| Commit message (Collapse) | Author | Age | Files | Lines |
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Move from segment indexes to names. This is a breaking change to make the API more
capable and consistent. An effort has been made to reduce the burden on C API users
where possible (specifically, you can avoid providing names and let Binaryen make them
for you, which will basically be numbers that match the indexes from before).
Fixes #6247
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When printing Binaryen IR, we previously generated names for unnamed heap types
based on their structure. This was useful for seeing the structure of simple
types at a glance without having to separately go look up their definitions, but
it also had two problems:
1. The same name could be generated for multiple types. The generated names did
not take into account rec group structure or finality, so types that differed
only in these properties would have the same name. Also, generated type names
were limited in length, so very large types that shared only some structure
could also end up with the same names. Using the same name for multiple types
produces incorrect and unparsable output.
2. The generated names were not useful beyond the most trivial examples. Even
with length limits, names for nontrivial types were extremely long and visually
noisy, which made reading disassembled real-world code more challenging.
Fix these problems by emitting simple indexed names for unnamed heap types
instead. This regresses readability for very simple examples, but the trade off
is worth it.
This change also reduces the number of type printing systems we have by one.
Previously we had the system in Print.cpp, but we had another, more general and
extensible system in wasm-type-printing.h and wasm-type.cpp as well. Remove the
old type printing system from Print.cpp and replace it with a much smaller use
of the new system. This requires significant refactoring of Print.cpp so that
PrintExpressionContents object now holds a reference to a parent
PrintSExpression object that holds the type name state.
This diff is very large because almost every test output changed slightly. To
minimize the diff and ease review, change the type printer in wasm-type.cpp to
behave the same as the old type printer in Print.cpp except for the differences
in name generation. These changes will be reverted in much smaller PRs in the
future to generally improve how types are printed.
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All top-level Module elements are identified and referred to by Name, but for
historical reasons element and data segments were referred to by index instead.
Fix this inconsistency by using Names to refer to segments from expressions that
use them. Also parse and print segment names like we do for other elements.
The C API is partially converted to use names instead of indices, but there are
still many functions that refer to data segments by index. Finishing the
conversion can be done in the future once it becomes necessary.
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Passive element segments do not belong to any table, so the link between
Table and elem needs to be weaker; i.e. an elem may have a table in case
of active segments, or simply be a collection of function references in
case of passive/declarative segments.
This PR takes Table::Segment out and turns it into a first class module
element just like tables and functions. It also implements early support
for parsing, printing, encoding and decoding passive/declarative elem
segments.
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`BinaryIndexes` was only used in two places (Print.cpp and
wasm-binary.h), so it didn't seem to be a great fit for
module-utils.h. This change moves it to wasm-binary.h and removes its
usage in Print.cpp. This means that function indexes are no longer
printed, but those were of limited utility and were the source of
annoying noise when updating tests, anyway.
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Function signatures were previously redundantly stored on Function
objects as well as on FunctionType objects. These two signature
representations had to always be kept in sync, which was error-prone
and needlessly complex. This PR takes advantage of the new ability of
Type to represent multiple value types by consolidating function
signatures as a pair of Types (params and results) stored on the
Function object.
Since there are no longer module-global named function types,
significant changes had to be made to the printing and emitting of
function types, as well as their parsing and manipulation in various
passes.
The C and JS APIs and their tests also had to be updated to remove
named function types.
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This PR adds an offset parameter to BinaryenSetFunctionTable so table elements
can start at the value of an (imported constant) global. Previously, the offset
was fixed to zero. As usual this is a breaking change to the C-API but backwards
compatible when using the JS-API.
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