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.editorconfig | ||
README.md | ||
Setup.local.example | ||
build_wasi.sh | ||
config.site-wasm32-emscripten | ||
config.site-wasm32-wasi | ||
mypy.ini | ||
python.html | ||
python.worker.js | ||
wasi-env | ||
wasi.py | ||
wasm_assets.py | ||
wasm_build.py | ||
wasm_webserver.py |
README.md
Python WebAssembly (WASM) build
WARNING: WASM support is work-in-progress! Lots of features are not working yet.
This directory contains configuration and helpers to facilitate cross compilation of CPython to WebAssembly (WASM). Python supports Emscripten (wasm32-emscripten) and WASI (wasm32-wasi) targets. Emscripten builds run in modern browsers and JavaScript runtimes like Node.js. WASI builds use WASM runtimes such as wasmtime.
Users and developers are encouraged to use the script
Tools/wasm/wasm_build.py
. The tool automates the build process and provides
assistance with installation of SDKs, running tests, etc.
NOTE: If you are looking for information that is not directly related to building CPython for WebAssembly (or the resulting build), please see https://github.com/psf/webassembly for more information.
wasm32-emscripten
Build
For now the build system has two target flavors. The Emscripten/browser
target (--with-emscripten-target=browser
) is optimized for browsers.
It comes with a reduced and preloaded stdlib without tests and threading
support. The Emscripten/node
target has threading enabled and can
access the file system directly.
Cross compiling to the wasm32-emscripten platform needs the Emscripten SDK and a build Python interpreter. Emscripten 3.1.19 or newer are recommended. All commands below are relative to a repository checkout.
Toolchain
Container image
Christian Heimes maintains a container image with Emscripten SDK, Python build dependencies, WASI-SDK, wasmtime, and several additional tools.
From within your local CPython repo clone, run one of the following commands:
# Fedora, RHEL, CentOS
podman run --rm -ti -v $(pwd):/python-wasm/cpython:Z -w /python-wasm/cpython quay.io/tiran/cpythonbuild:emsdk3
# other
docker run --rm -ti -v $(pwd):/python-wasm/cpython -w /python-wasm/cpython quay.io/tiran/cpythonbuild:emsdk3
Manually
Install Emscripten SDK
NOTE: Follow the on-screen instructions how to add the SDK to PATH
.
git clone https://github.com/emscripten-core/emsdk.git /opt/emsdk
/opt/emsdk/emsdk install latest
/opt/emsdk/emsdk activate latest
Optionally: enable ccache for EMSDK
The EM_COMPILER_WRAPPER
must be set after the EMSDK environment is
sourced. Otherwise the source script removes the environment variable.
. /opt/emsdk/emsdk_env.sh
EM_COMPILER_WRAPPER=ccache
Optionally: pre-build and cache static libraries
Emscripten SDK provides static builds of core libraries without PIC
(position-independent code). Python builds with dlopen
support require
PIC. To populate the build cache, run:
. /opt/emsdk/emsdk_env.sh
embuilder build zlib bzip2 MINIMAL_PIC
embuilder --pic build zlib bzip2 MINIMAL_PIC
Compile and build Python interpreter
From within the container, run the following command:
./Tools/wasm/wasm_build.py build
The command is roughly equivalent to:
mkdir -p builddir/build
pushd builddir/build
../../configure -C
make -j$(nproc)
popd
Cross-compile to wasm32-emscripten for browser
./Tools/wasm/wasm_build.py emscripten-browser
The command is roughly equivalent to:
mkdir -p builddir/emscripten-browser
pushd builddir/emscripten-browser
CONFIG_SITE=../../Tools/wasm/config.site-wasm32-emscripten \
emconfigure ../../configure -C \
--host=wasm32-unknown-emscripten \
--build=$(../../config.guess) \
--with-emscripten-target=browser \
--with-build-python=$(pwd)/../build/python
emmake make -j$(nproc)
popd
Serve python.html
with a local webserver and open the file in a browser.
Python comes with a minimal web server script that sets necessary HTTP
headers like COOP, COEP, and mimetypes. Run the script outside the container
and from the root of the CPython checkout.
./Tools/wasm/wasm_webserver.py
and open http://localhost:8000/builddir/emscripten-browser/python.html . This directory structure enables the C/C++ DevTools Support (DWARF) to load C and header files with debug builds.
