WAMR vmcore is a set of runtime libraries for loading and running Wasm modules. This document introduces how to build the WAMR vmcore.
References:
- how to build iwasm: building different target platforms such as Linux, Windows, Mac etc
- Blog: Introduction to WAMR running modes
By including the script runtime_lib.cmake
under folder build-scripts in CMakeList.txt, it is easy to use vmcore to build host software with cmake.
# add this into your CMakeList.txt
include (${WAMR_ROOT_DIR}/build-scripts/runtime_lib.cmake)
add_library(vmlib ${WAMR_RUNTIME_LIB_SOURCE})
The script runtime_lib.cmake
defines a number of variables for configuring the WAMR runtime features. You can set these variables in your CMakeList.txt or pass the configurations from cmake command line.
-
WAMR_BUILD_PLATFORM: set the target platform. It can be set to any platform name (folder name) under folder core/shared/platform.
-
WAMR_BUILD_TARGET: set the target CPU architecture. Current supported targets are: X86_64, X86_32, AARCH64, ARM, THUMB, XTENSA, ARC, RISCV32, RISCV64 and MIPS.
- For ARM and THUMB, the format is <arch>[<sub-arch>][_VFP], where <sub-arch> is the ARM sub-architecture and the "_VFP" suffix means using VFP coprocessor registers s0-s15 (d0-d7) for passing arguments or returning results in standard procedure-call. Both <sub-arch> and "_VFP" are optional, e.g. ARMV7, ARMV7_VFP, THUMBV7, THUMBV7_VFP and so on.
- For AARCH64, the format is<arch>[<sub-arch>], VFP is enabled by default. <sub-arch> is optional, e.g. AARCH64, AARCH64V8, AARCH64V8.1 and so on.
- For RISCV64, the format is <arch>[_abi], where "_abi" is optional, currently the supported formats are RISCV64, RISCV64_LP64D and RISCV64_LP64: RISCV64 and RISCV64_LP64D are identical, using LP64D as abi (LP64 with hardware floating-point calling convention for FLEN=64). And RISCV64_LP64 uses LP64 as abi (Integer calling-convention only, and hardware floating-point calling convention is not used).
- For RISCV32, the format is <arch>[_abi], where "_abi" is optional, currently the supported formats are RISCV32, RISCV32_ILP32D and RISCV32_ILP32: RISCV32 and RISCV32_ILP32D are identical, using ILP32D as abi (ILP32 with hardware floating-point calling convention for FLEN=64). And RISCV32_ILP32 uses ILP32 as abi (Integer calling-convention only, and hardware floating-point calling convention is not used).
cmake -DWAMR_BUILD_PLATFORM=linux -DWAMR_BUILD_TARGET=ARM
-
WAMR_BUILD_INTERP=1/0: enable or disable WASM interpreter
-
WAMR_BUILD_FAST_INTERP=1/0: build fast (default) or classic WASM interpreter.
NOTE: the fast interpreter runs ~2X faster than classic interpreter, but consumes about 2X memory to hold the pre-compiled code.
- WAMR_BUILD_AOT=1/0, enable AOT or not, default to enable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_JIT=1/0, enable LLVM JIT or not, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_FAST_JIT=1/0, enable Fast JIT or not, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_FAST_JIT=1 and WAMR_BUILD_JIT=1, enable Multi-tier JIT, default to disable if not set
-
WAMR_BUILD_LIBC_BUILTIN=1/0, build the built-in libc subset for WASM app, default to enable if not set
-
WAMR_BUILD_LIBC_WASI=1/0, build the WASI libc subset for WASM app, default to enable if not set
-
WAMR_BUILD_LIBC_UVWASI=1/0 (Experiment), build the WASI libc subset for WASM app based on uvwasi implementation, default to disable if not set
Note: for platform which doesn't support WAMR_BUILD_LIBC_WASI, e.g. Windows, developer can try using WAMR_BUILD_LIBC_UVWASI.
- WAMR_BUILD_MULTI_MODULE=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: See Multiple Modules as Dependencies for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_MINI_LOADER=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: the mini loader doesn't check the integrity of the WASM binary file, developer must ensure that the WASM file is well-formed.
