn parallel_compilation(&mut self, parallel: bool) -> &mut Self {
2183        self.parallel_compilation = parallel;
2184        self
2185    }
2186
2187    /// Configures whether compiled artifacts will contain information to map
2188    /// native program addresses back to the original wasm module.
2189    ///
2190    /// This configuration option is `true` by default and, if enabled,
2191    /// generates the appropriate tables in compiled modules to map from native
2192    /// address back to wasm source addresses. This is used for displaying wasm
2193    /// program counters in backtraces as well as generating filenames/line
2194    /// numbers if so configured as well (and the original wasm module has DWARF
2195    /// debugging information present).
2196    pub fn generate_address_map(&mut self, generate: bool) -> &mut Self {
2197        self.tunables.generate_address_map = Some(generate);
2198        self
2199    }
2200
2201    /// Configures whether copy-on-write memory-mapped data is used to
2202    /// initialize a linear memory.
2203    ///
2204    /// Initializing linear memory via a copy-on-write mapping can drastically
2205    /// improve instantiation costs of a WebAssembly module because copying
2206    /// memory is deferred. Additionally if a page of memory is only ever read
2207    /// from WebAssembly and never written too then the same underlying page of
2208    /// data will be reused between all instantiations of a module meaning that
2209    /// if a module is instantiated many times this can lower the overall memory
2210    /// required needed to run that module.
2211    ///
2212    /// The main disadvantage of copy-on-write initialization, however, is that
2213    /// it may be possible for highly-parallel scenarios to be less scalable. If
2214    /// a page is read initially by a WebAssembly module then that page will be
2215    /// mapped to a read-only copy shared between all WebAssembly instances. If
2216    /// the same page is then written, however, then a private copy is created
2217    /// and swapped out from the read-only version. This also requires an [IPI],
2218    /// however, which can be a significant bottleneck in high-parallelism
2219    /// situations.
2220    ///
2221    /// This feature is only applicable when a WebAssembly module meets specific
2222    /// criteria to be initialized in this fashion, such as:
2223    ///
2224    /// * Only memories defined in the module can be initialized this way.
2225    /// * Data segments for memory must use statically known offsets.
2226    /// * Data segments for memory must all be in-bounds.
2227    ///
2228    /// Modules which do not meet these criteria will fall back to
2229    /// initialization of linear memory based on copying memory.
2230    ///
2231    /// This feature of Wasmtime is also platform-specific:
2232    ///
2233    /// * Linux - this feature is supported for all instances of [`Module`].
2234    ///   Modules backed by an existing mmap (such as those created by
2235    ///   [`Module::deserialize_file`]) will reuse that mmap to cow-initialize
2236    ///   memory. Other instance of [`Module`] may use the `memfd_create`
2237    ///   syscall to create an initialization image to `mmap`.
2238    /// * Unix (not Linux) - this feature is only supported when loading modules
2239    ///   from a precompiled file via [`Module::deserialize_file`] where there
2240    ///   is a file descriptor to use to map data into the process. Note that
2241    ///   the module must have been compiled with this setting enabled as well.
2242    /// * Windows - there is no support for this feature at this time. Memory
2243    ///   initialization will always copy bytes.
2244    ///
2245    /// By default this option is enabled.
2246    ///
2247    /// [`Module::deserialize_file`]: crate::Module::deserialize_file
2248    /// [`Module`]: crate::Module
2249    /// [IPI]: https://en.wikipedia.org/wiki/Inter-processor_interrupt
2250    pub fn memory_init_cow(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
2251        self.tunables.memory_init_cow = Some(enable);
2252        self
2253    }
2254
2255    /// A configuration option to force the usage of `memfd_create` on Linux to
2256    /// be used as the backing source for a module's initial memory image.
2257    ///
2258    /// When [`Config::memory_init_cow`] is enabled, which is enabled by
2259    /// default, module memory initialization images are taken from a module's
2260    /// original mmap if possible. If a precompiled module was loaded from disk
2261    /// this means that the disk's file is used as an mmap source for the
2262    /// initial linear memory contents. This option can be used to force, on
2263    /// Linux, that instead of using the original file on disk a new in-memory
2264    /// file is created with `memfd_create` to hold the contents of the initial
2265    /// image.
2266    ///
2267    /// This option can be used to avoid possibly loading the contents of memory
2268    /// from disk through a page fault. Instead with `memfd_create` the contents
2269    /// of memory are always in RAM, meaning that even page faults which
2270    /// initially populate a wasm linear memory will only work with RAM instead
2271    /// of ever hitting the disk that the original precompiled module is stored
2272    /// on.
2273    ///
2274    /// This option is disabled by default.
2275    pub fn force_memory_init_memfd(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
2276        self.force_memory_init_memfd = enable;
2277        self
2278    }
2279
2280    /// Configures whether or not a coredump should be generated and attached to
2281    /// the [`Error`](crate::Error) when a trap is raised.
2282    ///
2283    /// This option is disabled by default.
2284    #[cfg(feature = "coredump")]
2285    pub fn coredump_on_trap(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
2286        self.coredump_on_trap = enable;
2287        self
2288    }
2289
2290    /// Enables memory error checking for wasm programs.
2291    ///
2292    /// This option is disabled by default.
2293    ///
2294    /// # Panics
2295    ///
2296    /// Panics if this configuration's compiler was [disabled][Config::enable_compiler].
2297    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
2298    pub fn wmemcheck(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
2299        self.wmemcheck = enable;
2300        self.compiler_config_mut().wmemcheck = enable;
2301        self
2302    }
2303
2304    /// Configures the "guaranteed dense image size" for copy-on-write
2305    /// initialized memories.
2306    ///
2307    /// When using the [`Config::memory_init_cow`] feature to initialize memory
2308    /// efficiently (which is enabled by default), compiled modules contain an
2309    /// image of the module's initial heap. If the module has a fairly sparse
2310    /// initial heap, with just a few data segments at very different offsets,
2311    /// this could result in a large region of zero bytes in the image. In
2312    /// other words, it's not very memory-efficient.
2313    ///
2314    /// We normally use a heuristic to avoid this: if less than half
2315    /// of the initialized range (first non-zero to last non-zero
2316    /// byte) of any memory in the module has pages with nonzero
2317    /// bytes, then we avoid creating a memory image for the entire module.
2318    ///
2319    /// However, if the embedder always needs the instantiation-time efficiency
2320    /// of copy-on-write initialization, and is otherwise carefully controlling
2321    /// parameters of the modules (for example, by limiting the maximum heap
2322    /// size of the modules), then it may be desirable to ensure a memory image
2323    /// is created even if this could go against the heuristic above. Thus, we
2324    /// add another condition: there is a size of initialized data region up to
2325    /// which we *always* allow a memory image. The embedder can set this to a
2326    /// known maximum heap size if they desire to always get the benefits of
2327    /// copy-on-write images.
2328    ///
2329    /// In the future we may implement a "best of both worlds"
2330    /// solution where we have a dense image up to some limit, and
2331    /// then support a sparse list of initializers beyond that; this
2332    /// would get most of the benefit of copy-on-write and pay the incremental
2333    /// cost of eager initialization only for those bits of memory
2334    /// that are out-of-bounds. However, for now, an embedder desiring
2335    /// fast instantiation should ensure that this setting is as large
2336    /// as the maximum module initial memory content size.
2337    ///
2338    /// By default this value is 16 MiB.
2339    pub fn memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size(&mut self, size_in_bytes: u64) -> &mut Self {
2340        self.memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size = size_in_bytes;
2341        self
2342    }
2343
2344    /// Whether to enable function inlining during compilation or not.
2345    ///
2346    /// This may result in faster execution at runtime, but adds additional
2347    /// compilation time. Inlining may also enlarge the size of compiled
2348    /// artifacts (for example, the size of the result of
2349    /// [`Engine::precompile_component`]).
2350    ///
2351    /// Inlining is not supported by all of Wasmtime's compilation strategies;
2352    /// currently, it only Cranelift supports it. This setting will be ignored
2353    /// when using a compilation strategy that does not support inlining, like
2354    /// Winch.
2355    ///
2356    /// The default value for this is `Inlining::No`.
2357    pub fn compiler_inlining(&mut self, inlining: Inlining) -> &mut Self {
2358        self.tunables.inlining = Some(inlining);
2359        self
2360    }
2361
2362    /// Returns the set of features that the currently selected compiler backend
2363    /// does not support at all and may panic on.
2364    ///
2365    /// Wasmtime strives to reject unknown modules or unsupported modules with
2366    /// first-class errors instead of panics. Not all compiler backends have the
2367    /// same level of feature support on all platforms as well. This method
2368    /// returns a set of features that the currently selected compiler
2369    /// configuration is known to not support and may panic on. This acts as a
2370    /// first-level filter on incoming wasm modules/configuration to fail-fast
2371    /// instead of panicking later on.
2372    ///
2373    /// Note that if a feature is not returned here it does not mean that the
2374    /// backend fully supports the proposal. Instead that means that the backend
2375    /// doesn't ever panic on the proposal, but errors during compilation may
2376    /// still be returned. This means that features listed here are definitely
2377    /// not supported at all, but features not listed here may still be
2378    /// partially supported. For example at the time of this writing the Winch
2379    /// backend partially supports simd so it's not listed here. Winch doesn't
2380    /// fully support simd but unimplemented instructions just return errors.
2381    fn compiler_panicking_wasm_features(&self) -> WasmFeatures {
2382        // First we compute the set of features that Wasmtime itself knows;
2383        // this is a sort of "maximal set" that we invert to create a set
2384        // of features we _definitely can't support_ because wasmtime
2385        // has never heard of them.
2386        let features_known_to_wasmtime = WasmFeatures::WASM3
2387            | WasmFeatures::SHARED_EVERYTHING_THREADS
2388            | WasmFeatures::COMPONENT_MODEL
2389            | WasmFeatures::CUSTOM_PAGE_SIZES
2390            | WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING
2391            | WasmFeatures::WIDE_ARITHMETIC
2392            | WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC
2393            | WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC_STACKFUL
2394            | WasmFeatures::CM_MORE_ASYNC_BUILTINS
2395            | WasmFeatures::CM_THREADING
2396            | WasmFeatures::CM_ERROR_CONTEXT
2397            | WasmFeatures::CM_GC
2398            | WasmFeatures::CM_MAP
2399            | WasmFeatures::CM_FIXED_LENGTH_LISTS
2400            | WasmFeatures::CM_IMPLEMENTS;
2401
2402        #[allow(unused_mut, reason = "easier to avoid #[cfg]")]
2403        let mut unsupported = !features_known_to_wasmtime;
2404
2405        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
2406        match self.compiler_config.as_ref().and_then(|c| c.strategy) {
2407            None | Some(Strategy::Cranelift) => {
2408                // Pulley at this time fundamentally doesn't support the
2409                // `threads` proposal, notably shared memory, because Rust can't
2410                // safely implement loads/stores in the face of shared memory.
2411                // Stack switching is not implemented, either.
2412                if self.compiler_target().is_pulley() {
2413                    unsupported |= WasmFeatures::THREADS;
2414                    unsupported |= WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING;
2415                }
2416
2417                use target_lexicon::*;
2418                match self.compiler_target() {
2419                    Triple {
2420                        architecture: Architecture::X86_64 | Architecture::X86_64h,
2421                        operating_system:
2422                            OperatingSystem::Linux
2423                            | OperatingSystem::MacOSX(_)
2424                            | OperatingSystem::Darwin(_),
2425                        ..
2426                    } => {
2427                        // Stack switching supported on (non-Pulley) Cranelift.
2428                    }
2429
2430                    _ => {
2431                        // On platforms other than x64 Unix-like, we don't
2432                        // support stack switching.
2433                        unsupported |= WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING;
2434                    }
2435                }
2436            }
2437            Some(Strategy::Winch) => {
2438                unsupported |= WasmFeatures::GC
2439                    | WasmFeatures::FUNCTION_REFERENCES
2440                    | WasmFeatures::RELAXED_SIMD
2441                    | WasmFeatures::TAIL_CALL
2442                    | WasmFeatures::GC_TYPES
2443                    | WasmFeatures::EXCEPTIONS
2444                    | WasmFeatures::LEGACY_EXCEPTIONS
2445                    | WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING;
2446                match self.compiler_target().architecture {
2447                    target_lexicon::Architecture::Aarch64(_) => {
2448                        unsupported |= WasmFeatures::THREADS;
2449                    }
2450
2451                    // Winch doesn't support other non-x64 architectures at this
2452                    // time either but will return an first-class error for
2453                    // them.
2454                    _ => {}
2455                }
2456            }
2457            Some(Strategy::Auto) => unreachable!(),
2458        }
2459        unsupported
2460    }
2461
2462    /// Calculates the set of features that are enabled for this `Config`.
2463    ///
2464    /// This is a bit of a subtle function which takes into account inputs such
2465    /// as the default set of features Wasmtime has enabled, the currently
2466    /// enabled compiler, the currently enabled target, compile-time crate
2467    /// features, and explicitly configured wasm proposals. This function does
2468    /// not return a fixed set of all proposals in all cases as it's a bit more
2469    /// nuanced than that.
2470    ///
2471    /// This method internally will start with an empty set of features to
2472    /// avoid being tied to wasmparser's defaults. Next Wasmtime's set of
2473    /// default features are added to this set, some of which are conditional
2474    /// depending on crate features. Finally explicitly requested features via
2475    /// `wasm_*` methods on `Config` are applied. Everything is then validated
2476    /// later in `Config::validate`.
2477    ///
2478    /// Note that the validation later on in `Config::validate` is a crucial
2479    /// step here. The returned features here might include features unsupported
2480    /// at compile time or unsupported by the selected compiler. In that case
2481    /// `Config::validate` will present a first-class error message indicating
2482    /// what's going on, and users should in theory be able to understand "ok
2483    /// yeah that's why I can't enable that feature here".
2484    fn features(&self) -> WasmFeatures {
2485        // Start with an empty set of wasm features. This notably decouples
2486        // features in Wasmtime from features in wasmparser as the two are
2487        // generally on different timelines.
2488        let mut features = WasmFeatures::empty();
2489
2490        // Next add in all on-by-default features that Wasmtime has which are
2491        // subject to the criteria at
2492        // https://docs.wasmtime.dev/contributing-implementing-wasm-proposals.html
2493        // and https://docs.wasmtime.dev/stability-wasm-proposals.html.
2494        //
2495        // Note that the first entry here, `WASM3`, is a fixed feature set that
2496        // won't change over time in wasmparser which represents the union of
2497        // all on-by-default features in Wasmtime. Also note that this is
2498        // further refined in the conditional section below based on crate
2499        // features.
2500        features |= WasmFeatures::WASM3;
2501
2502        // features |= WasmFeatures::YOUR_WASM_FEATURE;
2503        // ...
2504
2505        // NB: if you add a feature above this line please double-check
2506        // https://docs.wasmtime.dev/stability-wasm-proposals.html
2507        // to ensure all requirements are met and/or update the documentation
2508        // there too.
2509
2510        // Next configure some features further based on compile-time features
2511        // of the wasmtime crate itself. For example if "gc" is disabled then
2512        // `GC_TYPES` are disabled (a wasmparser pseudo-feature) as well as
2513        // exceptions, but reference-types is still available (e.g. new
2514        // encodings/types/etc).
