Specifies the concrete steps needed to replace the current READY stub with real Wasm module execution: - Optional cargo feature gate (wasmtime-runtime) to keep default builds fast; production service unit uses the feature-enabled binary. - Engine + Module setup from wasm file path. - WasiCtxBuilder with inherited stdout/stderr for READY signal passthrough. - READY signal timing: Option A (print before _start) vs Option B (explicit weft_ready() export); Option A is the initial implementation. - Entry point: _start (standard wasm32-wasi target output). - Error handling: module load failures, trap handling, missing _start. - Explicit non-scope: host imports beyond WASI, memory caps, component model, Wasm threads, fuel metering. - Prerequisite: confirmed wasm32-wasi app SDK before integration.
3.6 KiB
weft-runtime: Wasmtime Integration Plan
Status: Not yet implemented. weft-runtime currently stubs execution with println!("READY").
Current State
crates/weft-runtime/src/main.rs resolves the package directory, validates app.wasm
exists, then prints READY\n and exits. No Wasm code is executed.
The stub satisfies the supervisor contract (described in docs/architecture/app-package-format.md)
and allows the full session lifecycle to be tested end-to-end.
Required Changes
1. Optional feature gate
Add a wasmtime cargo feature to weft-runtime/Cargo.toml so the default build remains
fast:
[features]
default = []
wasmtime-runtime = ["dep:wasmtime"]
[dependencies]
wasmtime = { version = "30", optional = true, features = ["wasi"] }
cfg(feature = "wasmtime-runtime") guards the real implementation.
cfg(not(feature = "wasmtime-runtime")) keeps the stub for tests and development.
The production service unit (infra/systemd/weft-appd.service) would set
WEFT_RUNTIME_BIN to a binary built with --features wasmtime-runtime.
2. Engine and module setup
use wasmtime::{Config, Engine, Module, Store};
use wasmtime_wasi::{WasiCtxBuilder, preview1};
let engine = Engine::new(Config::default())?;
let module = Module::from_file(&engine, &wasm_path)?;
3. WASI context
let wasi = WasiCtxBuilder::new()
.inherit_stdout()
.inherit_stderr()
.build();
let mut store = Store::new(&engine, wasi);
stdout is inherited so the Wasm module can write READY\n directly via WASI
fd_write (standard output fd=1).
4. READY signal timing
The READY signal to weft-appd must be sent after module initialization but before the main event loop blocks. Two options:
Option A (simpler): weft-runtime prints READY\n before calling the Wasm entry
point. The Wasm module is responsible for being ready to handle requests when it
starts running.
Option B (accurate): The Wasm module exports a weft_ready() function that
weft-runtime calls explicitly before starting the main event loop. The ready signal
is sent after weft_ready() returns.
Initial implementation should use Option A. Option B requires a convention on the Wasm module's exported interface.
5. Entry point call
let linker = wasmtime_wasi::preview1::add_to_linker_sync(&engine)?;
let instance = linker.instantiate(&mut store, &module)?;
println!("READY");
let start = instance.get_typed_func::<(), ()>(&mut store, "_start")?;
start.call(&mut store, ())?;
_start is the standard WASI entry point generated by Rust's wasm32-wasi target.
6. Error handling
Module::from_filefailure: exit with non-zero code (weft-appd supervisor logs it)._starttrap: log the trap message, exit non-zero.- No
_startexport: log and exit non-zero. The package checker (weft-pack) should eventually validate this at install time.
What Is Not Designed
- Host function imports: Wasm modules that import host functions beyond WASI are not supported in the initial implementation. Custom host bindings are deferred.
- Memory limits: no per-session memory cap is enforced. Deferred to capability model.
- Wasm component model: not used. Wasm 2.0 module format only.
- Multi-threading (WASM threads): not enabled.
- Fuel metering: not enabled.
Prerequisite
Before implementing: confirm the target Wasm module compilation pipeline. The WEFT
app SDK must produce a valid wasm32-wasi binary that exports _start. Until an
example app exists that can be tested, the Wasmtime integration cannot be verified
end-to-end.