- WAMR_BUILD_SHARED_MEMORY=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_BULK_MEMORY=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_MEMORY64=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: Currently, the memory64 feature is only supported in classic interpreter running mode and AOT mode.
- WAMR_BUILD_THREAD_MGR=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_LIB_PTHREAD=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: The dependent feature of lib pthread such as the
shared memory
andthread manager
will be enabled automatically.
See WAMR pthread library for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_LIB_PTHREAD_SEMAPHORE=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: This feature depends on
lib-pthread
, it will be enabled automatically if this feature is enabled.
- WAMR_BUILD_LIB_WASI_THREADS=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: The dependent feature of lib wasi-threads such as the
shared memory
andthread manager
will be enabled automatically.
See wasi-threads and Introduction to WAMR WASI threads for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_WASI_NN=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: See WASI-NN for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_WASI_NN_ENABLE_GPU=1/0, default to disable if not set
-
WAMR_BUILD_WASI_NN_ENABLE_EXTERNAL_DELEGATE=1/0, default to disable if not set
-
WAMR_BUILD_WASI_NN_EXTERNAL_DELEGATE_PATH=Path to the external delegate shared library (e.g.
libedgetpu.so.1.0
for Coral USB)
- WAMR_BUILD_WASI_EPHEMERAL_NN=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_DISABLE_HW_BOUND_CHECK=1/0, default to enable if not set and supported by platform
Note: by default only platform linux/darwin/android/windows/vxworks 64-bit will enable the boundary check with hardware trap feature, for 32-bit platforms it's automatically disabled even when the flag is set to 0, and the wamrc tool will generate AOT code without boundary check instructions in all 64-bit targets except SGX to improve performance. The boundary check includes linear memory access boundary and native stack access boundary, if
WAMR_DISABLE_STACK_HW_BOUND_CHECK
below isn't set.
- WAMR_DISABLE_STACK_HW_BOUND_CHECK=1/0, default to enable if not set and supported by platform, same as
WAMR_DISABLE_HW_BOUND_CHECK
.
Note: When boundary check with hardware trap is disabled, or
WAMR_DISABLE_HW_BOUND_CHECK
is set to 1, the native stack boundary check with hardware trap will be disabled too, no matter what value is set toWAMR_DISABLE_STACK_HW_BOUND_CHECK
. And when boundary check with hardware trap is enabled, the status of this feature is set according to the value ofWAMR_DISABLE_STACK_HW_BOUND_CHECK
.
- WAMR_DISABLE_WAKEUP_BLOCKING_OP=1/0, default to enable if supported by the platform
Note: The feature helps async termination of blocking threads. If you disable it, the runtime can wait for termination of blocking threads possibly forever.
- WAMR_BUILD_TAIL_CALL=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_SIMD=1/0, default to enable if not set
Note: only supported in AOT mode x86-64 target.
- WAMR_BUILD_EXCE_HANDLING=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: Currently, the exception handling feature is only supported in classic interpreter running mode.
- WAMR_BUILD_GC=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_CUSTOM_NAME_SECTION=1/0, load the function name from custom name section, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_BUILD_AOT_STACK_FRAME=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: if it is enabled, the AOT or JIT stack frames (like stack frame of classic interpreter but only necessary data is committed) will be created for AOT or JIT mode in function calls. And please add
--enable-dump-call-stack
option to wamrc during compiling AOT module.
- WAMR_BUILD_DUMP_CALL_STACK=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: if it is enabled, the call stack will be dumped when exception occurs.
- For interpreter mode, the function names are firstly extracted from custom name section, if this section doesn't exist or the feature is not enabled, then the name will be extracted from the import/export sections
- For AOT/JIT mode, the function names are extracted from import/export section, please export as many functions as possible (for
wasi-sdk
you can use-Wl,--export-all
) when compiling wasm module, and add--enable-dump-call-stack --emit-custom-sections=name
option to wamrc during compiling AOT module.