2515        //
2516        // These features are all "on by default" in effect but dependent on
2517        // compile-time support being available.
2518        features.set(WasmFeatures::GC_TYPES, cfg!(feature = "gc"));
2519        features.set(WasmFeatures::EXCEPTIONS, cfg!(feature = "gc"));
2520        features.set(WasmFeatures::THREADS, cfg!(feature = "threads"));
2521        features.set(
2522            WasmFeatures::COMPONENT_MODEL,
2523            cfg!(feature = "component-model"),
2524        );
2525        features.set(
2526            WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC,
2527            self.tunables
2528                .concurrency_support
2529                .unwrap_or(cfg!(feature = "component-model-async")),
2530        );
2531
2532        // Next disable any features which the current compiler/target do not
2533        // support. This handles cases where Winch, for example, doesn't
2534        // implement a feature yet but Cranelift does. Or maybe Cranelift only
2535        // supports one particular platform and not others. Things like that.
2536        features = features & !self.compiler_panicking_wasm_features();
2537
2538        // And, finally, process all explicitly enabled/disabled features on
2539        // behalf of the embedder's frobbing `Config::wasm_*`. These have the
2540        // highest priority since they were explicitly requested.
2541        debug_assert!((self.enabled_features & self.disabled_features).is_empty());
2542        features &= !self.disabled_features;
2543        features |= self.enabled_features;
2544
2545        features
2546    }
2547
2548    /// Returns the configured compiler target for this `Config`.
2549    pub(crate) fn compiler_target(&self) -> target_lexicon::Triple {
2550        // If a target is explicitly configured, always use that.
2551        if let Some(target) = self.target.clone() {
2552            return target;
2553        }
2554
2555        // If the `build.rs` script determined that this platform uses pulley by
2556        // default, then use Pulley.
2557        if cfg!(default_target_pulley) {
2558            return target_lexicon::Triple::pulley_host();
2559        }
2560
2561        // And at this point the target is for sure the host.
2562        target_lexicon::Triple::host()
2563    }
2564
2565    /// Returns `true` if any of the `gc_heap_*` tunables have been explicitly
2566    /// configured.
2567    fn any_gc_heap_tunables_configured(&self) -> bool {
2568        self.tunables.gc_heap_reservation.is_some()
2569            || self.tunables.gc_heap_guard_size.is_some()
2570            || self.tunables.gc_heap_reservation_for_growth.is_some()
2571            || self.tunables.gc_heap_may_move.is_some()
2572    }
2573
2574    pub(crate) fn validate(&self) -> Result<(Tunables, WasmFeatures)> {
2575        let features = self.features();
2576
2577        // First validate that the selected compiler backend and configuration
2578        // supports the set of `features` that are enabled. This will help
2579        // provide more first class errors instead of panics about unsupported
2580        // features and configurations.
2581        let unsupported = features & self.compiler_panicking_wasm_features();
2582        if !unsupported.is_empty() {
2583            for flag in WasmFeatures::FLAGS.iter() {
2584                if !unsupported.contains(*flag.value()) {
2585                    continue;
2586                }
2587                bail!(
2588                    "the wasm_{} feature is not supported on this compiler configuration",
2589                    flag.name().to_lowercase()
2590                );
2591            }
2592
2593            panic!("should have returned an error by now")
2594        }
2595
2596        if self.max_wasm_stack > self.async_stack_size {
2597            bail!("max_wasm_stack size cannot exceed the async_stack_size");
2598        }
2599        if self.max_wasm_stack == 0 {
2600            bail!("max_wasm_stack size cannot be zero");
2601        }
2602        if !cfg!(feature = "wmemcheck") && self.wmemcheck {
2603            bail!("wmemcheck (memory checker) was requested but is not enabled in this build");
2604        }
2605
2606        if !cfg!(feature = "gc") && features.gc_types() {
2607            bail!("support for GC was disabled at compile time")
2608        }
2609
2610        if !cfg!(feature = "gc") && features.contains(WasmFeatures::EXCEPTIONS) {
2611            bail!("exceptions support requires garbage collection (GC) to be enabled in the build");
2612        }
2613
2614        match &self.rr_config {
2615            #[cfg(feature = "rr")]
2616            RRConfig::Recording | RRConfig::Replaying => {
2617                self.validate_rr_determinism_conflicts()?;
2618            }
2619            RRConfig::None => {}
2620        };
2621
2622        let mut tunables = Tunables::default_for_target(&self.compiler_target())?;
2623
2624        // By default this is enabled with the Cargo feature, and if the feature
2625        // is missing this is disabled.
2626        tunables.concurrency_support = cfg!(feature = "component-model-async");
2627
2628        #[cfg(feature = "rr")]
2629        {
2630            tunables.recording = matches!(self.rr_config, RRConfig::Recording);
2631        }
2632
2633        // If no target is explicitly specified then further refine `tunables`
2634        // for the configuration of this host depending on what platform
2635        // features were found available at compile time. This means that anyone
2636        // cross-compiling for a customized host will need to further refine
2637        // compilation options.
2638        if self.target.is_none() {
2639            // If this platform doesn't have native signals then change some
2640            // defaults to account for that. Note that VM guards are turned off
2641            // here because that's primarily a feature of eliding
2642            // bounds-checks.
2643            if !cfg!(has_native_signals) {
2644                tunables.signals_based_traps = cfg!(has_native_signals);
2645                tunables.memory_guard_size = 0;
2646                tunables.gc_heap_guard_size = 0;
2647            }
2648
2649            // When virtual memory is not available use slightly different
2650            // defaults for tunables to be more amenable to `MallocMemory`.
2651            // Note that these can still be overridden by config options.
2652            if !cfg!(has_virtual_memory) {
2653                tunables.memory_reservation = 0;
2654                tunables.memory_reservation_for_growth = 1 << 20; // 1MB
2655                tunables.memory_init_cow = false;
2656                tunables.gc_heap_reservation = 0;
2657                tunables.gc_heap_reservation_for_growth = 1 << 20; // 1MB
2658            }
2659        }
2660
2661        // If guest-debugging is enabled, we must disable
2662        // signals-based traps. Do this before we process the user's
2663        // provided tunables settings so we can detect a conflict with
2664        // an explicit request to use signals-based traps.
2665        #[cfg(feature = "debug")]
2666        if self.tunables.debug_guest == Some(true) {
2667            tunables.signals_based_traps = false;
2668        }
2669
2670        // Inlining currently falls over with the `stack_switch` instruction.
2671        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
2672        if features.contains(WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING) {
2673            if let Some(inlining) = self.tunables.inlining
2674                && inlining != Inlining::No
2675            {
2676                bail!("cannot enable compiler inlining when stack switching is enabled");
2677            }
2678            tunables.inlining = Inlining::No;
2679        }
2680
2681        self.tunables.configure(&mut tunables);
2682
2683        // If no GC heap tunables are explicitly configured, copy the memory
2684        // tunables' configured values so that GC heaps default to the same
2685        // configuration as linear memories.
2686        if !self.any_gc_heap_tunables_configured() {
2687            tunables.gc_heap_reservation = tunables.memory_reservation;
2688            tunables.gc_heap_guard_size = tunables.memory_guard_size;
2689            tunables.gc_heap_reservation_for_growth = tunables.memory_reservation_for_growth;
2690            tunables.gc_heap_may_move = tunables.memory_may_move;
2691        }
2692
2693        // If we're going to compile with winch, we must use the winch calling convention.
2694        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
2695        {
2696            tunables.winch_callable = self
2697                .compiler_config
2698                .as_ref()
2699                .is_some_and(|c| c.strategy == Some(Strategy::Winch));
2700        }
2701
2702        tunables.collector = if features.gc_types() {
2703            #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
2704            {
2705                use wasmtime_environ::Collector as EnvCollector;
2706                Some(match self.collector.try_not_auto()? {
2707                    Collector::DeferredReferenceCounting => EnvCollector::DeferredReferenceCounting,
2708                    Collector::Null => EnvCollector::Null,
2709                    Collector::Copying => EnvCollector::Copying,
2710                    Collector::Auto => unreachable!(),
2711                })
2712            }
2713            #[cfg(not(feature = "gc"))]
2714            bail!("cannot use GC types: the `gc` feature was disabled at compile time")
2715        } else {
2716            None
2717        };
2718
2719        if tunables.debug_guest {
2720            ensure!(
2721                cfg!(feature = "debug"),
2722                "debug instrumentation support was disabled at compile time"
2723            );
2724            ensure!(
2725                !tunables.signals_based_traps,
2726                "cannot use signals-based traps with guest debugging enabled"
2727            );
2728        }
2729
2730        // Concurrency support is required for some component model features.
2731        let requires_concurrency = WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC
2732            | WasmFeatures::CM_MORE_ASYNC_BUILTINS
2733            | WasmFeatures::CM_ASYNC_STACKFUL
2734            | WasmFeatures::CM_THREADING
2735            | WasmFeatures::CM_ERROR_CONTEXT;
2736        if tunables.concurrency_support && !cfg!(feature = "component-model-async") {
2737            bail!(
2738                "concurrency support was requested but was not \
2739                 compiled into this build of Wasmtime"
2740            )
2741        }
2742        if !tunables.concurrency_support && features.intersects(requires_concurrency) {
2743            bail!(
2744                "concurrency support must be enabled to use the component \
2745                 model async or threading features"
2746            )
2747        }
2748
2749        // If the pooling allocator is used and GC is enabled, check that
2750        // memories and the GC heap are configured identically, since the
2751        // pooling allocator can't support differently-configured heaps.
2752        #[cfg(feature = "pooling-allocator")]
2753        if matches!(
2754            &self.allocation_strategy,
2755            InstanceAllocationStrategy::Pooling(_)
2756        ) && tunables.collector.is_some()
2757        {
2758            if tunables.memory_reservation != tunables.gc_heap_reservation {
2759                bail!(
2760                    "when using the pooling allocator with GC, `memory_reservation` ({}) \
2761                     and `gc_heap_reservation` ({}) must be the same",
2762                    tunables.memory_reservation,
2763                    tunables.gc_heap_reservation,
2764                );
2765            }
2766            if tunables.memory_guard_size != tunables.gc_heap_guard_size {
2767                bail!(
2768                    "when using the pooling allocator with GC, `memory_guard_size` ({}) \
2769                     and `gc_heap_guard_size` ({}) must be the same",
2770                    tunables.memory_guard_size,
2771                    tunables.gc_heap_guard_size,
2772                );
2773            }
2774            if tunables.memory_reservation_for_growth != tunables.gc_heap_reservation_for_growth {
2775                bail!(
2776                    "when using the pooling allocator with GC, \
2777                     `memory_reservation_for_growth` ({}) and \
2778                     `gc_heap_reservation_for_growth` ({}) must be the same",
2779                    tunables.memory_reservation_for_growth,
2780                    tunables.gc_heap_reservation_for_growth,
2781                );
2782            }
2783            if tunables.memory_may_move != tunables.gc_heap_may_move {
2784                bail!(
2785                    "when using the pooling allocator with GC, `memory_may_move` ({}) \
2786                     and `gc_heap_may_move` ({}) must be the same",
2787                    tunables.memory_may_move,
2788                    tunables.gc_heap_may_move,
2789                );
2790            }
2791        }
2792
2793        if tunables.debug_native && !tunables.debug_symbols {
2794            bail!("cannot enable native debug info while debug symbols are disabled");
2795        }
2796
2797        Ok((tunables, features))
2798    }
2799
2800    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
2801    pub(crate) fn build_allocator(
2802        &self,
2803        tunables: &Tunables,
2804    ) -> Result<Box<dyn InstanceAllocator + Send + Sync>> {
2805        let _ = tunables;
2806
2807        match &self.allocation_strategy {
2808            InstanceAllocationStrategy::OnDemand => {
2809                let mut _allocator = try_new::<Box<_>>(OnDemandInstanceAllocator::new(
2810                    self.mem_creator.clone(),
2811                    self.async_stack_size,
2812                    self.async_stack_zeroing,
2813                ))?;
2814                #[cfg(feature = "async")]
2815                if let Some(stack_creator) = &self.stack_creator {
2816                    _allocator.set_stack_creator(stack_creator.clone());
2817                }
2818                Ok(_allocator as _)
2819            }
2820            #[cfg(feature = "pooling-allocator")]
2821            InstanceAllocationStrategy::Pooling(config) => {
2822                let mut config = config.clone();
2823                let _ = &mut config;
2824                #[cfg(feature = "async")]
2825                {
2826                    config.stack_size = self.async_stack_size;
2827                    config.async_stack_zeroing = self.async_stack_zeroing;
2828                }
2829                let allocator = try_new::<Box<_>>(
2830                    crate::runtime::vm::PoolingInstanceAllocator::new(&config, tunables)?,
2831                )?;
2832                Ok(allocator as _)
2833            }
2834        }
2835    }
2836
2837    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
2838    pub(crate) fn build_gc_runtime(&self) -> Result<Option<Arc<dyn GcRuntime>>> {
2839        if !self.features().gc_types() {
2840            return Ok(None);
2841        }
2842
2843        #[cfg(not(feature = "gc"))]
2844        bail!("cannot create a GC runtime: the `gc` feature was disabled at compile time");
2845
2846        #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
2847        #[cfg_attr(
2848            not(any(feature = "gc-null", feature = "gc-drc", feature = "gc-copying")),
2849            expect(unreachable_code, reason = "definitions known to be dummy")
2850        )]
2851        {
2852            Ok(Some(match self.collector.try_not_auto()? {
2853                #[cfg(feature = "gc-drc")]
2854                Collector::DeferredReferenceCounting => {
2855                    try_new::<Arc<_>>(crate::runtime::vm::DrcCollector::default())? as _
2856                }
2857                #[cfg(not(feature = "gc-drc"))]
2858                Collector::DeferredReferenceCounting => unreachable!(),
2859
2860                #[cfg(feature = "gc-null")]
2861                Collector::Null => {
2862                    try_new::<Arc<_>>(crate::runtime::vm::NullCollector::default())? as _
2863                }
2864                #[cfg(not(feature = "gc-null"))]
2865                Collector::Null => unreachable!(),
2866
2867                #[cfg(feature = "gc-copying")]
2868                Collector::Copying => {
2869                    try_new::<Arc<_>>(crate::runtime::vm::CopyingCollector::default())? as _
2870                }
2871                #[cfg(not(feature = "gc-copying"))]
2872                Collector::Copying => unreachable!(),
2873
2874                Collector::Auto => unreachable!(),
2875            }))
2876        }
2877    }
2878
2879    #[cfg(feature = "runtime")]
2880    pub(crate) fn build_profiler(&self) -> Result<Box<dyn ProfilingAgent>> {
2881        Ok(match self.profiling_strategy {
2882            ProfilingStrategy::PerfMap => profiling_agent::new_perfmap()?,
2883            ProfilingStrategy::JitDump => profiling_agent::new_jitdump()?,
2884            ProfilingStrategy::VTune => profiling_agent::new_vtune()?,
2885            ProfilingStrategy::None => profiling_agent::new_null(),
2886            ProfilingStrategy::Pulley => profiling_agent::new_pulley()?,
2887        })
2888    }
2889
2890    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
2891    pub(crate) fn build_compiler(
2892        mut self,
2893        tunables: &mut Tunables,
2894        features: WasmFeatures,
2895    ) -> Result<(Self, Box<dyn wasmtime_environ::Compiler>)> {
2896        let target = self.compiler_target();
2897
2898        // The target passed to the builders below is an `Option<Triple>` where
2899        // `None` represents the current host with CPU features inferred from
2900        // the host's CPU itself. The `target` above is not an `Option`, so
2901        // switch it to `None` in the case that a target wasn't explicitly
2902        // specified (which indicates no feature inference) and the target
2903        // matches the host.
