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* Massive renaming (#1855)Thomas Lively2019-01-071-4/+4
| | | | | | Automated renaming according to https://github.com/WebAssembly/spec/issues/884#issuecomment-426433329.
* Stack IR (#1623)Alon Zakai2018-07-301-1/+1
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | This adds a new IR, "Stack IR". This represents wasm at a very low level, as a simple stream of instructions, basically the same as wasm's binary format. This is unlike Binaryen IR which is structured and in a tree format. This gives some small wins on binary sizes, less than 1% in most cases, usually 0.25-0.50% or so. That's not much by itself, but looking forward this prepares us for multi-value, which we really need an IR like this to be able to optimize well. Also, it's possible there is more we can do already - currently there are just a few stack IR optimizations implemented, DCE local2stack - check if a set_local/get_local pair can be removed, which keeps the set's value on the stack, which if the stars align it can be popped instead of the get. Block removal - remove any blocks with no branches, as they are valid in wasm binary format. Implementation-wise, the IR is defined in wasm-stack.h. A new StackInst is defined, representing a single instruction. Most are simple reflections of Binaryen IR (an add, a load, etc.), and just pointers to them. Control flow constructs are expanded into multiple instructions, like a block turns into a block begin and end, and we may also emit extra unreachables to handle the fact Binaryen IR has unreachable blocks/ifs/loops but wasm does not. Overall, all the Binaryen IR differences with wasm vanish on the way to stack IR. Where this IR lives: Each Function now has a unique_ptr to stack IR, that is, a function may have stack IR alongside the main IR. If the stack IR is present, we write it out during binary writing; if not, we do the same binaryen IR => wasm binary process as before (this PR should not affect speed there). This design lets us use normal Passes on stack IR, in particular this PR defines 3 passes: Generate stack IR Optimize stack IR (might be worth splitting out into separate passes eventually) Print stack IR for debugging purposes Having these as normal passes is convenient as then they can run in parallel across functions and all the other conveniences of our current Pass system. However, a downside of keeping the second IR as an option on Functions, and using normal Passes to operate on it, means that we may get out of sync: if you generate stack IR, then modify binaryen IR, then the stack IR may no longer be valid (for example, maybe you removed locals or modified instructions in place etc.). To avoid that, Passes now define if they modify Binaryen IR or not; if they do, we throw away the stack IR. Miscellaneous notes: Just writing Stack IR, then writing to binary - no optimizations - is 20% slower than going directly to binary, which is one reason why we still support direct writing. This does lead to some "fun" C++ template code to make that convenient: there is a single StackWriter class, templated over the "mode", which is either Binaryen2Binary (direct writing), Binaryen2Stack, or Stack2Binary. This avoids a lot of boilerplate as the 3 modes share a lot of code in overlapping ways. Stack IR does not support source maps / debug info. We just don't use that IR if debug info is present. A tiny text format comment (if emitting non-minified text) indicates stack IR is present, if it is ((; has Stack IR ;)). This may help with debugging, just in case people forget. There is also a pass to print out the stack IR for debug purposes, as mentioned above. The sieve binaryen.js test was actually not validating all along - these new opts broke it in a more noticeable manner. Fixed. Added extra checks in pass-debug mode, to verify that if stack IR should have been thrown out, it was. This should help avoid any confusion with the IR being invalid. Added a comment about the possible future of stack IR as the main IR, depending on optimization results, following some discussion earlier today.
* Add optimize, shrink level and debug info options to C/JS (#1357)Daniel Wirtz2018-01-171-2/+2
| | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | | * Add optimize, shrink level and debug info options to C/JS * Add instantiate functionality for creating additional unique instances of the API * Use a workaround when running tests in node Tests misuse a module as a script by concatenating, so instead of catching this case in the library, catch it there * Update sieve test Seems optimized output changed due to running with optimize levels 2/1 now * Use the options with all pass runners * Update relooper-fuzz C-API test * Share defaults between tools and the C-API * Add a test for optimize levels * Unify node test support in check.by and auto_update_tests.py * Also add getters for optimize levels and test them * Also test debugInfo * Add debug info to C tests that used it as well * Fix missing NODEJS import in auto_update_tests * Detect node.js version (WASM support) * Update hello-world JS test (now also runs with node) * feature-test WebAssembly in node instead * Document that these options apply globally, and where * Make sure hello-world.js output doesn't differ between mozjs/node
* Optimize out memory and table when possible (#1352)Alon Zakai2018-01-101-2/+0
| | | We can remove the memory/table (itself, or an import if imported) if they are not used. This is pretty minor on a large wasm file, but when reading small wasts it's very noticeable to have an unused memory and table all the time.
* Fix binaryen.js's wasm2asm (#1257)Alon Zakai2017-11-011-2/+2
| | | | * fix wasm2asm in binaryen.js, the function locals may not all have names, so add them as necessary
* Safe heap pass (#1145)Alon Zakai2017-08-281-1/+1
| | | Adds --safe-heap which instruments the code to check heap loads and stores for validity (null pointer derefs, within range of valid sbrk memory, and alignment). Used in SAFE_HEAP in emscripten.
* update wasm.js and binaryen.js (#977)Alon Zakai2017-04-191-1/+1
| | | | | | * update wasm.js and binaryen.js * update test output for new names section
* New binaryen.js (#922)Alon Zakai2017-03-241-0/+33
New binaryen.js implementation, based on the C API underneath and with a JS-friendly API on top. See docs under docs/ for API details.