- WAMR_BUILD_MEMORY_PROFILING=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: if it is enabled, developer can use API
void wasm_runtime_dump_mem_consumption(wasm_exec_env_t exec_env)
to dump the memory consumption info. Currently we only profile the memory consumption of module, module_instance and exec_env, the memory consumed by other components such aswasi-ctx
,multi-module
andthread-manager
are not included.
Also refer to Memory usage estimation for a module.
- WAMR_BUILD_PERF_PROFILING=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: if it is enabled, developer can use API
void wasm_runtime_dump_perf_profiling(wasm_module_inst_t module_inst)
to dump the performance consumption info. Currently we only profile the performance consumption of each WASM function.
The function name searching sequence is the same with dump call stack feature.
Also refer to Tune the performance of running wasm/aot file.
- WAMR_BUILD_GLOBAL_HEAP_POOL=1/0, default to disable if not set for all iwasm applications, except for the platforms Alios and Zephyr.
WAMR_BUILD_GLOBAL_HEAP_POOL is used in the iwasm applications provided in the directory
product-mini
. When writing your own host application using WAMR, if you want to use a global heap and allocate memory from it, you must set the initialization argumentmem_alloc_type
toAlloc_With_Pool
. The global heap is defined in the documentation Memory model and memory usage tunning.
- WAMR_BUILD_GLOBAL_HEAP_SIZE=n, default to 10 MB (10485760) if not set for all iwasm applications, except for the platforms Alios (256 kB), Riot (256 kB) and Zephyr (128 kB).
WAMR_BUILD_GLOBAL_HEAP_SIZE is used in the iwasm applications provided in the directory
product-mini
. When writing your own host application using WAMR, if you want to set the amount of memory dedicated to the global heap pool, you must set the initialization argumentmem_alloc_option.pool
with the appropriate values. The global heap is defined in the documentation Memory model and memory usage tunning. Note: ifWAMR_BUILD_GLOBAL_HEAP_SIZE
is not set and the flagWAMR_BUILD_SPEC_TEST
is set, the global heap size is equal to 300 MB (314572800), or 100 MB (104857600) when compiled for Intel SGX (Linux).
- WAMR_APP_THREAD_STACK_SIZE_MAX=n, default to 8 MB (8388608) if not set
Note: the AOT boundary check with hardware trap mechanism might consume large stack since the OS may lazily grow the stack mapping as a guard page is hit, we may use this configuration to reduce the total stack usage, e.g. -DWAMR_APP_THREAD_STACK_SIZE_MAX=131072 (128 KB).
- WAMR_BH_VPRINTF=<vprintf_callback>, default to disable if not set
Note: if the vprintf_callback function is provided by developer, the os_printf() and os_vprintf() in Linux, Darwin, Windows, VxWorks, Android and esp-idf platforms, besides WASI Libc output will call the callback function instead of libc vprintf() function to redirect the stdout output. For example, developer can define the callback function like below outside runtime lib:
int my_vprintf(const char *format, va_list ap) { /* output to pre-opened file stream */ FILE *my_file = ...; return vfprintf(my_file, format, ap); /* or output to pre-opened file descriptor */ int my_fd = ...; return vdprintf(my_fd, format, ap); /* or output to string buffer and print the string */ char buf[128]; vsnprintf(buf, sizeof(buf), format, ap); return my_printf("%s", buf); }and then use
cmake -DWAMR_BH_VPRINTF=my_vprintf ..
to pass the callback function, or addBH_VPRINTF=my_vprintf
macro for the compiler, e.g. add lineadd_definitions(-DBH_VPRINTF=my_vprintf)
in CMakeLists.txt. See basic sample for a usage example.
Note: if the log_callback function is provided by the developer, WAMR logs are redirected to such callback. For example:
void my_log(uint32 log_level, const char *file, int line, const char *fmt, ...) { /* Usage of custom logger */ }See basic sample for a usage example.
