Alex Crichton fab5c795ae Add gc support for locals in functions
This commit adds support for running a gc pass over locals in a
function. This will remove dead local declarations for a function
(completely unused) as well as compact existing entries to ensure that
we don't have two local declarations of the same type.

While this was initially intended for some future support of emitting
shims in `wasm-bindgen`, it turns out this pass is firing quite a lot
over existing functions generated by LLVM. Looks like we may see benefit
from this today with slightly smaller wasm binaries!
2018-10-29 10:10:23 -07:00
2018-08-27 13:37:55 -07:00
2018-10-10 13:19:40 -07:00
2018-09-20 17:37:04 -07:00
2017-12-18 14:45:06 -08:00
2017-12-18 14:45:06 -08:00
2018-10-10 13:19:40 -07:00
2018-10-05 10:25:55 -05:00

wasm-bindgen

Facilitating high-level interactions between wasm modules and JavaScript.

Build Status Build status API Documentation on docs.rs

Import JavaScript things into Rust and export Rust things to JavaScript.

extern crate wasm_bindgen;
use wasm_bindgen::prelude::*;

// Import the `window.alert` function from the Web.
#[wasm_bindgen]
extern {
    fn alert(s: &str);
}

// Export a `greet` function from Rust to JavaScript, that alerts a
// hello message.
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn greet(name: &str) {
    alert(&format!("Hello, {}!", name));
}

Use exported Rust things from JavaScript with ECMAScript modules!

import { greet } from "./hello_world";

greet("World!");

Features

  • Lightweight. Only pay for what you use. wasm-bindgen only generates bindings and glue for the JavaScript imports you actually use and Rust functionality that you export. For example, importing and using the document.querySelector method doesn't cause Node.prototype.appendChild or window.alert to be included in the bindings as well.

  • ECMAScript modules. Just import WebAssembly modules the same way you would import JavaScript modules. Future compatible with WebAssembly modules and ECMAScript modules integration.

  • Designed with the "host bindings" proposal in mind. Eventually, there won't be any JavaScript shims between Rust-generated wasm functions and native DOM methods. Because the wasm functions are statically type checked, some of those native methods' dynamic type checks should become unnecessary, promising to unlock even-faster-than-JavaScript DOM access.

Guide

📚 Read the wasm-bindgen guide here! 📚

API Docs

License

This project is licensed under either of

at your option.

Contribution

See the "Contributing" section of the guide for information on hacking on wasm-bindgen!

Unless you explicitly state otherwise, any contribution intentionally submitted for inclusion in this project by you, as defined in the Apache-2.0 license, shall be dual licensed as above, without any additional terms or conditions.

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