Cross compile to wasm32-emscripten for node
./Tools/wasm/wasm_build.py emscripten-node-dl
The command is roughly equivalent to:
mkdir -p builddir/emscripten-node-dl
pushd builddir/emscripten-node-dl
CONFIG_SITE=../../Tools/wasm/config.site-wasm32-emscripten \
emconfigure ../../configure -C \
--host=wasm32-unknown-emscripten \
--build=$(../../config.guess) \
--with-emscripten-target=node \
--enable-wasm-dynamic-linking \
--with-build-python=$(pwd)/../build/python
emmake make -j$(nproc)
popd
node --experimental-wasm-threads --experimental-wasm-bulk-memory --experimental-wasm-bigint builddir/emscripten-node-dl/python.js
(--experimental-wasm-bigint
is not needed with recent NodeJS versions)
Limitations and issues
Emscripten before 3.1.8 has known bugs that can cause memory corruption and resource leaks. 3.1.8 contains several fixes for bugs in date and time functions.
Network stack
- Python's socket module does not work with Emscripten's emulated POSIX
sockets yet. Network modules like
asyncio
,urllib
,selectors
, etc. are not available. - Only
AF_INET
andAF_INET6
withSOCK_STREAM
(TCP) orSOCK_DGRAM
(UDP) are available.AF_UNIX
is not supported. socketpair
does not work.- Blocking sockets are not available and non-blocking sockets don't work
correctly, e.g.
socket.accept
crashes the runtime.gethostbyname
does not resolve to a real IP address. IPv6 is not available. - The
select
module is limited.select.select()
crashes the runtime due to lack of exectfd support.
processes, signals
- Processes are not supported. System calls like fork, popen, and subprocess
fail with
ENOSYS
orENOSUP
. - Signal support is limited.
signal.alarm
,itimer
,sigaction
are not available or do not work correctly.SIGTERM
exits the runtime. - Keyboard interrupt (CTRL+C) handling is not implemented yet.
- Resource-related functions like
os.nice
and most functions of theresource
module are not available.
threading
- Threading is disabled by default. The
configure
option--enable-wasm-pthreads
adds compiler flag-pthread
and linker flags-sUSE_PTHREADS -sPROXY_TO_PTHREAD
. - pthread support requires WASM threads and SharedArrayBuffer (bulk memory). The Node.JS runtime keeps a pool of web workers around. Each web worker uses several file descriptors (eventfd, epoll, pipe).
- It's not advised to enable threading when building for browsers or with dynamic linking support; there are performance and stability issues.
file system
- Most user, group, and permission related function and modules are not
supported or don't work as expected, e.g.
pwd
module,grp
module,os.setgroups
,os.chown
, and so on.lchown
andlchmod
are not available. umask
is a no-op.- hard links (
os.link
) are not supported. - Offset and iovec I/O functions (e.g.
os.pread
,os.preadv
) are not available. os.mknod
andos.mkfifo
don't work and are disabled.- Large file support crashes the runtime and is disabled.
mmap
module is unstable. flush (msync
) can crash the runtime.
Misc
- Heap memory and stack size are limited. Recursion or extensive memory consumption can crash Python.
- Most stdlib modules with a dependency on external libraries are missing,
e.g.
ctypes
,readline
,ssl
, and more. - Shared extension modules are not implemented yet. All extension modules
are statically linked into the main binary. The experimental configure
option
--enable-wasm-dynamic-linking
enables dynamic extensions supports. It's currently known to crash in combination with threading. - glibc extensions for date and time formatting are not available.
locales
module is affected by musl libc issues, gh-90548.- Python's object allocator
obmalloc
is disabled by default. ensurepip
is not available.- Some
ctypes
features likec_longlong
andc_longdouble
may need NodeJS option--experimental-wasm-bigint
.
In the browser
- The interactive shell does not handle copy 'n paste and unicode support well.
- The bundled stdlib is limited. Network-related modules,
multiprocessing, dbm, tests and similar modules
are not shipped. All other modules are bundled as pre-compiled
pyc
files. - In-memory file system (MEMFS) is not persistent and limited.
- Test modules are disabled by default. Use
--enable-test-modules
build test modules like_testcapi
.
wasm32-emscripten in node
Node builds use NODERAWFS
.
- Node RawFS allows direct access to the host file system without need to
perform
FS.mount()
call.
wasm64-emscripten
- wasm64 requires recent NodeJS and
--experimental-wasm-memory64
. EM_JS
functions must returnBigInt()
.Py_BuildValue()
format strings must match size of types. Confusing 32 and 64 bits types leads to memory corruption, see gh-95876 and gh-95878.
Hosting Python WASM builds
The simple REPL terminal uses SharedArrayBuffer. For security reasons
browsers only provide the feature in secure environents with cross-origin
isolation. The webserver must send cross-origin headers and correct MIME types
for the JavaScript and WASM files. Otherwise the terminal will fail to load
with an error message like Browsers disable shared array buffer
.
Apache HTTP .htaccess
Place a .htaccess
file in the same directory as python.wasm
.
# .htaccess
Header set Cross-Origin-Opener-Policy same-origin
Header set Cross-Origin-Embedder-Policy require-corp
AddType application/javascript js
AddType application/wasm wasm
<IfModule mod_deflate.c>
AddOutputFilterByType DEFLATE text/html application/javascript application/wasm
</IfModule>
WASI (wasm32-wasi)
NOTE: The instructions below assume a Unix-based OS due to cross-compilation for CPython being set up for ./configure
.