- WAMR_BUILD_REF_TYPES=1/0, default to disable if not set
- WAMR_DISABLE_APP_ENTRY=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: The WAMR application entry (
core/iwasm/common/wasm_application.c
) encapsulate some common process to instantiate, execute the wasm functions and print the results. Some platform related APIs are used in these functions, so you can enable this flag to exclude this file if your platform doesn't support those APIs. Don't enable this flag if you are buildingproduct-mini
- WAMR_BUILD_DEBUG_INTERP=1/0, default to 0 if not set
Note: There are some other setup required by source debugging, please refer to source_debugging.md and WAMR source debugging basic for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_LOAD_CUSTOM_SECTION=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: By default, the custom sections are ignored. If the embedder wants to get custom sections from
wasm_module_t
, thenWAMR_BUILD_LOAD_CUSTOM_SECTION
should be enabled, and thenwasm_runtime_get_custom_section
can be used to get a custom section by name.
Note: If
WAMR_BUILD_CUSTOM_NAME_SECTION
is enabled, then thecustom name section
will be treated as a special section and consumed by the runtime, not available to the embedder.
For AoT file, must use
--emit-custom-sections
to specify which sections need to be emitted into AoT file, otherwise all custom sections will be ignored.
- WAMR_BUILD_STACK_GUARD_SIZE=n, default to N/A if not set.
Note: By default, the stack guard size is 1K (1024) or 24K (if uvwasi enabled).
- WAMR_DISABLE_WRITE_GS_BASE=1/0, default to enable if not set and supported by platform
Note: by default only platform linux x86-64 will enable this feature, for 32-bit platforms it's automatically disabled even when the flag is set to 0. In linux x86-64, writing the linear memory base address to x86 GS segment register may be used to speedup the linear memory access for LLVM AOT/JIT, when
--enable-segue=[<flags>]
option is added forwamrc
oriwasm
.
See Enable segue optimization for wamrc when generating the aot file for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_ALLOC_WITH_USAGE=1/0, default to disable if not set
Notes: by default, the linear memory is allocated by system. when it's set to 1 and Alloc_With_Allocator is selected, it will be allocated by customer.
- WAMR_BUILD_STATIC_PGO=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: See Use the AOT static PGO method for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_LINUX_PERF=1/0, enable linux perf support to generate the flamegraph to analyze the performance of a wasm application, default to disable if not set
Note: See Use linux-perf for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_MODULE_INST_CONTEXT=1/0, enable module instance context APIs which can set one or more contexts created by the embedder for a wasm module instance, default to enable if not set:
wasm_runtime_create_context_key
wasm_runtime_destroy_context_key
wasm_runtime_set_context
wasm_runtime_set_context_spread
wasm_runtime_get_context
Note: See wasm_export.h for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_QUICK_AOT_ENTRY=1/0, enable registering quick call entries to speedup the aot/jit func call process, default to enable if not set
Note: See Refine callings to AOT/JIT functions from host native for more details.
- WAMR_BUILD_AOT_INTRINSICS=1/0, enable the AOT intrinsic functions, default to enable if not set. These functions can be called from the AOT code when
--disable-llvm-intrinsics
flag or--enable-builtin-intrinsics=<intr1,intr2,...>
flag is used by wamrc to generate the AOT file.
Note: See Tuning the XIP intrinsic functions for more details.
- WAMR_CONFIGURABLE_BOUNDS_CHECKS=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: If it is enabled, allow to run
iwasm --disable-bounds-checks
to disable the memory access boundary checks for interpreter mode.
- WAMR_BUILD_MODULE_INST_CONTEXT=1/0, default to disable if not set
Note: If it is enabled, allow to set one or more contexts created by embedder for a module instance, the below APIs are provided:
wasm_runtime_create_context_key
wasm_runtime_destroy_context_key
wasm_runtime_set_context
wasm_runtime_set_context_spread
wasm_runtime_get_context
Combination of configurations:
We can combine the configurations. For example, if we want to disable interpreter, enable AOT and WASI, we can run command:
cmake .. -DWAMR_BUILD_INTERP=0 -DWAMR_BUILD_AOT=1 -DWAMR_BUILD_LIBC_WASI=0 -DWAMR_BUILD_PLATFORM=linux
Or if we want to enable interpreter, disable AOT and WASI, and build as X86_32, we can run command:
cmake .. -DWAMR_BUILD_INTERP=1 -DWAMR_BUILD_AOT=0 -DWAMR_BUILD_LIBC_WASI=0 -DWAMR_BUILD_TARGET=X86_32