2904        let target_for_builder =
2905            if self.target.is_none() && target == target_lexicon::Triple::host() {
2906                None
2907            } else {
2908                Some(target.clone())
2909            };
2910
2911        let mut compiler = match self.compiler_config_mut().strategy {
2912            #[cfg(feature = "cranelift")]
2913            Some(Strategy::Cranelift) => wasmtime_cranelift::builder(target_for_builder)?,
2914            #[cfg(not(feature = "cranelift"))]
2915            Some(Strategy::Cranelift) => bail!("cranelift support not compiled in"),
2916            #[cfg(feature = "winch")]
2917            Some(Strategy::Winch) => wasmtime_winch::builder(target_for_builder)?,
2918            #[cfg(not(feature = "winch"))]
2919            Some(Strategy::Winch) => bail!("winch support not compiled in"),
2920
2921            None | Some(Strategy::Auto) => unreachable!(),
2922        };
2923
2924        if let Some(path) = &self.compiler_config_mut().clif_dir {
2925            compiler.clif_dir(path)?;
2926        }
2927
2928        // If probestack is enabled for a target, Wasmtime will always use the
2929        // inline strategy which doesn't require us to define a `__probestack`
2930        // function or similar.
2931        self.compiler_config_mut().settings.insert(
2932            "probestack_strategy".into(),
2933            ("inline".into(), UserSpecified::No),
2934        );
2935
2936        // We enable stack probing by default on all targets.
2937        // This is required on Windows because of the way Windows
2938        // commits its stacks, but it's also a good idea on other
2939        // platforms to ensure guard pages are hit for large frame
2940        // sizes.
2941        self.compiler_config_mut()
2942            .flags
2943            .insert("enable_probestack".into(), UserSpecified::No);
2944
2945        // The current wasm multivalue implementation depends on this.
2946        // FIXME(#9510) handle this in wasmtime-cranelift instead.
2947        self.compiler_config_mut()
2948            .flags
2949            .insert("enable_multi_ret_implicit_sret".into(), UserSpecified::No);
2950
2951        if let Some(unwind_requested) = self.native_unwind_info {
2952            if !self
2953                .compiler_config_mut()
2954                .ensure_setting_unset_or_given("unwind_info", &unwind_requested.to_string())
2955            {
2956                bail!(
2957                    "incompatible settings requested for Cranelift and Wasmtime `unwind-info` settings"
2958                );
2959            }
2960        }
2961
2962        if target.operating_system == target_lexicon::OperatingSystem::Windows {
2963            if !self
2964                .compiler_config_mut()
2965                .ensure_setting_unset_or_given("unwind_info", "true")
2966            {
2967                bail!("`native_unwind_info` cannot be disabled on Windows");
2968            }
2969        }
2970
2971        // We require frame pointers for correct stack walking, which is safety
2972        // critical in the presence of reference types, and otherwise it is just
2973        // really bad developer experience to get wrong.
2974        self.compiler_config_mut().settings.insert(
2975            "preserve_frame_pointers".into(),
2976            ("true".into(), UserSpecified::No),
2977        );
2978
2979        if !tunables.signals_based_traps {
2980            let mut ok = self
2981                .compiler_config_mut()
2982                .ensure_setting_unset_or_given("enable_table_access_spectre_mitigation", "false");
2983            ok = ok
2984                && self.compiler_config_mut().ensure_setting_unset_or_given(
2985                    "enable_heap_access_spectre_mitigation",
2986                    "false",
2987                );
2988
2989            // Right now spectre-mitigated bounds checks will load from zero so
2990            // if host-based signal handlers are disabled then that's a mismatch
2991            // and doesn't work right now. Fixing this will require more thought
2992            // of how to implement the bounds check in spectre-only mode.
2993            if !ok {
2994                bail!(
2995                    "when signals-based traps are disabled then spectre \
2996                     mitigations must also be disabled"
2997                );
2998            }
2999        }
3000
3001        if features.contains(WasmFeatures::RELAXED_SIMD) && !features.contains(WasmFeatures::SIMD) {
3002            bail!("cannot disable the simd proposal but enable the relaxed simd proposal");
3003        }
3004
3005        if features.contains(WasmFeatures::STACK_SWITCHING) {
3006            use target_lexicon::OperatingSystem;
3007            let model = match target.operating_system {
3008                OperatingSystem::Windows => "update_windows_tib",
3009                OperatingSystem::Linux
3010                | OperatingSystem::MacOSX(_)
3011                | OperatingSystem::Darwin(_) => "basic",
3012                _ => bail!("stack-switching feature not supported on this platform "),
3013            };
3014
3015            if !self
3016                .compiler_config_mut()
3017                .ensure_setting_unset_or_given("stack_switch_model", model)
3018            {
3019                bail!(
3020                    "compiler option 'stack_switch_model' must be set to '{model}' on this platform"
3021                );
3022            }
3023        }
3024
3025        // Apply compiler settings and flags
3026        compiler.set_tunables(tunables.clone())?;
3027        for (k, (v, _)) in self.compiler_config_mut().settings.iter() {
3028            compiler.set(k, v)?;
3029        }
3030        for (flag, _) in self.compiler_config_mut().flags.iter() {
3031            compiler.enable(flag)?;
3032        }
3033        *tunables = compiler.tunables().cloned().unwrap();
3034
3035        #[cfg(all(feature = "incremental-cache", feature = "cranelift"))]
3036        if let Some(cache_store) = &self.compiler_config_mut().cache_store {
3037            compiler.enable_incremental_compilation(cache_store.clone())?;
3038        }
3039
3040        compiler.wmemcheck(self.compiler_config_mut().wmemcheck);
3041
3042        Ok((self, compiler.build()?))
3043    }
3044
3045    /// Internal setting for whether adapter modules for components will have
3046    /// extra WebAssembly instructions inserted performing more debug checks
3047    /// then are necessary.
3048    #[cfg(feature = "component-model")]
3049    pub fn debug_adapter_modules(&mut self, debug: bool) -> &mut Self {
3050        self.tunables.debug_adapter_modules = Some(debug);
3051        self
3052    }
3053
3054    /// Enables clif output when compiling a WebAssembly module.
3055    #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
3056    pub fn emit_clif(&mut self, path: &Path) -> &mut Self {
3057        self.compiler_config_mut().clif_dir = Some(path.to_path_buf());
3058        self
3059    }
3060
3061    /// Configures whether, when on macOS, Mach ports are used for exception
3062    /// handling instead of traditional Unix-based signal handling.
3063    ///
3064    /// WebAssembly traps in Wasmtime are implemented with native faults, for
3065    /// example a `SIGSEGV` will occur when a WebAssembly guest accesses
3066    /// out-of-bounds memory. Handling this can be configured to either use Unix
3067    /// signals or Mach ports on macOS. By default Mach ports are used.
3068    ///
3069    /// Mach ports enable Wasmtime to work by default with foreign
3070    /// error-handling systems such as breakpad which also use Mach ports to
3071    /// handle signals. In this situation Wasmtime will continue to handle guest
3072    /// faults gracefully while any non-guest faults will get forwarded to
3073    /// process-level handlers such as breakpad. Some more background on this
3074    /// can be found in #2456.
3075    ///
3076    /// A downside of using mach ports, however, is that they don't interact
3077    /// well with `fork()`. Forking a Wasmtime process on macOS will produce a
3078    /// child process that cannot successfully run WebAssembly. In this
3079    /// situation traditional Unix signal handling should be used as that's
3080    /// inherited and works across forks.
3081    ///
3082    /// If your embedding wants to use a custom error handler which leverages
3083    /// Mach ports and you additionally wish to `fork()` the process and use
3084    /// Wasmtime in the child process that's not currently possible. Please
3085    /// reach out to us if you're in this bucket!
3086    ///
3087    /// This option defaults to `true`, using Mach ports by default.
3088    pub fn macos_use_mach_ports(&mut self, mach_ports: bool) -> &mut Self {
3089        self.macos_use_mach_ports = mach_ports;
3090        self
3091    }
3092
3093    /// Configures an embedder-provided function, `detect`, which is used to
3094    /// determine if an ISA-specific feature is available on the current host.
3095    ///
3096    /// This function is used to verify that any features enabled for a compiler
3097    /// backend, such as AVX support on x86\_64, are also available on the host.
3098    /// It is undefined behavior to execute an AVX instruction on a host that
3099    /// doesn't support AVX instructions, for example.
3100    ///
3101    /// When the `std` feature is active on this crate then this function is
3102    /// configured to a default implementation that uses the standard library's
3103    /// feature detection. When the `std` feature is disabled then there is no
3104    /// default available and this method must be called to configure a feature
3105    /// probing function.
3106    ///
3107    /// The `detect` function provided is given a string name of an ISA feature.
3108    /// The function should then return:
3109    ///
3110    /// * `Some(true)` - indicates that the feature was found on the host and it
3111    ///   is supported.
3112    /// * `Some(false)` - the feature name was recognized but it was not
3113    ///   detected on the host, for example the CPU is too old.
3114    /// * `None` - the feature name was not recognized and it's not known
3115    ///   whether it's on the host or not.
3116    ///
3117    /// Feature names passed to `detect` match the same feature name used in the
3118    /// Rust standard library. For example `"sse4.2"` is used on x86\_64.
3119    ///
3120    /// # Unsafety
3121    ///
3122    /// This function is `unsafe` because it is undefined behavior to execute
3123    /// instructions that a host does not support. This means that the result of
3124    /// `detect` must be correct for memory safe execution at runtime.
3125    pub unsafe fn detect_host_feature(&mut self, detect: fn(&str) -> Option<bool>) -> &mut Self {
3126        self.detect_host_feature = Some(detect);
3127        self
3128    }
3129
3130    /// Configures Wasmtime to not use signals-based trap handlers, for example
3131    /// disables `SIGILL` and `SIGSEGV` handler registration on Unix platforms.
3132    ///
3133    /// > **Note:** this option has important performance ramifications, be sure
3134    /// > to understand the implications. Wasm programs have been measured to
3135    /// > run up to 2x slower when signals-based traps are disabled.
3136    ///
3137    /// Wasmtime will by default leverage signals-based trap handlers (or the
3138    /// platform equivalent, for example "vectored exception handlers" on
3139    /// Windows) to make generated code more efficient. For example, when
3140    /// Wasmtime can use signals-based traps, it can elide explicit bounds
3141    /// checks for Wasm linear memory accesses, instead relying on virtual
3142    /// memory guard pages to raise a `SIGSEGV` (on Unix) for out-of-bounds
3143    /// accesses, which Wasmtime's runtime then catches and handles. Another
3144    /// example is divide-by-zero: with signals-based traps, Wasmtime can let
3145    /// the hardware raise a trap when the divisor is zero. Without
3146    /// signals-based traps, Wasmtime must explicitly emit additional
3147    /// instructions to check for zero and conditionally branch to a trapping
3148    /// code path.
3149    ///
3150    /// Some environments however may not have access to signal handlers. For
3151    /// example embedded scenarios may not support virtual memory. Other
3152    /// environments where Wasmtime is embedded within the surrounding
3153    /// environment may require that new signal handlers aren't registered due
3154    /// to the global nature of signal handlers. This option exists to disable
3155    /// the signal handler registration when required for these scenarios.
3156    ///
3157    /// When signals-based trap handlers are disabled, then Wasmtime and its
3158    /// generated code will *never* rely on segfaults or other
3159    /// signals. Generated code will be slower because bounds must be explicitly
3160    /// checked along with other conditions like division by zero.
3161    ///
3162    /// The following additional factors can also affect Wasmtime's ability to
3163    /// elide explicit bounds checks and leverage signals-based traps:
3164    ///
3165    /// * The [`Config::memory_reservation`] and [`Config::memory_guard_size`]
3166    ///   settings
3167    /// * The index type of the linear memory (e.g. 32-bit or 64-bit)
3168    /// * The page size of the linear memory
3169    ///
3170    /// When this option is disabled, the
3171    /// `enable_heap_access_spectre_mitigation` and
3172    /// `enable_table_access_spectre_mitigation` Cranelift settings must also be
3173    /// disabled. This means that generated code must have spectre mitigations
3174    /// disabled. This is because spectre mitigations rely on faults from
3175    /// loading from the null address to implement bounds checks.
3176    ///
3177    /// This option defaults to `true`: signals-based trap handlers are enabled
3178    /// by default.
3179    ///
3180    /// > **Note:** Disabling this option is not compatible with the Winch
3181    /// > compiler.
3182    pub fn signals_based_traps(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3183        self.tunables.signals_based_traps = Some(enable);
3184        self
3185    }
3186
3187    /// Enable/disable GC support in Wasmtime entirely.
3188    ///
3189    /// This flag can be used to gate whether GC infrastructure is enabled or
3190    /// initialized in Wasmtime at all. Wasmtime's GC implementation is required
3191    /// for the [`Self::wasm_gc`] proposal, [`Self::wasm_function_references`],
3192    /// and [`Self::wasm_exceptions`] at this time. None of those proposal can
3193    /// be enabled without also having this option enabled.
3194    ///
3195    /// This option defaults to whether the crate `gc` feature is enabled or
3196    /// not.
3197    pub fn gc_support(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3198        self.wasm_features(WasmFeatures::GC_TYPES, enable)
3199    }
3200
3201    /// Explicitly indicate or not whether the host is using a hardware float
3202    /// ABI on x86 targets.
3203    ///
3204    /// This configuration option is only applicable on the
3205    /// `x86_64-unknown-none` Rust target and has no effect on other host
3206    /// targets. The `x86_64-unknown-none` Rust target does not support hardware
3207    /// floats by default and uses a "soft float" implementation and ABI. This
3208    /// means that `f32`, for example, is passed in a general-purpose register
3209    /// between functions instead of a floating-point register. This does not
3210    /// match Cranelift's ABI for `f32` where it's passed in floating-point
3211    /// registers.  Cranelift does not have support for a "soft float"
3212    /// implementation where all floating-point operations are lowered to
3213    /// libcalls.
3214    ///
3215    /// This means that for the `x86_64-unknown-none` target the ABI between
3216    /// Wasmtime's libcalls and the host is incompatible when floats are used.
3217    /// This further means that, by default, Wasmtime is unable to load native
3218    /// code when compiled to the `x86_64-unknown-none` target. The purpose of
3219    /// this option is to explicitly allow loading code and bypass this check.
