package binaryen
Install
Dune Dependency
Authors
Maintainers
Sources
md5=d7dc5e6710699da6680a622b068deef6
sha512=72cfe10eb0ad4964e59c64a1dfa0be5fcf52a4872bd2e2b5d7955bf259f8e8e24965558c94a5d78261914d65af45a51fd443aa7a3d615e19be23fd2cd3d502b6
Description
Published: 26 Jan 2022
README
Binaryen.ml
OCaml bindings for Binaryen.
Binaryen is a compiler and toolchain infrastructure for WebAssembly. It makes compilation to WebAssembly pretty darn easy.
Here's Binaryen's hello world test in OCaml form:
open Binaryen
let wasm_mod = Module.create ()
(* Create function type for i32 (i32, i32) *)
let params = Type.create [| Type.int32; Type.int32 |]
let results = Type.int32
(* Get arguments 0 and 1, add them *)
let x = Expression.Local_get.make wasm_mod 0 Type.int32
let y = Expression.Local_get.make wasm_mod 1 Type.int32
let add = Expression.Binary.make wasm_mod Op.add_int32 x y
(* Create the add function *)
(* Note: no additional local variables *)
let adder = Function.add_function wasm_mod "adder" params results [||] add
let _ = Module.print wasm_mod
let _ = Module.dispose wasm_mod
Feature Parity
This project aims to provide full feature parity with the Binaryen C API. It's fairly complete, but a few things still need bindings:
SIMD instructions
Tags
Atomics
Query operations on expressions
Query operations on functions
None of these are particularly challenging to create bindings for—they just haven't been written yet. If you need anything that's missing, feel free to open a PR.
Python dependency
When using this package with esy
, you'll need to ensure that a python
executable exists in one of these locations: /usr/local/bin/python
, /usr/bin/python
, /bin/python
, /usr/sbin/python
, or /sbin/python
. Esy will only look for python in those locations, and it is not provided for you in the sandbox.
Note: This implicit dependency will be removed in a future version.
MacOS C++ Compiler
When including this library in your dune
MacOS executables, you'll need to specify -cc clang++
in your (ocamlopt_flags)
stanza. This is required because Binaryen will throw errors for itself to catch and using clang++
is the only way to handle them correctly. You can find more info on this ocaml issue.
Your stanza could look something like this:
(executable
(name example)
(public_name example)
(package example)
+ (ocamlopt_flags -cc clang++)
(modules example)
(libraries binaryen))
These flags likely won't work on other operating systems, so you'll probably need to use dune-configurator
to vary the flags per platform. You can see an example of this in our tests/.
Static Linking
If you are planning to create portable binaries for Windows, it will try to find Cygwin/MinGW locations in your PATH
. To avoid this, you probably want to add this to your (executable)
stanzas:
(executable
(name example)
(public_name example)
(package example)
+ (flags (:standard -ccopt -- -ccopt -static))
(modules example)
(libraries binaryen))
These flags might not work on other operating systems (like MacOS), so you'll probably need to use dune-configurator
to vary the flags per platform.
Contributing
You'll need Node.js and esy
to build this project.
dune
will take care of compiling the C stubs, so to build the project you'll only need to run:
esy
This will take a while. Once it's done, you can run the tests:
esy test
Dependencies (7)
-
libbinaryen
>= "102.0.4" & < "103.0.0"
-
js_of_ocaml-compiler
>= "3.10.0"
-
js_of_ocaml-ppx
>= "3.10.0"
-
js_of_ocaml
>= "3.10.0"
-
dune-configurator
>= "2.9.1"
-
dune
>= "2.9.1"
-
ocaml
>= "4.12"
Dev Dependencies
None
Used by
None
Conflicts
None