This commit moves `wasm-bindgen` the CLI tool from internally using
`parity-wasm` for wasm parsing/serialization to instead use `walrus`.
The `walrus` crate is something we've been working on recently with an
aim to replace the usage of `parity-wasm` in `wasm-bindgen` to make the
current CLI tool more maintainable as well as more future-proof.
The `walrus` crate provides a much nicer AST to work with as well as a
structured `Module`, whereas `parity-wasm` provides a very raw interface
to the wasm module which isn't really appropriate for our use case. The
many transformations and tweaks that wasm-bindgen does have a huge
amount of ad-hoc index management to carefully craft a final wasm
binary, but this is all entirely taken care for us with the `walrus`
crate.
Additionally, `wasm-bindgen` will ingest and rewrite the wasm file,
often changing the binary offsets of functions. Eventually with DWARF
debug information we'll need to be sure to preserve the debug
information throughout the transformations that `wasm-bindgen` does
today. This is practically impossible to do with the `parity-wasm`
architecture, but `walrus` was designed from the get-go to solve this
problem transparently in the `walrus` crate itself. (it doesn't today,
but this is planned work)
It is the intention that this does not end up regressing any
`wasm-bindgen` use cases, neither in functionality or in speed. As a
large change and refactoring, however, it's likely that at least
something will arise! We'll want to continue to remain vigilant to any
issues that come up with this commit.
Note that the `gc` crate has been deleted as part of this change, as the
`gc` crate is no longer necessary since `walrus` does it automatically.
Additionally the `gc` crate was one of the main problems with preserving
debug information as it often deletes wasm items!
Finally, this also starts moving crates to the 2018 edition where
necessary since `walrus` requires the 2018 edition, and in general it's
more pleasant to work within the 2018 edition!
This commit implements the first half of [RFC #5] where the `Deref`
trait is implemented for all imported types. The target of `Deref` is
either the first entry of the list of `extends` attribute or `JsValue`.
All examples using `.as_ref()` with various `web-sys` types have been
updated to the more ergonomic deref casts now. Additionally the
`web-sys` generation of the `extends` array has been fixed slightly to
explicitly list implementatoins in the hierarchy order to ensure the
correct target for `Deref` is chosen.
[RFC #5]: https://github.com/rustwasm/rfcs/blob/master/text/005-structural-and-deref.md
For example, the constructor in Response.webidl accepts multiple types. However, one of those types is `ReadableStream` which isn't defined yet, and that causes all constructors for Response to be skipped even though the other argument types could be supported.
Previously the "container attribute" were set to the attributes of the
mixin itself, but we want the container attributes to be that of the
type which includes the mixin (like `Window`) as those attributes
contain information about whether or not bindings are `structural`.
The end result with this is that the `structural` tag is now used for
properties on `Window`, correctly generating setters/getters.
Closes#904
This information is embedded within the algorithm for constructing interfaces
and their prototypes in the section for ECMAScript glue in the WebIDL spec...
This really *should* make the `wasm_bindgen_backend::ast::ImportType::extends`
member from a `Vec<Ident>` into a `Vec<syn::Path>` so that we could use
`js_sys::Object` in the extends field, but that is a huge pain because then the
`ImportedTypes` trait needs to be changed, and all of its implementers, etc...
This commit updates how we name overloaded methods. Previously all argument
names were concatenated, but after this commit it only concatenates argument
names where at least one possibility has a different type. Otherwise if all
possibilities have the same type name it in theory isn't adding too much more
information!
Additionally this commit also switches to using `_with_` consistently everywhere
instead of `_with_` for constructors and `_using_` for methods.
Closes#712
* Tweak the implementation of heap closures
This commit updates the implementation of the `Closure` type to internally store
an `Rc` and be suitable for dropping a `Closure` during the execution of the
closure. This is currently needed for promises but may be generally useful as
well!
* Support asynchronous tests
This commit adds support for executing tests asynchronously. This is modeled
by tests returning a `Future` instead of simply executing inline, and is
signified with `#[wasm_bindgen_test(async)]`.
Support for this is added through a new `wasm-bindgen-futures` crate which is a
binding between the `futures` crate and JS `Promise` objects.
Lots more details can be found in the details of the commit, but one of the end
results is that the `web-sys` tests are now entirely contained in the same test
suite and don't need `npm install` to be run to execute them!
* Review tweaks
* Add some bindings for `Function.call` to `js_sys`
Name them `call0`, `call1`, `call2`, ... for the number of arguments being
passed.
* Use oneshots channels with `JsFuture`
It did indeed clean up the implementation!
In an actual browser, the changing of the history using the binding
worked a little too well, and caused the test to fail if you refreshed
the page or manually used the back and forward buttons. The stateful
stuff has been removed - the remaining two assertions should adequately
test that the binding works, which is the point of these tests anyways.
* Adding in initial support for all HTML*Element interfaces.
* Fix camelcasing of short HTML interface names
* Disabling span test as breaks on taskcluster
* Shard the `convert.rs` module into sub-modules
Hopefully this'll make the organization a little nicer over time!
* Start adding support for optional types
This commit starts adding support for optional types to wasm-bindgen as
arguments/return values to functions. The strategy here is to add two new
traits, `OptionIntoWasmAbi` and `OptionFromWasmAbi`. These two traits are used
as a blanket impl to implement `IntoWasmAbi` and `FromWasmAbi` for `Option<T>`.
Some consequences of this design:
* It should be possible to ensure `Option<SomeForeignType>` implements to/from
wasm traits. This is because the option-based traits can be implemented for
foreign types.
* A specialized implementation is possible for all types, so there's no need for
`Option<T>` to introduce unnecessary overhead.
* Two new traits is a bit unforutnate but I can't currently think of an
alternative design that works for the above two constraints, although it
doesn't mean one doesn't exist!
* The error messages for "can't use this type here" is actually halfway decent
because it says these new traits need to be implemented, which provides a good
place to document and talk about what's going on here!
* Nested references like `Option<&T>` can't implement `FromWasmAbi`. This means
that you can't define a function in Rust which takes `Option<&str>`. It may be
possible to do this one day but it'll likely require more trait trickery than
I'm capable of right now.
* Add support for optional slices
This commit adds support for optional slice types, things like strings and
arrays. The null representation of these has a pointer value of 0, which should
never happen in normal Rust. Otherwise the various plumbing is done throughout
the tooling to enable these types in all locations.
* Fix `takeObject` on global sentinels
These don't have a reference count as they're always expected to work, so avoid
actually dropping a reference on them.
* Remove some no longer needed bindings
* Add support for optional anyref types
This commit adds support for optional imported class types. Each type imported
with `#[wasm_bindgen]` automatically implements the relevant traits and now
supports `Option<Foo>` in various argument/return positions.
* Fix building without the `std` feature
* Actually fix the build...
* Add support for optional types to WebIDL
Closes#502