3220    ///
3221    /// Setting this configuration option to `true` indicates that either:
3222    /// (a) the Rust target is compiled with the hard-float ABI manually via
3223    /// `-Zbuild-std` and a custom target JSON configuration, or (b) sufficient
3224    /// x86 features have been enabled in the compiler such that float libcalls
3225    /// will not be used in Wasmtime. For (a) there is no way in Rust at this
3226    /// time to detect whether a hard-float or soft-float ABI is in use on
3227    /// stable Rust, so this manual opt-in is required. For (b) the only
3228    /// instance where Wasmtime passes a floating-point value in a register
3229    /// between the host and compiled wasm code is with libcalls.
3230    ///
3231    /// Float-based libcalls are only used when the compilation target for a
3232    /// wasm module has insufficient target features enabled for native
3233    /// support. For example SSE4.1 is required for the `f32.ceil` WebAssembly
3234    /// instruction to be compiled to a native instruction. If SSE4.1 is not
3235    /// enabled then `f32.ceil` is translated to a "libcall" which is
3236    /// implemented on the host. Float-based libcalls can be avoided with
3237    /// sufficient target features enabled, for example:
3238    ///
3239    /// * `self.cranelift_flag_enable("has_sse3")`
3240    /// * `self.cranelift_flag_enable("has_ssse3")`
3241    /// * `self.cranelift_flag_enable("has_sse41")`
3242    /// * `self.cranelift_flag_enable("has_sse42")`
3243    /// * `self.cranelift_flag_enable("has_fma")`
3244    ///
3245    /// Note that when these features are enabled Wasmtime will perform a
3246    /// runtime check to determine that the host actually has the feature
3247    /// present.
3248    ///
3249    /// For some more discussion see [#11506].
3250    ///
3251    /// [#11506]: https://github.com/bytecodealliance/wasmtime/issues/11506
3252    ///
3253    /// # Safety
3254    ///
3255    /// This method is not safe because it cannot be detected in Rust right now
3256    /// whether the host is compiled with a soft or hard float ABI. Additionally
3257    /// if the host is compiled with a soft float ABI disabling this check does
3258    /// not ensure that the wasm module in question has zero usage of floats
3259    /// in the boundary to the host.
3260    ///
3261    /// Safely using this method requires one of:
3262    ///
3263    /// * The host target is compiled to use hardware floats.
3264    /// * Wasm modules loaded are compiled with enough x86 Cranelift features
3265    ///   enabled to avoid float-related hostcalls.
3266    pub unsafe fn x86_float_abi_ok(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3267        self.x86_float_abi_ok = Some(enable);
3268        self
3269    }
3270
3271    /// Enable or disable the ability to create a
3272    /// [`SharedMemory`](crate::SharedMemory).
3273    ///
3274    /// The WebAssembly threads proposal, configured by [`Config::wasm_threads`]
3275    /// is on-by-default but there are enough deficiencies in Wasmtime's
3276    /// implementation and API integration that creation of a shared memory is
3277    /// disabled by default. This configuration knob can be used to enable this.
3278    ///
3279    /// When enabling this method be aware that wasm threads are, at this time,
3280    /// a [tier 2
3281    /// feature](https://docs.wasmtime.dev/stability-tiers.html#tier-2) in
3282    /// Wasmtime meaning that it will not receive security updates or fixes to
3283    /// historical releases. Additionally security CVEs will not be issued for
3284    /// bugs in the implementation.
3285    ///
3286    /// This option is `false` by default.
3287    pub fn shared_memory(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3288        self.shared_memory = enable;
3289        self
3290    }
3291
3292    /// Specifies whether support for concurrent execution of WebAssembly is
3293    /// supported within this store.
3294    ///
3295    /// This configuration option affects whether runtime data structures are
3296    /// initialized within a `Store` on creation to support concurrent execution
3297    /// of WebAssembly guests. This is primarily applicable to the
3298    /// [`Config::wasm_component_model_async`] configuration which is the first
3299    /// time Wasmtime has supported concurrent execution of guests. This
3300    /// configuration option, for example, enables usage of
3301    /// [`Store::run_concurrent`], [`Func::call_concurrent`], [`StreamReader`],
3302    /// etc.
3303    ///
3304    /// This configuration option can be manually disabled to avoid initializing
3305    /// data structures in the [`Store`] related to concurrent execution. When
3306    /// this option is disabled then APIs related to concurrency will all fail
3307    /// with a panic. For example [`Store::run_concurrent`] will panic, creating
3308    /// a [`StreamReader`] will panic, etc.
3309    ///
3310    /// The value of this option additionally affects whether a [`Config`] is
3311    /// valid and the default set of enabled WebAssembly features. If this
3312    /// option is disabled then component-model features related to concurrency
3313    /// will all be disabled. If this option is enabled, then the options will
3314    /// retain their normal defaults. It is not valid to create a [`Config`]
3315    /// with component-model-async explicitly enabled and this option explicitly
3316    /// disabled, however.
3317    ///
3318    /// This option defaults to `true`.
3319    ///
3320    /// [`Store`]: crate::Store
3321    /// [`Store::run_concurrent`]: crate::Store::run_concurrent
3322    /// [`Func::call_concurrent`]: crate::component::Func::call_concurrent
3323    /// [`StreamReader`]: crate::component::StreamReader
3324    pub fn concurrency_support(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3325        self.tunables.concurrency_support = Some(enable);
3326        self
3327    }
3328
3329    /// Validate if the current configuration has conflicting overrides that prevent
3330    /// execution determinism. Returns an error if a conflict exists.
3331    ///
3332    /// Note: Keep this in sync with [`Config::enforce_determinism`].
3333    #[inline]
3334    #[cfg(feature = "rr")]
3335    pub(crate) fn validate_rr_determinism_conflicts(&self) -> Result<()> {
3336        if let Some(v) = self.tunables.relaxed_simd_deterministic {
3337            if v == false {
3338                bail!("Relaxed deterministic SIMD cannot be disabled when determinism is enforced");
3339            }
3340        }
3341        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
3342        if let Some((v, _)) = self
3343            .compiler_config
3344            .as_ref()
3345            .and_then(|c| c.settings.get("enable_nan_canonicalization"))
3346        {
3347            if v != "true" {
3348                bail!("NaN canonicalization cannot be disabled when determinism is enforced");
3349            }
3350        }
3351        Ok(())
3352    }
3353
3354    /// Enable execution trace recording or replaying to the configuration.
3355    ///
3356    /// When either recording/replaying are enabled, validation fails if settings
3357    /// that control determinism are not set appropriately. In particular, RR requires
3358    /// doing the following:
3359    /// * Enabling NaN canonicalization with [`Config::cranelift_nan_canonicalization`].
3360    /// * Enabling deterministic relaxed SIMD with [`Config::relaxed_simd_deterministic`].
3361    #[inline]
3362    pub fn rr(&mut self, cfg: RRConfig) -> &mut Self {
3363        self.rr_config = cfg;
3364        self
3365    }
3366
3367    /// Whether or not trap metadata is generated in compiled wasms for internal
3368    /// asserts in the compiled code itself.
3369    ///
3370    /// Wasmtime inserts metadata within compiled artifacts which contain a
3371    /// table of known trap codes for all instructions. If a trap via a signal
3372    /// happens, and it's not listed in these tables, then that's considered a
3373    /// fatal bug that crashes the process. This option controls whether trap
3374    /// codes are inserted into metadata for internal asserts as part of
3375    /// Wasmtime's translation process. These internal asserts should never be
3376    /// triggered, but if they are then the process dies with a signal.
3377    ///
3378    /// Inserting trap metadata into compiled artifacts can take extra space in
3379    /// the final artifact. The trap tables for the artifact will be larger as
3380    /// they contain more trap codes to contain.
3381    ///
3382    /// This is intended as a debugging option and is set to `false` by
3383    /// default.
3384    pub fn metadata_for_internal_asserts(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3385        self.tunables.metadata_for_internal_asserts = Some(enable);
3386        self
3387    }
3388
3389    /// Whether or not trap metadata is generated in compiled wasms for
3390    /// detection of corruption in the GC heap.
3391    ///
3392    /// For more information about what metadata is in this scenario, see
3393    /// [`Config::metadata_for_internal_asserts`]. Note, though, that this
3394    /// option is enabled by default unlike internal asserts. This is intended
3395    /// as a defense-in-depth option for generated code in the face of GC heap
3396    /// corruption. If the GC heap is corrupted and is detected then the
3397    /// trapping instruction will be gracefully handled and delivered to the
3398    /// embedder. Otherwise if this option were set to `false` then the process
3399    /// would be aborted due to a signal.
3400    pub fn metadata_for_gc_heap_corruption(&mut self, enable: bool) -> &mut Self {
3401        self.tunables.metadata_for_gc_heap_corruption = Some(enable);
3402        self
3403    }
3404}
3405
3406impl Default for Config {
3407    fn default() -> Config {
3408        Config::new()
3409    }
3410}
3411
3412impl fmt::Debug for Config {
3413    fn fmt(&self, f: &mut fmt::Formatter) -> fmt::Result {
3414        let mut f = f.debug_struct("Config");
3415
3416        // Not every flag in WasmFeatures can be enabled as part of creating
3417        // a Config. This impl gives a complete picture of all WasmFeatures
3418        // enabled, and doesn't require maintenance by hand (which has become out
3419        // of date in the past), at the cost of possible confusion for why
3420        // a flag in this set doesn't have a Config setter.
3421        let features = self.features();
3422        for flag in WasmFeatures::FLAGS.iter() {
3423            f.field(
3424                &format!("wasm_{}", flag.name().to_lowercase()),
3425                &features.contains(*flag.value()),
3426            );
3427        }
3428
3429        f.field("parallel_compilation", &self.parallel_compilation);
3430        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
3431        {
3432            f.field("compiler_config", &self.compiler_config);
3433        }
3434
3435        self.tunables.format(&mut f);
3436        f.finish()
3437    }
3438}
3439
3440/// Possible Compilation strategies for a wasm module.
3441///
3442/// This is used as an argument to the [`Config::strategy`] method.
3443#[non_exhaustive]
3444#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Clone, Debug, Copy)]
3445pub enum Strategy {
3446    /// An indicator that the compilation strategy should be automatically
3447    /// selected.
3448    ///
3449    /// This is generally what you want for most projects and indicates that the
3450    /// `wasmtime` crate itself should make the decision about what the best
3451    /// code generator for a wasm module is.
3452    ///
3453    /// Currently this always defaults to Cranelift, but the default value may
3454    /// change over time.
3455    Auto,
3456
3457    /// Currently the default backend, Cranelift aims to be a reasonably fast
3458    /// code generator which generates high quality machine code.
3459    Cranelift,
3460
3461    /// A low-latency baseline compiler for WebAssembly.
3462    /// For more details regarding ISA support and Wasm proposals support
3463    /// see <https://docs.wasmtime.dev/stability-tiers.html#current-tier-status>
3464    Winch,
3465}
3466
3467#[cfg(any(feature = "winch", feature = "cranelift"))]
3468impl Strategy {
3469    fn not_auto(&self) -> Option<Strategy> {
3470        match self {
3471            Strategy::Auto => {
3472                if cfg!(feature = "cranelift") {
3473                    Some(Strategy::Cranelift)
3474                } else if cfg!(feature = "winch") {
3475                    Some(Strategy::Winch)
3476                } else {
3477                    None
3478                }
3479            }
3480            other => Some(*other),
3481        }
3482    }
3483}
3484
3485/// Possible garbage collector implementations for Wasm.
3486///
3487/// This is used as an argument to the [`Config::collector`] method.
3488///
3489/// The properties of Wasmtime's available collectors are summarized in the
3490/// following table:
3491///
3492/// | Collector                   | Collects Garbage[^1]  | Latency[^2] | Throughput[^3] | Allocation Speed[^4] | Heap Utilization[^5] |
3493/// |-----------------------------|-----------------------|-------------|----------------|----------------------|----------------------|
3494/// | `Copying`                   | Yes, including cycles | 🙁         | 🙂             | 🙂                   | 🙁                  |
3495/// | `DeferredReferenceCounting` | Yes, but not cycles   | 🙂         | 🙁             | 😐                   | 😐                  |
3496/// | `Null`                      | No                    | 🙂         | 🙂             | 🙂                   | 🙂                  |
3497///
3498/// [^1]: Whether or not the collector is capable of collecting garbage and cyclic garbage.
3499///
3500/// [^2]: How long the Wasm program is paused during garbage
3501///       collections. Shorter is better. In general, better latency implies
3502///       worse throughput and vice versa.
3503///
3504/// [^3]: How fast the Wasm program runs when using this collector. Roughly
3505///       equivalent to the number of Wasm instructions executed per
3506///       second. Faster is better. In general, better throughput implies worse
3507///       latency and vice versa.
3508///
3509/// [^4]: How fast can individual objects be allocated?
3510///
3511/// [^5]: How many objects can the collector fit into N bytes of memory? That
3512///       is, how much space for bookkeeping and metadata does this collector
3513///       require? Less space taken up by metadata means more space for
3514///       additional objects. Reference counts are larger than mark bits and
3515///       free lists are larger than bump pointers, for example.
3516#[non_exhaustive]
3517#[derive(PartialEq, Eq, Clone, Debug, Copy)]
3518pub enum Collector {
3519    /// An indicator that the garbage collector should be automatically
3520    /// selected.
3521    ///
3522    /// This is generally what you want for most projects and indicates that the
3523    /// `wasmtime` crate itself should make the decision about what the best
3524    /// collector to use is.
3525    ///
3526    /// Currently this always defaults to the copying collector, but the default
3527    /// value may change over time.
3528    Auto,
3529
3530    /// The deferred reference-counting collector.
3531    ///
3532    /// A reference-counting collector, generally trading improved latency for
3533    /// worsened throughput. However, to avoid the largest overheads of
3534    /// reference counting, it avoids manipulating reference counts for Wasm
3535    /// objects on the stack. Instead, it will hold a reference count for an
3536    /// over-approximation of all objects that are currently on the stack, trace
3537    /// the stack during collection to find the precise set of on-stack roots,
3538    /// and decrement the reference count of any object that was in the
3539    /// over-approximation but not the precise set. This improves throughput,
3540    /// compared to "pure" reference counting, by performing many fewer
3541    /// refcount-increment and -decrement operations. The cost is the increased
3542    /// latency associated with tracing the stack.
3543    ///
3544    /// This collector cannot currently collect cycles; they will leak until the
3545    /// GC heap's store is dropped.
3546    DeferredReferenceCounting,
3547
3548    /// The null collector.
3549    ///
3550    /// This collector does not actually collect any garbage. It simply
3551    /// allocates objects until it runs out of memory, at which point further
3552    /// objects allocation attempts will trap.
3553    ///
3554    /// This collector is useful for incredibly short-running Wasm instances
3555    /// where additionally you would rather halt an over-allocating Wasm program
3556    /// than spend time collecting its garbage to allow it to keep running. It
3557    /// is also useful for measuring the overheads associated with other
3558    /// collectors, as this collector imposes as close to zero throughput and
3559    /// latency overhead as possible.
3560    Null,
3561
3562    /// The copying collector.
3563    ///
3564    /// A tracing collector that splits the GC heap in half, bump-allocates
3565    /// objects in one half until it fills up, and then does a GC and copies
3566    /// live objects into the other half, and repeats the process. It has fast
3567    /// allocation, collects cyclic garbage, and good collection throughput,
3568    /// however it suffers from poor latency due to its stop-the-world
3569    /// collections and poor heap utilization due to only using half the GC
3570    /// heap's full capacity at any given time.
