feat: add example hello

This commit is contained in:
2023-01-19 00:13:30 +08:00
parent 33cd9b007c
commit c173ce8dba

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@@ -0,0 +1,47 @@
use std::error::Error;
use wasmtime::*;
// https://docs.wasmtime.dev/lang-rust.html
fn main() -> Result<(), Box<dyn Error>> {
// An engine stores and configures global compilation settings like
// optimization level, enabled wasm features, etc.
let engine = Engine::default();
// We start off by creating a `Module` which represents a compiled form
// of our input wasm module. In this case it'll be JIT-compiled after
// we parse the text format.
let module = Module::new(&engine, r#"
(module
(func (export "answer") (result i32)
i32.const 42
)
)
"#)?;
// A `Store` is what will own instances, functions, globals, etc. All wasm
// items are stored within a `Store`, and it's what we'll always be using to
// interact with the wasm world. Custom data can be stored in stores but for
// now we just use `()`.
let mut store = Store::new(&engine, ());
// With a compiled `Module` we can then instantiate it, creating
// an `Instance` which we can actually poke at functions on.
let instance = Instance::new(&mut store, &module, &[])?;
// The `Instance` gives us access to various exported functions and items,
// which we access here to pull out our `answer` exported function and
// run it.
let answer = instance.get_func(&mut store, "answer")
.expect("`answer` was not an exported function");
// There's a few ways we can call the `answer` `Func` value. The easiest
// is to statically assert its signature with `typed` (in this case
// asserting it takes no arguments and returns one i32) and then call it.
let answer = answer.typed::<(), i32>(&store)?;
// And finally we can call our function! Note that the error propagation
// with `?` is done to handle the case where the wasm function traps.
let result = answer.call(&mut store, ())?;
println!("Answer: {:?}", result);
Ok(())
}