- Removes the `ExtismContext` type from runtime and all SDKs
- Removed SDK functions: `extism_context_new`, `extism_context_reset`,
`extism_context_free`
- All SDKs have been updated, but there are still some TODOs below
- Removes `extism_plugin_update`
- Plugins can no longer be updated - a new plugin should be created
instead
- Adds `extism_plugin_id` to uniquely identify plugins
- Merges the `extism-runtime` and `extism` crates (there is no longer an
`extism-runtime` crate)
- Makes `extism::Manifest` an alias for `extism_manifest::Manifest`
instead of a distinct type
- Adds `MemoryHandle` type to SDKs to refer to blocks of Extism memory
that can be accessed in host functions
- Improves thread-safety of Plugins, adds C++ test to call a single
plugin from multiple threads.
- Expands wasmtime bounds to include 12.0
EIP: https://github.com/extism/proposals/pull/8
This PR makes minor breaking changes to several SDKs, but not to runtime
C API. The threadsafety updates in the Rust SDK are kind of specific to
Rust, I'm not sure if it makes sense to add the locks to all the other
SDKs at this point. For the most part the `Context` and `Plugin` types
in the SDKs should be safe to use protected by a mutex but they aren't
inherently threadsafe. That kind of locking should probably be done by
the user.
- Runtime
- improve thread safety
- reinstantiates less
- fixes a potential resource exhaustion bug from re-instantiating using
the same store too many times
- Rust SDK
- adds `Send` and `Sync` implementations for `Context`
- adds test sharing a context between threads
- adds `Plugin::call_map` to call a plugin and handle the output with
the lock held
- adds testing sharing an `Arc<Mutex<Plugin>>` between threads
- adds `Plugin::create` and `Plugin::create_from_manifest` to create a
plugin without a `Context`
- Python
- BREAKING
- changes `Plugin` constructor to take `context` as an optional named
argument, to update use `Plugin(data, context=context)` instead
- Ruby
- BREAKING
- changes `Plugin` constructor to take `context` as an optional named
argument, to update use `Plugin.new(data, context=context)` instead
- Go
- adds `NewPlugin` and `NewPluginFromManifest` functions
- Node
- BREAKING
- changes `Plugin` constructor to take `context` as an optional named
argument, to update use `new Plugin(data, wasi, config, host, context)`
instead of `new Plugin(context, data, wasi, functions, config)` (most
people are probably using `context.plugin` instead of the Plugin
constructor anyway)
- OCaml
- BREAKING
- changes `Plugin.create` and `Plugin.of_manifest` to take `context` as
an optional named argument, to update `Plugin.create ~context data` and
`Plugin.of_manifest ~context data` instead
- Haskell
- adds `createPlugin` and `createPluginFromManifest` functions
- Elixir
- adds `Plugin.new` to make a plugin without going through
`Context.new_plugin`
- Java
- adds new `Plugin` constructors without a `Context` argument
- C++
- BREAKING
- Updates `Plugin` constructor to take an optional context as the last
argument, instead of requiring it to be the first argument
- Use `Plugin(wasm, wasi, functions, ctx)` instead of `Plugin(ctx, wasm,
wasi, functions)`
- Zig
- Adds `Plugin.create` and `Plugin.createWithManifest` to create plugins
in their own context.
---------
Co-authored-by: zach <zach@dylib.so>
Co-authored-by: Benjamin Eckel <bhelx@simst.im>