3571    ///
3572    /// Note that this collector is still under construction and is not yet
3573    /// functional.
3574    Copying,
3575}
3576
3577impl Default for Collector {
3578    fn default() -> Collector {
3579        Collector::Auto
3580    }
3581}
3582
3583#[cfg(feature = "gc")]
3584impl Collector {
3585    fn not_auto(&self) -> Option<Collector> {
3586        match self {
3587            Collector::Auto => {
3588                if cfg!(feature = "gc-copying") {
3589                    Some(Collector::Copying)
3590                } else if cfg!(feature = "gc-drc") {
3591                    Some(Collector::DeferredReferenceCounting)
3592                } else if cfg!(feature = "gc-null") {
3593                    Some(Collector::Null)
3594                } else {
3595                    None
3596                }
3597            }
3598            other => Some(*other),
3599        }
3600    }
3601
3602    fn try_not_auto(&self) -> Result<Self> {
3603        match self.not_auto() {
3604            #[cfg(feature = "gc-drc")]
3605            Some(c @ Collector::DeferredReferenceCounting) => Ok(c),
3606            #[cfg(not(feature = "gc-drc"))]
3607            Some(Collector::DeferredReferenceCounting) => bail!(
3608                "cannot create an engine using the deferred reference-counting \
3609                 collector because the `gc-drc` feature was not enabled at \
3610                 compile time",
3611            ),
3612
3613            #[cfg(feature = "gc-null")]
3614            Some(c @ Collector::Null) => Ok(c),
3615            #[cfg(not(feature = "gc-null"))]
3616            Some(Collector::Null) => bail!(
3617                "cannot create an engine using the null collector because \
3618                 the `gc-null` feature was not enabled at compile time",
3619            ),
3620
3621            #[cfg(feature = "gc-copying")]
3622            Some(c @ Collector::Copying) => Ok(c),
3623            #[cfg(not(feature = "gc-copying"))]
3624            Some(Collector::Copying) => bail!(
3625                "cannot create an engine using the copying collector because \
3626                 the `gc-copying` feature was not enabled at compile time",
3627            ),
3628
3629            Some(Collector::Auto) => unreachable!(),
3630
3631            None => bail!(
3632                "cannot create an engine with GC support when none of the \
3633                 collectors are available; enable one of the following \
3634                 features: `gc-drc`, `gc-null`, `gc-copying`",
3635            ),
3636        }
3637    }
3638}
3639
3640/// Possible optimization levels for the Cranelift codegen backend.
3641#[non_exhaustive]
3642#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, Eq, PartialEq)]
3643pub enum OptLevel {
3644    /// No optimizations performed, minimizes compilation time by disabling most
3645    /// optimizations.
3646    None,
3647    /// Generates the fastest possible code, but may take longer.
3648    Speed,
3649    /// Similar to `speed`, but also performs transformations aimed at reducing
3650    /// code size.
3651    SpeedAndSize,
3652}
3653
3654/// Possible register allocator algorithms for the Cranelift codegen backend.
3655#[non_exhaustive]
3656#[derive(Copy, Clone, Debug, Eq, PartialEq)]
3657pub enum RegallocAlgorithm {
3658    /// Generates the fastest possible code, but may take longer.
3659    ///
3660    /// This algorithm performs "backtracking", which means that it may
3661    /// undo its earlier work and retry as it discovers conflicts. This
3662    /// results in better register utilization, producing fewer spills
3663    /// and moves, but can cause super-linear compile runtime.
3664    Backtracking,
3665    /// Generates acceptable code very quickly.
3666    ///
3667    /// This algorithm performs a single pass through the code,
3668    /// guaranteed to work in linear time.  (Note that the rest of
3669    /// Cranelift is not necessarily guaranteed to run in linear time,
3670    /// however.) It cannot undo earlier decisions, however, and it
3671    /// cannot foresee constraints or issues that may occur further
3672    /// ahead in the code, so the code may have more spills and moves as
3673    /// a result.
3674    ///
3675    /// > **Note**: This algorithm is not yet production-ready and has
3676    /// > historically had known problems. It is not recommended to enable this
3677    /// > algorithm for security-sensitive applications and the Wasmtime project
3678    /// > does not consider this configuration option for issuing security
3679    /// > advisories at this time.
3680    SinglePass,
3681}
3682
3683/// Select which profiling technique to support.
3684#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy, PartialEq)]
3685pub enum ProfilingStrategy {
3686    /// No profiler support.
3687    None,
3688
3689    /// Collect function name information as the "perf map" file format, used with `perf` on Linux.
3690    PerfMap,
3691
3692    /// Collect profiling info for "jitdump" file format, used with `perf` on
3693    /// Linux.
3694    JitDump,
3695
3696    /// Collect profiling info using the "ittapi", used with `VTune` on Linux.
3697    VTune,
3698
3699    /// Support for profiling Pulley, Wasmtime's interpreter. Note that enabling
3700    /// this at runtime requires enabling the `profile-pulley` Cargo feature at
3701    /// compile time.
3702    Pulley,
3703}
3704
3705/// Select how wasm backtrace detailed information is handled.
3706#[derive(Debug, Clone, Copy)]
3707pub enum WasmBacktraceDetails {
3708    /// Support is unconditionally enabled and wasmtime will parse and read
3709    /// debug information.
3710    Enable,
3711
3712    /// Support is disabled, and wasmtime will not parse debug information for
3713    /// backtrace details.
3714    Disable,
3715
3716    /// Support for backtrace details is conditional on the
3717    /// `WASMTIME_BACKTRACE_DETAILS` environment variable.
3718    Environment,
3719}
3720
3721/// Describe the tri-state configuration of keys such as MPK or PAGEMAP_SCAN.
3722#[derive(Clone, Copy, Debug, Eq, PartialEq, Hash)]
3723pub enum Enabled {
3724    /// Enable this feature if it's detected on the host system, otherwise leave
3725    /// it disabled.
3726    Auto,
3727    /// Enable this feature and fail configuration if the feature is not
3728    /// detected on the host system.
3729    Yes,
3730    /// Do not enable this feature, even if the host system supports it.
3731    No,
3732}
3733
3734/// Configuration options used with [`InstanceAllocationStrategy::Pooling`] to
3735/// change the behavior of the pooling instance allocator.
3736///
3737/// This structure has a builder-style API in the same manner as [`Config`] and
3738/// is configured with [`Config::allocation_strategy`].
3739///
3740/// Note that usage of the pooling allocator does not affect compiled
3741/// WebAssembly code. Compiled `*.cwasm` files, for example, are usable both
3742/// with and without the pooling allocator.
3743///
3744/// ## Advantages of Pooled Allocation
3745///
3746/// The main benefit of the pooling allocator is to make WebAssembly
3747/// instantiation both faster and more scalable in terms of parallelism.
3748/// Allocation is faster because virtual memory is already configured and ready
3749/// to go within the pool, there's no need to [`mmap`] (for example on Unix) a
3750/// new region and configure it with guard pages. By avoiding [`mmap`] this
3751/// avoids whole-process virtual memory locks which can improve scalability and
3752/// performance through avoiding this.
3753///
3754/// Additionally with pooled allocation it's possible to create "affine slots"
3755/// to a particular WebAssembly module or component over time. For example if
3756/// the same module is multiple times over time the pooling allocator will, by
3757/// default, attempt to reuse the same slot. This mean that the slot has been
3758/// pre-configured and can retain virtual memory mappings for a copy-on-write
3759/// image, for example (see [`Config::memory_init_cow`] for more information.
3760/// This means that in a steady state instance deallocation is a single
3761/// [`madvise`] to reset linear memory to its original contents followed by a
3762/// single (optional) [`mprotect`] during the next instantiation to shrink
3763/// memory back to its original size. Compared to non-pooled allocation this
3764/// avoids the need to [`mmap`] a new region of memory, [`munmap`] it, and
3765/// [`mprotect`] regions too.
3766///
3767/// Another benefit of pooled allocation is that it's possible to configure
3768/// things such that no virtual memory management is required at all in a steady
3769/// state. For example a pooling allocator can be configured with:
3770///
3771/// * [`Config::memory_init_cow`] disabled
3772/// * [`Config::memory_guard_size`] disabled
3773/// * [`Config::memory_reservation`] shrunk to minimal size
3774/// * [`PoolingAllocationConfig::table_keep_resident`] sufficiently large
3775/// * [`PoolingAllocationConfig::linear_memory_keep_resident`] sufficiently large
3776///
3777/// With all these options in place no virtual memory tricks are used at all and
3778/// everything is manually managed by Wasmtime (for example resetting memory is
3779/// a `memset(0)`). This is not as fast in a single-threaded scenario but can
3780/// provide benefits in high-parallelism situations as no virtual memory locks
3781/// or IPIs need happen.
3782///
3783/// ## Disadvantages of Pooled Allocation
3784///
3785/// Despite the above advantages to instantiation performance the pooling
3786/// allocator is not enabled by default in Wasmtime. One reason is that the
3787/// performance advantages are not necessarily portable, for example while the
3788/// pooling allocator works on Windows it has not been tuned for performance on
3789/// Windows in the same way it has on Linux.
3790///
3791/// Additionally the main cost of the pooling allocator is that it requires a
3792/// very large reservation of virtual memory (on the order of most of the
3793/// addressable virtual address space). WebAssembly 32-bit linear memories in
3794/// Wasmtime are, by default 4G address space reservations with a small guard
3795/// region both before and after the linear memory. Memories in the pooling
3796/// allocator are contiguous which means that we only need a guard after linear
3797/// memory because the previous linear memory's slot post-guard is our own
3798/// pre-guard. This means that, by default, the pooling allocator uses roughly
3799/// 4G of virtual memory per WebAssembly linear memory slot. 4G of virtual
3800/// memory is 32 bits of a 64-bit address. Many 64-bit systems can only
3801/// actually use 48-bit addresses by default (although this can be extended on
3802/// architectures nowadays too), and of those 48 bits one of them is reserved
3803/// to indicate kernel-vs-userspace. This leaves 47-32=15 bits left,
3804/// meaning you can only have at most 32k slots of linear memories on many
3805/// systems by default. This is a relatively small number and shows how the
3806/// pooling allocator can quickly exhaust all of virtual memory.
3807///
3808/// Another disadvantage of the pooling allocator is that it may keep memory
3809/// alive when nothing is using it. A previously used slot for an instance might
3810/// have paged-in memory that will not get paged out until the
3811/// [`Engine`] owning the pooling allocator is dropped. While
3812/// suitable for some applications this behavior may not be suitable for all
3813/// applications.
3814///
3815/// Finally the last disadvantage of the pooling allocator is that the
3816/// configuration values for the maximum number of instances, memories, tables,
3817/// etc, must all be fixed up-front. There's not always a clear answer as to
3818/// what these values should be so not all applications may be able to work
3819/// with this constraint.
3820///
3821/// [`madvise`]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/madvise.2.html
3822/// [`mprotect`]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/mprotect.2.html
3823/// [`mmap`]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/mmap.2.html
3824/// [`munmap`]: https://man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/munmap.2.html
3825#[derive(Debug, Clone)]
3826pub struct PoolingAllocationConfig {
3827    /// See `PoolingAllocatorConfig::max_unused_warm_slots` in `wasmtime`
3828    pub(crate) max_unused_warm_slots: u32,
3829    /// The target number of decommits to do per batch. This is not precise, as
3830    /// we can queue up decommits at times when we aren't prepared to
3831    /// immediately flush them, and so we may go over this target size
3832    /// occasionally.
3833    pub(crate) decommit_batch_size: usize,
3834    /// The size, in bytes, of async stacks to allocate (not including the guard
3835    /// page).
3836    #[cfg_attr(
3837        not(all(feature = "async", feature = "pooling-allocator")),
3838        expect(dead_code, reason = "easier to cfg")
3839    )]
3840    pub(crate) stack_size: usize,
3841    /// The limits to apply to instances allocated within this allocator.
3842    pub(crate) limits: InstanceLimits,
3843    /// Whether or not async stacks are zeroed after use.
3844    #[cfg_attr(
3845        not(all(feature = "async", feature = "pooling-allocator")),
3846        expect(dead_code, reason = "easier to cfg")
3847    )]
3848    pub(crate) async_stack_zeroing: bool,
3849    /// If async stack zeroing is enabled and the host platform is Linux this is
3850    /// how much memory to zero out with `memset`.
3851    ///
3852    /// The rest of memory will be zeroed out with `madvise`.
3853    pub(crate) async_stack_keep_resident: usize,
3854    /// How much linear memory, in bytes, to keep resident after resetting for
3855    /// use with the next instance. This much memory will be `memset` to zero
3856    /// when a linear memory is deallocated.
3857    ///
3858    /// Memory exceeding this amount in the wasm linear memory will be released
3859    /// with `madvise` back to the kernel.
3860    ///
3861    /// Only applicable on Linux.
3862    pub(crate) linear_memory_keep_resident: usize,
3863    /// Same as `linear_memory_keep_resident` but for tables.
3864    pub(crate) table_keep_resident: usize,
3865    /// Whether to enable memory protection keys.
3866    pub(crate) memory_protection_keys: Enabled,
3867    /// How many memory protection keys to allocate.
3868    pub(crate) max_memory_protection_keys: usize,
3869    /// Whether to enable PAGEMAP_SCAN on Linux.
3870    pub(crate) pagemap_scan: Enabled,
3871}
3872
3873impl Default for PoolingAllocationConfig {
3874    fn default() -> Self {
3875        Self {
3876            max_unused_warm_slots: 100,
3877            decommit_batch_size: 1,
3878            stack_size: 2 << 20,
3879            limits: InstanceLimits::default(),
3880            async_stack_zeroing: false,
3881            async_stack_keep_resident: 0,
3882            linear_memory_keep_resident: 0,
3883            table_keep_resident: 0,
3884            memory_protection_keys: Enabled::No,
3885            max_memory_protection_keys: 16,
3886            pagemap_scan: Enabled::No,
3887        }
3888    }
3889}
3890
3891/// Instance-related limit configuration for pooling.
3892///
3893/// More docs on this can be found at `wasmtime::PoolingAllocationConfig`.
3894#[derive(Debug, Copy, Clone)]
3895pub(crate) struct InstanceLimits {
3896    /// The maximum number of component instances that may be allocated
3897    /// concurrently.
3898    pub(crate) total_component_instances: u32,
3899
3900    /// The maximum size of a component's `VMComponentContext`, including
3901    /// the aggregate size of all its inner core modules' `VMContext` sizes.
3902    pub(crate) component_instance_size: usize,
3903
3904    /// The maximum number of core module instances that may be allocated
3905    /// concurrently.
3906    pub(crate) total_core_instances: u32,
3907
3908    /// The maximum number of core module instances that a single component may
3909    /// transitively contain.
3910    pub(crate) max_core_instances_per_component: u32,
3911
3912    /// The maximum number of Wasm linear memories that a component may
3913    /// transitively contain.
3914    pub(crate) max_memories_per_component: u32,
3915
3916    /// The maximum number of tables that a component may transitively contain.
3917    pub(crate) max_tables_per_component: u32,
3918
3919    /// The total number of linear memories in the pool, across all instances.
