The wasmedge-sdk crate defines a group of high-level Rust APIs, which are used to build up business applications.
Notice that wasmedge-sdk requires Rust v1.63 or above in the stable channel.
The following table provides the versioning information about each crate of WasmEdge Rust bindings.
| wasmedge-sdk | WasmEdge lib | wasmedge-sys | wasmedge-types| wasmedge-macro| | :-----------: | :-----------: | :-----------: | :-----------: | :-----------: | | 0.7.0 | 0.11.2 | 0.12 | 0.3.1 | 0.3.0 | | 0.6.0 | 0.11.2 | 0.11 | 0.3.0 | 0.2.0 | | 0.5.0 | 0.11.1 | 0.10 | 0.3.0 | 0.1.0 | | 0.4.0 | 0.11.0 | 0.9 | 0.2.1 | - | | 0.3.0 | 0.10.1 | 0.8 | 0.2 | - | | 0.1.0 | 0.10.0 | 0.7 | 0.1 | - |
To use or build the wasmedge-sdk
crate, the WasmEdge
library is required.
If you choose to use install.sh to install WasmEdge Runtime on your local system. Please use WASMEDGE_INCLUDE_DIR
and WASMEDGE_LIB_DIR
to specify the paths to the include
and lib
directories, respectively. For example, use the following commands to specify the paths after using bash install.sh --path=$HOME/wasmedge-install
to install WasmEdge Runtime on Ubuntu 20.04:
bash
export WASMEDGE_INCLUDE_DIR=$HOME/wasmedge-install/include
export WASMEDGE_LIB_DIR=$HOME/wasmedge-install/lib
If you choose to manually download WasmEdge Runtime binary from WasmEdge Releases Page, it is strongly recommended to place it in $HOME/.wasmedge
directory. It looks like below on Ubuntu 20.04. wasmedge-sdk
will search the directory automatically, you do not have to set any environment variables for it.
``bash
// $HOME/.wasmedge/
.
|-- bin
| |-- wasmedge
|
-- wasmedgec
|-- include
| -- wasmedge
| |-- enum.inc
| |-- enum_configure.h
| |-- enum_errcode.h
| |-- enum_types.h
| |-- int128.h
| |-- version.h
|
-- wasmedge.h
-- lib64
|-- libwasmedge_c.so
-- wasmedge
`-- libwasmedgePluginWasmEdgeProcess.so
5 directories, 11 files ```
If you'd like to enable WasmEdge Plugins (currently, only available on Linux platform), please use WASMEDGE_PLUGIN_PATH
environment variable to specify the path to the directory containing the plugins. For example, use the following commands to specify the path on Ubuntu 20.04:
bash
export WASMEDGE_PLUGIN_PATH=$HOME/.wasmedge/lib/wasmedge
A quick-start example below is using wasmedge-sdk
to run a WebAssembly module written with its WAT format (textual format):
```rust // If the version of rust used is less than v1.63, please uncomment the follow attribute. // #![feature(explicitgenericargswithimpl_trait)]
use wasmedgesdk::{Executor, FuncTypeBuilder, ImportObjectBuilder, Module, Store}; use wasmedgesys::WasmValue; use wasmedge_types::wat2wasm;
#[cfgattr(test, test)] fn main() -> anyhow::Result<()> { let wasmbytes = wat2wasm( br#" (module ;; First we define a type with no parameters and no results. (type $noargsnoretst (func (param) (result)))
;; Then we declare that we want to import a function named "env" "say_hello" with
;; that type signature.
(import "env" "say_hello" (func $say_hello (type $no_args_no_rets_t)))
;; Finally we create an entrypoint that calls our imported function.
(func $run (type $no_args_no_rets_t)
(call $say_hello))
;; And mark it as an exported function named "run".
(export "run" (func $run)))
"#, )?;
// We define a function to act as our "env" "say_hello" function imported in the
// Wasm program above.
fn say_hello_world(_: CallingFrame, _: Vec<WasmValue>) -> Result<Vec<WasmValue>, u8> {
println!("Hello, world!");
Ok(vec![])
}
// create an import module
let import = ImportObjectBuilder::new()
.with_func::<(), ()>("say_hello", Box::new(say_hello_world))?
.build("env")?;
// loads a wasm module from the given in-memory bytes
let module = Module::from_bytes(None, &wasm_bytes)?;
// create an executor
let mut executor = Executor::new(None, None)?;
// create a store
let mut store = Store::new()?;
// register the module into the store
store.register_import_module(&mut executor, &import)?;
let extern_instance = store.register_named_module(&mut executor, "extern", &module)?;
// get the exported function "run"
let run = extern_instance.func("run").ok_or(anyhow::Error::msg(
"Not found exported function named 'run'.",
))?;
// run host function
run.call(&mut executor, [])?;
Ok(())
}
```