Prerequisites
Developing for WASI requires two additional tools to be installed beyond the typical tools required to build CPython:
- The WASI SDK 16.0+
- A WASI host/runtime (wasmtime 14+ is recommended and what the instructions below assume)
All of this is provided in the devcontainer if you don't want to install these tools locally.
Building
Building for WASI requires doing a cross-build where you have a "build" Python to help produce a WASI build of CPython (technically it's a "host x host" cross-build because the build Python is also the target Python while the host build is the WASI build; yes, it's confusing terminology). In the end you should have a build Python in cross-build/build
and a WASI build in cross-build/wasm32-wasi
.
The easiest way to do a build is to use the wasi.py
script. You can either have it perform the entire build process from start to finish in one step, or you can do it in discrete steps that mirror running configure
and make
for each of the two builds of Python you end up producing (which are beneficial when you only need to do a specific step after getting a complete build, e.g. editing some code and you just need to run make
for the WASI build). The script is designed to self-document what actions it is performing on your behalf, both as a way to check its work but also for educaitonal purposes.
The discrete steps for building via wasi.py
are:
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py configure-build-python
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py make-build-python
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py configure-host
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py make-host
To do it all in a single command, run:
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py build
That will:
- Run
configure
for the build Python (same aswasi.py configure-build-python
) - Run
make
for the build Python (wasi.py make-build-python
) - Run
configure
for the WASI build (wasi.py configure-host
) - Run
make
for the WASI build (wasi.py make-host
)
See the --help
for the various options available for each of the subcommands which controls things like the location of the WASI SDK, the command to use with the WASI host/runtime, etc. Also note that you can use --
as a separator for any of the configure
-related commands -- including build
itself -- to pass arguments to the underlying configure
call. For example, if you want a pydebug build that also caches the results from configure
, you can do:
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py build -- -C --with-pydebug
The wasi.py
script is able to infer details from the build Python, and so you only technically need to specify --with-pydebug
once via configure-build-python
as this will lead to configure-host
detecting its use if you use the discrete steps:
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py configure-build-python -- -C --with-pydebug
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py make-build-python
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py configure-host -- -C
python Tools/wasm/wasi.py make-host
Running
If you used wasi.py
to do your build then there will be a cross-build/wasm32-wasi/python.sh
file which you can use to run the python.wasm
file (see the output from the configure-host
subcommand):
cross-build/wasm32-wasi/python.sh --version
While you can run python.wasm
directly, Python will fail to start up without certain things being set (e.g. PYTHONPATH
for sysconfig
data). As such, the python.sh
file records these details for you.
Detecting WebAssembly builds
Python code
import os, sys
if sys.platform == "emscripten":
# Python on Emscripten
...
if sys.platform == "wasi":
# Python on WASI
...
if os.name == "posix":
# WASM platforms identify as POSIX-like.
# Windows does not provide os.uname().
machine = os.uname().machine
if machine.startswith("wasm"):
# WebAssembly (wasm32, wasm64 potentially in the future)
>>> import os, sys
>>> os.uname()
posix.uname_result(
sysname='Emscripten',
nodename='emscripten',
release='3.1.19',
version='#1',
machine='wasm32'
)
>>> os.name
'posix'
>>> sys.platform
'emscripten'
>>> sys._emscripten_info
sys._emscripten_info(
emscripten_version=(3, 1, 10),
runtime='Mozilla/5.0 (X11; Linux x86_64; rv:104.0) Gecko/20100101 Firefox/104.0',
pthreads=False,
shared_memory=False
)
>>> sys._emscripten_info
sys._emscripten_info(
emscripten_version=(3, 1, 19),
runtime='Node.js v14.18.2',
pthreads=True,
shared_memory=True
)
>>> import os, sys
>>> os.uname()
posix.uname_result(
sysname='wasi',
nodename='(none)',
release='0.0.0',
version='0.0.0',
machine='wasm32'
)
>>> os.name
'posix'
>>> sys.platform
'wasi'
C code
Emscripten SDK and WASI SDK define several built-in macros. You can dump a
full list of built-ins with emcc -dM -E - < /dev/null
and
/path/to/wasi-sdk/bin/clang -dM -E - < /dev/null
.
- WebAssembly
__wasm__
(also__wasm
) - wasm32
__wasm32__
(also__wasm32
) - wasm64
__wasm64__
- Emscripten
__EMSCRIPTEN__
(alsoEMSCRIPTEN
) - Emscripten version
__EMSCRIPTEN_major__
,__EMSCRIPTEN_minor__
,__EMSCRIPTEN_tiny__
- WASI
__wasi__