3920    pub(crate) total_memories: u32,
3921
3922    /// The total number of tables in the pool, across all instances.
3923    pub(crate) total_tables: u32,
3924
3925    /// The total number of async stacks in the pool, across all instances.
3926    pub(crate) total_stacks: u32,
3927
3928    /// Maximum size of a core instance's `VMContext`.
3929    pub(crate) core_instance_size: usize,
3930
3931    /// Maximum number of tables per instance.
3932    pub(crate) max_tables_per_module: u32,
3933
3934    /// Maximum number of word-size elements per table.
3935    ///
3936    /// Note that tables for element types such as continuations
3937    /// that use more than one word of storage may store fewer
3938    /// elements.
3939    pub(crate) table_elements: usize,
3940
3941    /// Maximum number of linear memories per instance.
3942    pub(crate) max_memories_per_module: u32,
3943
3944    /// Maximum byte size of a linear memory, must be smaller than
3945    /// `memory_reservation` in `Tunables`.
3946    pub(crate) max_memory_size: usize,
3947
3948    /// The total number of GC heaps in the pool, across all instances.
3949    pub(crate) total_gc_heaps: u32,
3950}
3951
3952impl Default for InstanceLimits {
3953    fn default() -> Self {
3954        let total = if cfg!(target_pointer_width = "32") {
3955            100
3956        } else {
3957            1000
3958        };
3959        // See doc comments for `wasmtime::PoolingAllocationConfig` for these
3960        // default values
3961        Self {
3962            total_component_instances: total,
3963            component_instance_size: 1 << 20, // 1 MiB
3964            total_core_instances: total,
3965            max_core_instances_per_component: u32::MAX,
3966            max_memories_per_component: u32::MAX,
3967            max_tables_per_component: u32::MAX,
3968            total_memories: total,
3969            total_tables: total,
3970            total_stacks: total,
3971            core_instance_size: 1 << 20, // 1 MiB
3972            max_tables_per_module: 1,
3973            // NB: in #8504 it was seen that a C# module in debug module can
3974            // have 10k+ elements.
3975            table_elements: 20_000,
3976            max_memories_per_module: 1,
3977            #[cfg(target_pointer_width = "64")]
3978            max_memory_size: 1 << 32, // 4G,
3979            #[cfg(target_pointer_width = "32")]
3980            max_memory_size: 10 << 20, // 10 MiB
3981            total_gc_heaps: total,
3982        }
3983    }
3984}
3985
3986impl PoolingAllocationConfig {
3987    /// Returns a new configuration builder with all default settings
3988    /// configured.
3989    pub fn new() -> PoolingAllocationConfig {
3990        PoolingAllocationConfig::default()
3991    }
3992
3993    /// Configures the maximum number of "unused warm slots" to retain in the
3994    /// pooling allocator.
3995    ///
3996    /// The pooling allocator operates over slots to allocate from, and each
3997    /// slot is considered "cold" if it's never been used before or "warm" if
3998    /// it's been used by some module in the past. Slots in the pooling
3999    /// allocator additionally track an "affinity" flag to a particular core
4000    /// wasm module. When a module is instantiated into a slot then the slot is
4001    /// considered affine to that module, even after the instance has been
4002    /// deallocated.
4003    ///
4004    /// When a new instance is created then a slot must be chosen, and the
4005    /// current algorithm for selecting a slot is:
4006    ///
4007    /// * If there are slots that are affine to the module being instantiated,
4008    ///   then the most recently used slot is selected to be allocated from.
4009    ///   This is done to improve reuse of resources such as memory mappings and
4010    ///   additionally try to benefit from temporal locality for things like
4011    ///   caches.
4012    ///
4013    /// * Otherwise if there are more than N affine slots to other modules, then
4014    ///   one of those affine slots is chosen to be allocated. The slot chosen
4015    ///   is picked on a least-recently-used basis.
4016    ///
4017    /// * Finally, if there are less than N affine slots to other modules, then
4018    ///   the non-affine slots are allocated from.
4019    ///
4020    /// This setting, `max_unused_warm_slots`, is the value for N in the above
4021    /// algorithm. The purpose of this setting is to have a knob over the RSS
4022    /// impact of "unused slots" for a long-running wasm server.
4023    ///
4024    /// If this setting is set to 0, for example, then affine slots are
4025    /// aggressively reused on a least-recently-used basis. A "cold" slot is
4026    /// only used if there are no affine slots available to allocate from. This
4027    /// means that the set of slots used over the lifetime of a program is the
4028    /// same as the maximum concurrent number of wasm instances.
4029    ///
4030    /// If this setting is set to infinity, however, then cold slots are
4031    /// prioritized to be allocated from. This means that the set of slots used
4032    /// over the lifetime of a program will approach
4033    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_memories`], or the maximum number of
4034    /// slots in the pooling allocator.
4035    ///
4036    /// Wasmtime does not aggressively decommit all resources associated with a
4037    /// slot when the slot is not in use. For example the
4038    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::linear_memory_keep_resident`] option can be
4039    /// used to keep memory associated with a slot, even when it's not in use.
4040    /// This means that the total set of used slots in the pooling instance
4041    /// allocator can impact the overall RSS usage of a program.
4042    ///
4043    /// The default value for this option is `100`.
4044    pub fn max_unused_warm_slots(&mut self, max: u32) -> &mut Self {
4045        self.max_unused_warm_slots = max;
4046        self
4047    }
4048
4049    /// The target number of decommits to do per batch.
4050    ///
4051    /// This is not precise, as we can queue up decommits at times when we
4052    /// aren't prepared to immediately flush them, and so we may go over this
4053    /// target size occasionally.
4054    ///
4055    /// Note additionally that the queue of not-yet-decommitted entities is
4056    /// sharded to reduce lock contention: one shard per available CPU, capped
4057    /// at 16. Each shard batches up to this many decommits independently,
4058    /// meaning that up to `min(available_parallelism, 16) * (batch_size - 1)`
4059    /// decommits may be queued and not yet flushed at any given time.
4060    ///
4061    /// A batch size of one effectively disables batching.
4062    ///
4063    /// Defaults to `1`.
4064    pub fn decommit_batch_size(&mut self, batch_size: usize) -> &mut Self {
4065        self.decommit_batch_size = batch_size;
4066        self
4067    }
4068
4069    /// How much memory, in bytes, to keep resident for async stacks allocated
4070    /// with the pooling allocator.
4071    ///
4072    /// When [`Config::async_stack_zeroing`] is enabled then Wasmtime will reset
4073    /// the contents of async stacks back to zero upon deallocation. This option
4074    /// can be used to perform the zeroing operation with `memset` up to a
4075    /// certain threshold of bytes instead of using system calls to reset the
4076    /// stack to zero.
4077    ///
4078    /// Note that when using this option the memory with async stacks will
4079    /// never be decommitted.
4080    pub fn async_stack_keep_resident(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
4081        self.async_stack_keep_resident = size;
4082        self
4083    }
4084
4085    /// How much memory, in bytes, to keep resident for each linear memory
4086    /// after deallocation.
4087    ///
4088    /// This option is only applicable on Linux and has no effect on other
4089    /// platforms.
4090    ///
4091    /// By default Wasmtime will use `madvise` to reset the entire contents of
4092    /// linear memory back to zero when a linear memory is deallocated. This
4093    /// option can be used to use `memset` instead to set memory back to zero
4094    /// which can, in some configurations, reduce the number of page faults
4095    /// taken when a slot is reused.
4096    pub fn linear_memory_keep_resident(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
4097        self.linear_memory_keep_resident = size;
4098        self
4099    }
4100
4101    /// How much memory, in bytes, to keep resident for each table after
4102    /// deallocation.
4103    ///
4104    /// This option is only applicable on Linux and has no effect on other
4105    /// platforms.
4106    ///
4107    /// This option is the same as
4108    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::linear_memory_keep_resident`] except that it
4109    /// is applicable to tables instead.
4110    pub fn table_keep_resident(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
4111        self.table_keep_resident = size;
4112        self
4113    }
4114
4115    /// The maximum number of concurrent component instances supported (default
4116    /// is `1000`).
4117    ///
4118    /// This provides an upper-bound on the total size of component
4119    /// metadata-related allocations, along with
4120    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_component_instance_size`]. The upper bound is
4121    ///
4122    /// ```text
4123    /// total_component_instances * max_component_instance_size
4124    /// ```
4125    ///
4126    /// where `max_component_instance_size` is rounded up to the size and alignment
4127    /// of the internal representation of the metadata.
4128    pub fn total_component_instances(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4129        self.limits.total_component_instances = count;
4130        self
4131    }
4132
4133    /// The maximum size, in bytes, allocated for a component instance's
4134    /// `VMComponentContext` metadata as well as the aggregate size of this
4135    /// component's core instances `VMContext` metadata.
4136    ///
4137    /// The [`wasmtime::component::Instance`][crate::component::Instance] type
4138    /// has a static size but its internal `VMComponentContext` is dynamically
4139    /// sized depending on the component being instantiated. This size limit
4140    /// loosely correlates to the size of the component, taking into account
4141    /// factors such as:
4142    ///
4143    /// * number of lifted and lowered functions,
4144    /// * number of memories
4145    /// * number of inner instances
4146    /// * number of resources
4147    ///
4148    /// If the allocated size per instance is too small then instantiation of a
4149    /// module will fail at runtime with an error indicating how many bytes were
4150    /// needed.
4151    ///
4152    /// In addition to the memory in the runtime for the component itself,
4153    /// components contain one or more core module instances. Each of these
4154    /// require some memory in the runtime as described in
4155    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_core_instance_size`]. The limit here
4156    /// applies against the sum of all of these individual allocations.
4157    ///
4158    /// The default value for this is 1MiB.
4159    ///
4160    /// This provides an upper-bound on the total size of all component's
4161    /// metadata-related allocations (for both the component and its embedded
4162    /// core module instances), along with
4163    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_component_instances`]. The upper bound is
4164    ///
4165    /// ```text
4166    /// total_component_instances * max_component_instance_size
4167    /// ```
4168    ///
4169    /// where `max_component_instance_size` is rounded up to the size and alignment
4170    /// of the internal representation of the metadata.
4171    pub fn max_component_instance_size(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
4172        self.limits.component_instance_size = size;
4173        self
4174    }
4175
4176    /// The maximum number of core instances a single component may contain
4177    /// (default is unlimited).
4178    ///
4179    /// This method (along with
4180    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memories_per_component`],
4181    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_tables_per_component`], and
4182    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_component_instance_size`]) allows you to cap
4183    /// the amount of resources a single component allocation consumes.
4184    ///
4185    /// If a component will instantiate more core instances than `count`, then
4186    /// the component will fail to instantiate.
4187    pub fn max_core_instances_per_component(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4188        self.limits.max_core_instances_per_component = count;
4189        self
4190    }
4191
4192    /// The maximum number of Wasm linear memories that a single component may
4193    /// transitively contain (default is unlimited).
4194    ///
4195    /// This method (along with
4196    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_core_instances_per_component`],
4197    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_tables_per_component`], and
4198    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_component_instance_size`]) allows you to cap
4199    /// the amount of resources a single component allocation consumes.
4200    ///
4201    /// If a component transitively contains more linear memories than `count`,
4202    /// then the component will fail to instantiate.
4203    pub fn max_memories_per_component(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4204        self.limits.max_memories_per_component = count;
4205        self
4206    }
4207
4208    /// The maximum number of tables that a single component may transitively
4209    /// contain (default is unlimited).
4210    ///
4211    /// This method (along with
4212    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_core_instances_per_component`],
4213    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memories_per_component`],
4214    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_component_instance_size`]) allows you to cap
4215    /// the amount of resources a single component allocation consumes.
4216    ///
4217    /// If a component will transitively contains more tables than `count`, then
4218    /// the component will fail to instantiate.
4219    pub fn max_tables_per_component(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4220        self.limits.max_tables_per_component = count;
4221        self
4222    }
4223
4224    /// The maximum number of concurrent Wasm linear memories supported (default
4225    /// is `1000`).
4226    ///
4227    /// This value has a direct impact on the amount of memory allocated by the pooling
4228    /// instance allocator.
4229    ///
4230    /// The pooling instance allocator allocates a memory pool, where each entry
4231    /// in the pool contains the reserved address space for each linear memory
4232    /// supported by an instance.
4233    ///
4234    /// The memory pool will reserve a large quantity of host process address
4235    /// space to elide the bounds checks required for correct WebAssembly memory
4236    /// semantics. Even with 64-bit address spaces, the address space is limited
4237    /// when dealing with a large number of linear memories.
4238    ///
4239    /// For example, on Linux x86_64, the userland address space limit is 128
4240    /// TiB. That might seem like a lot, but each linear memory will *reserve* 6
4241    /// GiB of space by default.
4242    pub fn total_memories(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4243        self.limits.total_memories = count;
4244        self
4245    }
4246
4247    /// The maximum number of concurrent tables supported (default is `1000`).
4248    ///
4249    /// This value has a direct impact on the amount of memory allocated by the
4250    /// pooling instance allocator.
4251    ///
4252    /// The pooling instance allocator allocates a table pool, where each entry
4253    /// in the pool contains the space needed for each WebAssembly table
4254    /// supported by an instance (see `table_elements` to control the size of
4255    /// each table).
4256    pub fn total_tables(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4257        self.limits.total_tables = count;
4258        self
4259    }
4260
4261    /// The maximum number of execution stacks allowed for asynchronous
4262    /// execution, when enabled (default is `1000`).
4263    ///
4264    /// This value has a direct impact on the amount of memory allocated by the
4265    /// pooling instance allocator.
4266    #[cfg(feature = "async")]
4267    pub fn total_stacks(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4268        self.limits.total_stacks = count;
4269        self
4270    }
4271
4272    /// The maximum number of concurrent core instances supported (default is
4273    /// `1000`).
4274    ///
4275    /// This provides an upper-bound on the total size of core instance
4276    /// metadata-related allocations, along with
4277    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_core_instance_size`]. The upper bound is
4278    ///
4279    /// ```text
4280    /// total_core_instances * max_core_instance_size
4281    /// ```
4282    ///
4283    /// where `max_core_instance_size` is rounded up to the size and alignment of
4284    /// the internal representation of the metadata.
4285    pub fn total_core_instances(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4286        self.limits.total_core_instances = count;
4287        self
4288    }
4289
4290    /// The maximum size, in bytes, allocated for a core instance's `VMContext`
4291    /// metadata.
4292    ///
4293    /// The [`Instance`][crate::Instance] type has a static size but its
4294    /// `VMContext` metadata is dynamically sized depending on the module being
4295    /// instantiated. This size limit loosely correlates to the size of the Wasm
4296    /// module, taking into account factors such as:
4297    ///
4298    /// * number of functions
4299    /// * number of globals
4300    /// * number of memories
4301    /// * number of tables
4302    /// * number of function types
4303    ///
4304    /// If the allocated size per instance is too small then instantiation of a
4305    /// module will fail at runtime with an error indicating how many bytes were
4306    /// needed.
4307    ///
4308    /// The default value for this is 1MiB.
4309    ///
4310    /// This provides an upper-bound on the total size of core instance
4311    /// metadata-related allocations, along with
4312    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_core_instances`]. The upper bound is
4313    ///
4314    /// ```text
4315    /// total_core_instances * max_core_instance_size
4316    /// ```
4317    ///
4318    /// where `max_core_instance_size` is rounded up to the size and alignment of
4319    /// the internal representation of the metadata.
