//! Small example of how to instantiate a wasm module that imports one function, //! showing how you can fill in host functionality for a wasm module. // You can execute this example with `cargo run --example hello` use anyhow::Result; use wasmtime::*; struct MyState { name: String, count: usize, } fn main() -> Result<()> { // First the wasm module needs to be compiled. This is done with a global // "compilation environment" within an `Engine`. Note that engines can be // further configured through `Config` if desired instead of using the // default like this is here. println!("Compiling module..."); let engine = Engine::default(); let module = Module::from_file(&engine, "examples/hello.wat")?; // After a module is compiled we create a `Store` which will contain // instantiated modules and other items like host functions. A Store // contains an arbitrary piece of host information, and we use `MyState` // here. println!("Initializing..."); let mut store = Store::new( &engine, MyState { name: "hello, world!".to_string(), count: 0, }, ); // Our wasm module we'll be instantiating requires one imported function. // the function takes no parameters and returns no results. We create a host // implementation of that function here, and the `caller` parameter here is // used to get access to our original `MyState` value. println!("Creating callback..."); let hello_func = Func::wrap(&mut store, |mut caller: Caller<'_, MyState>| { println!("Calling back..."); println!("> {}", caller.data().name); caller.data_mut().count += 1; }); // Once we've got that all set up we can then move to the instantiation // phase, pairing together a compiled module as well as a set of imports. // Note that this is where the wasm `start` function, if any, would run. println!("Instantiating module..."); let imports = [hello_func.into()]; let instance = Instance::new(&mut store, &module, &imports)?; // Next we poke around a bit to extract the `run` function from the module. println!("Extracting export..."); let run = instance.get_typed_func::<(), ()>(&mut store, "run")?; // And last but not least we can call it! println!("Calling export..."); run.call(&mut store, ())?; println!("Done."); Ok(()) }