4320    pub fn max_core_instance_size(&mut self, size: usize) -> &mut Self {
4321        self.limits.core_instance_size = size;
4322        self
4323    }
4324
4325    /// The maximum number of defined tables for a core module (default is `1`).
4326    ///
4327    /// This value controls the capacity of the `VMTableDefinition` table in
4328    /// each instance's `VMContext` structure.
4329    ///
4330    /// The allocated size of the table will be `tables *
4331    /// sizeof(VMTableDefinition)` for each instance regardless of how many
4332    /// tables are defined by an instance's module.
4333    pub fn max_tables_per_module(&mut self, tables: u32) -> &mut Self {
4334        self.limits.max_tables_per_module = tables;
4335        self
4336    }
4337
4338    /// The maximum table elements for any table defined in a module (default is
4339    /// `20000`).
4340    ///
4341    /// If a table's minimum element limit is greater than this value, the
4342    /// module will fail to instantiate.
4343    ///
4344    /// If a table's maximum element limit is unbounded or greater than this
4345    /// value, the maximum will be `table_elements` for the purpose of any
4346    /// `table.grow` instruction.
4347    ///
4348    /// This value is used to reserve the maximum space for each supported
4349    /// table; table elements are pointer-sized in the Wasmtime runtime.
4350    /// Therefore, the space reserved for each instance is `tables *
4351    /// table_elements * sizeof::<*const ()>`.
4352    pub fn table_elements(&mut self, elements: usize) -> &mut Self {
4353        self.limits.table_elements = elements;
4354        self
4355    }
4356
4357    /// The maximum number of defined linear memories for a module (default is
4358    /// `1`).
4359    ///
4360    /// This value controls the capacity of the `VMMemoryDefinition` table in
4361    /// each core instance's `VMContext` structure.
4362    ///
4363    /// The allocated size of the table will be `memories *
4364    /// sizeof(VMMemoryDefinition)` for each core instance regardless of how
4365    /// many memories are defined by the core instance's module.
4366    pub fn max_memories_per_module(&mut self, memories: u32) -> &mut Self {
4367        self.limits.max_memories_per_module = memories;
4368        self
4369    }
4370
4371    /// The maximum byte size that any WebAssembly linear memory may grow to.
4372    ///
4373    /// This option defaults to 4 GiB meaning that for 32-bit linear memories
4374    /// there is no restrictions. 64-bit linear memories will not be allowed to
4375    /// grow beyond 4 GiB by default.
4376    ///
4377    /// If a memory's minimum size is greater than this value, the module will
4378    /// fail to instantiate.
4379    ///
4380    /// If a memory's maximum size is unbounded or greater than this value, the
4381    /// maximum will be `max_memory_size` for the purpose of any `memory.grow`
4382    /// instruction.
4383    ///
4384    /// This value is used to control the maximum accessible space for each
4385    /// linear memory of a core instance. This can be thought of as a simple
4386    /// mechanism like [`Store::limiter`](crate::Store::limiter) to limit memory
4387    /// at runtime. This value can also affect striping/coloring behavior when
4388    /// used in conjunction with
4389    /// [`memory_protection_keys`](PoolingAllocationConfig::memory_protection_keys).
4390    ///
4391    /// The virtual memory reservation size of each linear memory is controlled
4392    /// by the [`Config::memory_reservation`] setting and this method's
4393    /// configuration cannot exceed [`Config::memory_reservation`].
4394    pub fn max_memory_size(&mut self, bytes: usize) -> &mut Self {
4395        self.limits.max_memory_size = bytes;
4396        self
4397    }
4398
4399    /// Configures whether memory protection keys (MPK) should be used for more
4400    /// efficient layout of pool-allocated memories.
4401    ///
4402    /// When using the pooling allocator (see [`Config::allocation_strategy`],
4403    /// [`InstanceAllocationStrategy::Pooling`]), memory protection keys can
4404    /// reduce the total amount of allocated virtual memory by eliminating guard
4405    /// regions between WebAssembly memories in the pool. It does so by
4406    /// "coloring" memory regions with different memory keys and setting which
4407    /// regions are accessible each time executions switches from host to guest
4408    /// (or vice versa).
4409    ///
4410    /// Leveraging MPK requires configuring a smaller-than-default
4411    /// [`max_memory_size`](PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memory_size) to enable
4412    /// this coloring/striping behavior. For example embeddings might want to
4413    /// reduce the default 4G allowance to 128M.
4414    ///
4415    /// MPK is only available on Linux (called `pku` there) and recent x86
4416    /// systems; we check for MPK support at runtime by examining the `CPUID`
4417    /// register. This configuration setting can be in three states:
4418    ///
4419    /// - `auto`: if MPK support is available the guard regions are removed; if
4420    ///   not, the guard regions remain
4421    /// - `yes`: use MPK to eliminate guard regions; fail if MPK is not
4422    ///   supported
4423    /// - `no`: never use MPK
4424    ///
4425    /// By default this value is `no`, but may become `auto` in future
4426    /// releases.
4427    ///
4428    /// __WARNING__: this configuration options is still experimental--use at
4429    /// your own risk! MPK uses kernel and CPU features to protect memory
4430    /// regions; you may observe segmentation faults if anything is
4431    /// misconfigured.
4432    #[cfg(feature = "memory-protection-keys")]
4433    pub fn memory_protection_keys(&mut self, enable: Enabled) -> &mut Self {
4434        self.memory_protection_keys = enable;
4435        self
4436    }
4437
4438    /// Sets an upper limit on how many memory protection keys (MPK) Wasmtime
4439    /// will use.
4440    ///
4441    /// This setting is only applicable when
4442    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::memory_protection_keys`] is set to `enable`
4443    /// or `auto`. Configuring this above the HW and OS limits (typically 15)
4444    /// has no effect.
4445    ///
4446    /// If multiple Wasmtime engines are used in the same process, note that all
4447    /// engines will share the same set of allocated keys; this setting will
4448    /// limit how many keys are allocated initially and thus available to all
4449    /// other engines.
4450    #[cfg(feature = "memory-protection-keys")]
4451    pub fn max_memory_protection_keys(&mut self, max: usize) -> &mut Self {
4452        self.max_memory_protection_keys = max;
4453        self
4454    }
4455
4456    /// Check if memory protection keys (MPK) are available on the current host.
4457    ///
4458    /// This is a convenience method for determining MPK availability using the
4459    /// same method that [`Enabled::Auto`] does. See
4460    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::memory_protection_keys`] for more
4461    /// information.
4462    #[cfg(feature = "memory-protection-keys")]
4463    pub fn are_memory_protection_keys_available() -> bool {
4464        crate::runtime::vm::mpk::is_supported()
4465    }
4466
4467    /// The maximum number of concurrent GC heaps supported (default is `1000`).
4468    ///
4469    /// This value has a direct impact on the amount of memory allocated by the
4470    /// pooling instance allocator.
4471    ///
4472    /// The pooling instance allocator allocates a GC heap pool, where each
4473    /// entry in the pool contains the space needed for each GC heap used by a
4474    /// store.
4475    #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
4476    pub fn total_gc_heaps(&mut self, count: u32) -> &mut Self {
4477        self.limits.total_gc_heaps = count;
4478        self
4479    }
4480
4481    /// Configures whether the Linux-specific [`PAGEMAP_SCAN` ioctl][ioctl] is
4482    /// used to help reset linear memory.
4483    ///
4484    /// When [`Self::linear_memory_keep_resident`] or
4485    /// [`Self::table_keep_resident`] options are configured to nonzero values
4486    /// the default behavior is to `memset` the lowest addresses of a table or
4487    /// memory back to their original contents. With the `PAGEMAP_SCAN` ioctl on
4488    /// Linux this can be done to more intelligently scan for resident pages in
4489    /// the region and only reset those pages back to their original contents
4490    /// with `memset` rather than assuming the low addresses are all resident.
4491    ///
4492    /// This ioctl has the potential to provide a number of performance benefits
4493    /// in high-reuse and high concurrency scenarios. Notably this enables
4494    /// Wasmtime to scan the entire region of WebAssembly linear memory and
4495    /// manually reset memory back to its original contents, up to
4496    /// [`Self::linear_memory_keep_resident`] bytes, possibly skipping an
4497    /// `madvise` entirely. This can be more efficient by avoiding removing
4498    /// pages from the address space entirely and additionally ensuring that
4499    /// future use of the linear memory doesn't incur page faults as the pages
4500    /// remain resident.
4501    ///
4502    /// At this time this configuration option is still being evaluated as to
4503    /// how appropriate it is for all use cases. It currently defaults to
4504    /// `no` or disabled but may change to `auto`, enable if supported, in the
4505    /// future. This option is only supported on Linux and requires a kernel
4506    /// version of 6.7 or higher.
4507    ///
4508    /// [ioctl]: https://www.man7.org/linux/man-pages/man2/PAGEMAP_SCAN.2const.html
4509    pub fn pagemap_scan(&mut self, enable: Enabled) -> &mut Self {
4510        self.pagemap_scan = enable;
4511        self
4512    }
4513
4514    /// Returns the configured
4515    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::decommit_batch_size`], if enabled.
4516    pub fn get_decommit_batch_size(&self) -> usize {
4517        self.decommit_batch_size
4518    }
4519
4520    /// Returns the configured
4521    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_unused_warm_slots`], if enabled.
4522    pub fn get_max_unused_warm_slots(&self) -> u32 {
4523        self.max_unused_warm_slots
4524    }
4525
4526    /// Returns the configured
4527    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::linear_memory_keep_resident`], if
4528    /// enabled.
4529    pub fn get_memory_keep_resident(&self) -> usize {
4530        self.linear_memory_keep_resident
4531    }
4532
4533    /// Returns the configured
4534    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::table_keep_resident`], if enabled.
4535    pub fn get_table_keep_resident(&self) -> usize {
4536        self.table_keep_resident
4537    }
4538
4539    /// Returns the configured
4540    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::async_stack_keep_resident`], if
4541    /// enabled.
4542    pub fn get_async_stack_keep_resident(&self) -> usize {
4543        self.async_stack_keep_resident
4544    }
4545
4546    /// Returns the configured
4547    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::memory_protection_keys`], if enabled.
4548    pub fn get_memory_protection_keys(&self) -> Enabled {
4549        self.memory_protection_keys
4550    }
4551
4552    /// Returns the configured
4553    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memory_protection_keys`], if
4554    /// enabled.
4555    pub fn get_max_memory_protection_keys(&self) -> usize {
4556        self.max_memory_protection_keys
4557    }
4558
4559    /// Returns the configured
4560    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::pagemap_scan`], if enabled.
4561    pub fn get_pagemap_scan(&self) -> Enabled {
4562        self.pagemap_scan
4563    }
4564
4565    /// Returns the configured
4566    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_core_instances`], if enabled.
4567    pub fn get_total_core_instances(&self) -> u32 {
4568        self.limits.total_core_instances
4569    }
4570
4571    /// Returns the configured
4572    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_component_instances`], if
4573    /// enabled.
4574    pub fn get_total_component_instances(&self) -> u32 {
4575        self.limits.total_component_instances
4576    }
4577
4578    /// Returns the configured
4579    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_memories`], if enabled.
4580    pub fn get_total_memories(&self) -> u32 {
4581        self.limits.total_memories
4582    }
4583
4584    /// Returns the configured
4585    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_tables`], if enabled.
4586    pub fn get_total_tables(&self) -> u32 {
4587        self.limits.total_tables
4588    }
4589
4590    /// Returns the configured
4591    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_stacks`], if enabled.
4592    pub fn get_total_stacks(&self) -> u32 {
4593        self.limits.total_stacks
4594    }
4595
4596    /// Returns the configured
4597    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::total_gc_heaps`], if enabled.
4598    pub fn get_total_gc_heaps(&self) -> u32 {
4599        self.limits.total_gc_heaps
4600    }
4601
4602    /// Returns the configured
4603    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memory_size`], if enabled.
4604    pub fn get_max_memory_size(&self) -> usize {
4605        self.limits.max_memory_size
4606    }
4607
4608    /// Returns the configured
4609    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::table_elements`], if enabled.
4610    pub fn get_table_elements(&self) -> usize {
4611        self.limits.table_elements
4612    }
4613
4614    /// Returns the configured
4615    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_core_instance_size`], if enabled.
4616    pub fn get_max_core_instance_size(&self) -> usize {
4617        self.limits.core_instance_size
4618    }
4619
4620    /// Returns the configured
4621    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_component_instance_size`], if
4622    /// enabled.
4623    pub fn get_max_component_instance_size(&self) -> usize {
4624        self.limits.component_instance_size
4625    }
4626
4627    /// Returns the configured
4628    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_core_instances_per_component`], if
4629    /// enabled.
4630    pub fn get_max_core_instances_per_component(&self) -> u32 {
4631        self.limits.max_core_instances_per_component
4632    }
4633
4634    /// Returns the configured
4635    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memories_per_component`], if
4636    /// enabled.
4637    pub fn get_max_memories_per_component(&self) -> u32 {
4638        self.limits.max_memories_per_component
4639    }
4640
4641    /// Returns the configured
4642    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_tables_per_component`], if enabled.
4643    pub fn get_max_tables_per_component(&self) -> u32 {
4644        self.limits.max_tables_per_component
4645    }
4646
4647    /// Returns the configured
4648    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_tables_per_module`], if enabled.
4649    pub fn get_max_tables_per_module(&self) -> u32 {
4650        self.limits.max_tables_per_module
4651    }
4652
4653    /// Returns the configured
4654    /// [`PoolingAllocationConfig::max_memories_per_module`], if enabled.
4655    pub fn get_max_memories_per_module(&self) -> u32 {
4656        self.limits.max_memories_per_module
4657    }
4658}
4659
4660#[cfg(feature = "std")]
4661fn detect_host_feature(feature: &str) -> Option<bool> {
4662    #[cfg(target_arch = "aarch64")]
4663    {
4664        return match feature {
4665            "lse" => Some(std::arch::is_aarch64_feature_detected!("lse")),
4666            "paca" => Some(std::arch::is_aarch64_feature_detected!("paca")),
4667            "fp16" => Some(std::arch::is_aarch64_feature_detected!("fp16")),
4668            "dotprod" => Some(std::arch::is_aarch64_feature_detected!("dotprod")),
4669
4670            _ => None,
4671        };
4672    }
4673
4674    // `is_s390x_feature_detected` is nightly only for now, so use the
4675    // STORE FACILITY LIST EXTENDED instruction as a temporary measure.
4676    #[cfg(target_arch = "s390x")]
4677    {
4678        let mut facility_list: [u64; 4] = [0; 4];
4679        unsafe {
4680            core::arch::asm!(
4681                "stfle 0({})",
4682                in(reg_addr) facility_list.as_mut_ptr() ,
4683                inout("r0") facility_list.len() as u64 - 1 => _,
4684                options(nostack)
4685            );
4686        }
4687        let get_facility_bit = |n: usize| {
4688            // NOTE: bits are numbered from the left.
4689            facility_list[n / 64] & (1 << (63 - (n % 64))) != 0
4690        };
4691
4692        return match feature {
4693            "mie3" => Some(get_facility_bit(61)),
4694            "mie4" => Some(get_facility_bit(84)),
4695            "vxrs_ext2" => Some(get_facility_bit(148)),
4696            "vxrs_ext3" => Some(get_facility_bit(198)),
4697
4698            _ => None,
4699        };
4700    }
4701
4702    #[cfg(target_arch = "riscv64")]
4703    {
4704        return match feature {
4705            // due to `is_riscv64_feature_detected` is not stable.
4706            // we cannot use it. For now lie and say all features are always
4707            // found to keep tests working.
4708            _ => Some(true),
4709        };
4710    }
4711
4712    #[cfg(target_arch = "x86_64")]
4713    {
4714        return match feature {
4715            "cmpxchg16b" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("cmpxchg16b")),
4716            "sse3" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("sse3")),
4717            "ssse3" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("ssse3")),
4718            "sse4.1" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("sse4.1")),
4719            "sse4.2" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("sse4.2")),
4720            "popcnt" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("popcnt")),
4721            "avx" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx")),
4722            "avx2" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx2")),
4723            "fma" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("fma")),
4724            "bmi1" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("bmi1")),
4725            "bmi2" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("bmi2")),
4726            "avx512bitalg" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx512bitalg")),
4727            "avx512dq" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx512dq")),
4728            "avx512f" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx512f")),
4729            "avx512vl" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx512vl")),
4730            "avx512vbmi" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("avx512vbmi")),
4731            "lzcnt" => Some(std::is_x86_feature_detected!("lzcnt")),
4732
4733            _ => None,
4734        };
4735    }
4736
4737    #[allow(
4738        unreachable_code,
4739        reason = "reachable or not depending on if a target above matches"
4740    )]
4741    {
4742        let _ = feature;
4743        return None;
4744    }
4745}
4746
4747// What follows in this impl block is intended to be a somewhat-mechanical
4748// mostly-complete set of getters for relevant configuration options on
4749// `Config`. The `Config` type does not reflect a complete configuration so
4750// default values cannot be directly read from it. An `Engine`, however,
4751// represents a concrete and complete configuration with all default values
4752// fully specified. The purpose of these getters are then to perform a dual
4753// function of reflecting what was explicitly configured above as well as
4754// defaults that Wasmtime sets.
4755//
4756// The current pattern is:
4757//
4758// * All methods are `get_<config_name>`
4759// * Return values return `T` instead of `Option<T>` where possible unless the
4760//   state for `T` is completely missing.
4761//
4762// This impl is primarily in service of
4763// `wasmtime_cli_flags::CommonOptions::from_engine` at this time, and CLI flags
4764// are not as comprehensive as `Config` options, but it's expected that the set
4765// will settle/grow over time.
4766impl Engine {
4767    /// Returns the configured [`Config::memory_may_move`] value.
4768    pub fn get_memory_may_move(&self) -> bool {
4769        self.tunables().memory_may_move
4770    }
4771
4772    /// Returns the configured [`Config::memory_reservation`] value.
4773    pub fn get_memory_reservation(&self) -> u64 {
4774        self.tunables().memory_reservation
4775    }
4776
4777    /// Returns the configured [`Config::memory_reservation_for_growth`] value.
4778    pub fn get_memory_reservation_for_growth(&self) -> u64 {
4779        self.tunables().memory_reservation_for_growth
4780    }
4781
4782    /// Returns the configured [`Config::memory_guard_size`] value.
4783    pub fn get_memory_guard_size(&self) -> u64 {
4784        self.tunables().memory_guard_size
4785    }
4786
4787    /// Returns the configured [`Config::gc_heap_may_move`] value.
4788    pub fn get_gc_heap_may_move(&self) -> bool {
4789        self.tunables().gc_heap_may_move
4790    }
4791
4792    /// Returns the configured [`Config::gc_heap_reservation`] value.
4793    pub fn get_gc_heap_reservation(&self) -> u64 {
4794        self.tunables().gc_heap_reservation
4795    }
4796
4797    /// Returns the configured [`Config::gc_heap_initial_size`] value.
4798    pub fn get_gc_heap_initial_size(&self) -> u64 {
4799        self.tunables().gc_heap_initial_size
4800    }
4801
4802    /// Returns the configured [`Config::gc_heap_reservation_for_growth`] value.
4803    pub fn get_gc_heap_reservation_for_growth(&self) -> u64 {
4804        self.tunables().gc_heap_reservation_for_growth
4805    }
4806
4807    /// Returns the configured [`Config::gc_heap_guard_size`] value.
4808    pub fn get_gc_heap_guard_size(&self) -> u64 {
4809        self.tunables().gc_heap_guard_size
4810    }
4811
4812    /// Returns the configured [`Config::guard_before_linear_memory`] value.
4813    pub fn get_guard_before_linear_memory(&self) -> bool {
4814        self.tunables().guard_before_linear_memory
4815    }
4816
4817    /// Returns the configured [`Config::table_lazy_init`] value.
4818    pub fn get_table_lazy_init(&self) -> bool {
4819        self.tunables().table_lazy_init
4820    }
4821
4822    /// Returns the configured [`Config::memory_init_cow`] value.
4823    pub fn get_memory_init_cow(&self) -> bool {
4824        self.tunables().memory_init_cow
4825    }
4826
4827    /// Returns the configured [`Config::memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size`] value.
4828    pub fn get_memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size(&self) -> u64 {
4829        self.config().memory_guaranteed_dense_image_size
4830    }
4831
4832    /// Returns the configured [`Config::signals_based_traps`] value.
4833    pub fn get_signals_based_traps(&self) -> bool {
4834        self.tunables().signals_based_traps
4835    }
4836
4837    /// Returns the configured [`Config::gc_zeal_alloc_counter`] value.
4838    pub fn get_gc_zeal_alloc_counter(&self) -> Option<core::num::NonZeroU32> {
4839        self.tunables().gc_zeal_alloc_counter
4840    }
4841
4842    /// Returns the configured [`Config::cranelift_opt_level`] value.
4843    pub fn get_cranelift_opt_level(&self) -> Option<OptLevel> {
4844        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
4845        if let Some(compiler) = self.compiler() {
4846            let flags = compiler.flags();
4847            let (_, FlagValue::Enum(opt)) = flags.iter().find(|(f, _)| *f == "opt_level")? else {
4848                return None;
4849            };
4850            return match &opt[..] {
4851                "none" => Some(OptLevel::None),
4852                "speed" => Some(OptLevel::Speed),
4853                "speed_and_size" => Some(OptLevel::SpeedAndSize),
4854                _ => None,
4855            };
4856        }
4857        None
4858    }
4859
4860    /// Returns the configured [`Config::cranelift_regalloc_algorithm`] value.
4861    pub fn get_cranelift_regalloc_algorithm(&self) -> Option<RegallocAlgorithm> {
4862        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
4863        if let Some(compiler) = self.compiler() {
4864            let flags = compiler.flags();
4865            let (_, FlagValue::Enum(opt)) =
4866                flags.iter().find(|(f, _)| *f == "regalloc_algorithm")?
4867            else {
4868                return None;
4869            };
4870            return match &opt[..] {
4871                "backtracking" => Some(RegallocAlgorithm::Backtracking),
4872                "single_pass" => Some(RegallocAlgorithm::SinglePass),
4873                _ => None,
4874            };
4875        }
4876        None
4877    }
4878
4879    /// Returns the configured [`Config::strategy`] value.
4880    pub fn get_strategy(&self) -> Option<Strategy> {
4881        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
4882        return self.config().compiler_config.as_ref()?.strategy;
4883        #[cfg(not(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch")))]
4884        return None;
4885    }
4886
4887    /// Returns the configured [`Config::collector`] value.
4888    pub fn get_collector(&self) -> Option<Collector> {
4889        #[cfg(feature = "gc")]
4890        return Some(self.config().collector);
4891        #[cfg(not(feature = "gc"))]
4892        return None;
4893    }
4894
4895    /// Returns the configured [`Config::cranelift_debug_verifier`] value.
4896    pub fn get_cranelift_debug_verifier(&self) -> Option<bool> {
4897        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
4898        if let Some(compiler) = self.compiler() {
4899            let flags = compiler.flags();
4900            let (_, FlagValue::Bool(b)) = flags.iter().find(|(f, _)| *f == "enable_verifier")?
4901            else {
4902                return None;
4903            };
4904            return Some(*b);
4905        }
4906        None
4907    }
4908
4909    /// Returns the configured [`Config::compiler_inlining`] value.
4910    pub fn get_compiler_inlining(&self) -> Inlining {
4911        self.tunables().inlining
4912    }
4913
4914    /// Returns the configured [`Config::native_unwind_info`] value.
4915    pub fn get_native_unwind_info(&self) -> Option<bool> {
4916        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
4917        if let Some(compiler) = self.compiler() {
4918            let flags = compiler.flags();
4919            let (_, FlagValue::Bool(b)) = flags.iter().find(|(f, _)| *f == "unwind_info")? else {
4920                return None;
4921            };
4922            return Some(*b);
4923        }
4924        None
4925    }
4926
4927    /// Returns the configured [`Config::parallel_compilation`] value.
4928    pub fn get_parallel_compilation(&self) -> bool {
4929        self.config().parallel_compilation
4930    }
4931
4932    /// Returns the configured [`Config::metadata_for_internal_asserts`] value.
4933    pub fn get_metadata_for_internal_asserts(&self) -> bool {
4934        self.tunables().metadata_for_internal_asserts
4935    }
4936
4937    /// Returns the configured [`Config::metadata_for_gc_heap_corruption`] value.
4938    pub fn get_metadata_for_gc_heap_corruption(&self) -> bool {
4939        self.tunables().metadata_for_gc_heap_corruption
4940    }
4941
4942    /// Returns the runtime pooling allocator configuration, if the pooling
4943    /// allocator is in use.
4944    pub fn get_pooling_config(&self) -> Option<&PoolingAllocationConfig> {
4945        #[cfg(feature = "pooling-allocator")]
4946        {
4947            Some(self.allocator().as_pooling()?.config())
4948        }
4949        #[cfg(not(feature = "pooling-allocator"))]
4950        {
4951            None
4952        }
4953    }
4954
4955    /// Returns the configured wasm proposals enabled in this engine.
4956    pub fn get_wasm_features(&self) -> WasmFeatures {
4957        self.features()
4958    }
4959
4960    /// Returns the configured [`Config::async_stack_size`] value.
4961    pub fn get_async_stack_size(&self) -> usize {
4962        self.config().async_stack_size
4963    }
4964
4965    /// Returns the configured [`Config::async_stack_zeroing`] value.
4966    pub fn get_async_stack_zeroing(&self) -> bool {
4967        self.config().async_stack_zeroing
4968    }
4969
4970    /// Returns the configured [`Config::wasm_branch_hinting`] value.
4971    pub fn get_wasm_branch_hinting(&self) -> bool {
4972        self.tunables().branch_hinting
4973    }
4974
4975    /// Returns the configured [`Config::concurrency_support`] value.
4976    pub fn get_concurrency_support(&self) -> bool {
4977        self.tunables().concurrency_support
4978    }
4979
4980    /// Returns the configured [`Config::epoch_interruption`] value.
4981    pub fn get_epoch_interruption(&self) -> bool {
4982        self.tunables().epoch_interruption
4983    }
4984
4985    /// Returns the configured [`Config::consume_fuel`] value.
4986    pub fn get_consume_fuel(&self) -> bool {
4987        self.tunables().consume_fuel
4988    }
4989
4990    /// Returns the configured [`Config::max_wasm_stack`] value.
4991    pub fn get_max_wasm_stack(&self) -> usize {
4992        self.config().max_wasm_stack
4993    }
4994
4995    /// Returns the configured [`Config::cranelift_nan_canonicalization`] value.
4996    pub fn get_cranelift_nan_canonicalization(&self) -> Option<bool> {
4997        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
4998        if let Some(compiler) = self.compiler() {
4999            let flags = compiler.flags();
5000            let (_, FlagValue::Bool(b)) = flags
5001                .iter()
5002                .find(|(f, _)| *f == "enable_nan_canonicalization")?
5003            else {
5004                return None;
5005            };
5006            return Some(*b);
5007        }
5008        None
5009    }
5010
5011    /// Returns the configured [`Config::relaxed_simd_deterministic`] value.
5012    pub fn get_relaxed_simd_deterministic(&self) -> bool {
5013        self.tunables().relaxed_simd_deterministic
5014    }
5015
5016    /// Returns the configured [`Config::shared_memory`] value.
5017    pub fn get_shared_memory(&self) -> bool {
5018        self.config().shared_memory
5019    }
5020
5021    /// Returns the configured [`Config::generate_address_map`] value.
5022    pub fn get_generate_address_map(&self) -> bool {
5023        self.tunables().generate_address_map
5024    }
5025
5026    /// Returns the configured [`Config::debug_info`] value.
5027    pub fn get_debug_info(&self) -> bool {
5028        self.tunables().debug_native
5029    }
5030
5031    /// Returns the configured [`Config::guest_debug`] value.
5032    pub fn get_guest_debug(&self) -> bool {
5033        self.tunables().debug_guest
5034    }
5035
5036    /// Returns the configured [`Config::debug_symbols`] value.
5037    pub fn get_debug_symbols(&self) -> bool {
5038        self.tunables().debug_symbols
5039    }
5040
5041    /// Returns the configured [`Config::wasm_backtrace_max_frames`] value.
5042    pub fn get_wasm_backtrace_max_frames(&self) -> usize {
5043        self.config()
5044            .wasm_backtrace_max_frames
5045            .map(|f| f.get())
5046            .unwrap_or(0)
5047    }
5048
5049    /// Returns the configured [`Config::target`] value.
5050    pub fn get_target(&self) -> Option<String> {
5051        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
5052        if let Some(compiler) = self.compiler() {
5053            return Some(compiler.triple().to_string());
5054        }
5055        None
5056    }
5057
5058    /// Returns the enabled flags via [`Config::cranelift_flag_enable`].
5059    pub fn get_cranelift_flags_enabled(&self) -> impl Iterator<Item = &str> {
5060        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
5061        if let Some(config) = &self.config().compiler_config {
5062            return config
5063                .flags
5064                .iter()
5065                .filter_map(|(k, v)| match v {
5066                    UserSpecified::Yes => Some(k.as_str()),
5067                    UserSpecified::No => None,
5068                })
5069                .collect::<Vec<_>>()
5070                .into_iter();
5071        }
5072
5073        Vec::new().into_iter()
5074    }
5075
5076    /// Returns the enabled flags via [`Config::cranelift_flag_set`].
5077    pub fn get_cranelift_flags_set(&self) -> impl Iterator<Item = (&str, &str)> {
5078        #[cfg(any(feature = "cranelift", feature = "winch"))]
5079        if let Some(config) = &self.config().compiler_config {
5080            return config
5081                .settings
5082                .iter()
5083                .filter_map(|(k, (v, s))| match s {
5084                    UserSpecified::Yes => Some((k.as_str(), v.as_str())),
5085                    UserSpecified::No => None,
5086                })
5087                .collect::<Vec<_>>()
5088                .into_iter();
5089        }
5090
5091        Vec::new().into_iter()
5092    }
5093}