Supported Rust Targets - The wasm-bindgen Guide (original) (raw)
- Introduction
- 1. Examples
- 1.1. Hello, World!
- 1.2. Using console.log
- 1.3. Small Wasm files
- 1.4. Without a Bundler
- 1.5. Synchronous Instantiation
- 1.6. Importing functions from JS
- 1.7. Working with char
- 1.8. js-sys: WebAssembly in WebAssembly
- 1.9. web-sys: DOM hello world
- 1.10. web-sys: Closures
- 1.11. web-sys: performance.now
- 1.12. web-sys: using fetch
- 1.13. web-sys: Weather report
- 1.14. web-sys: canvas hello world
- 1.15. web-sys: canvas Julia set
- 1.16. web-sys: WebAudio
- 1.17. web-sys: WebGL
- 1.18. web-sys: WebSockets
- 1.19. web-sys: WebRTC DataChannel
- 1.20. web-sys: requestAnimationFrame
- 1.21. web-sys: A Simple Paint Program
- 1.22. web-sys: Wasm in Web Worker
- 1.23. Parallel Raytracing
- 1.24. Wasm Audio Worklet
- 1.25. web-sys: A TODO MVC App
- 2. Reference
- 2.1. Deployment
- 2.2. JS snippets
- 2.3. Static JS Objects
- 2.4. Passing Rust Closures to JS
- 2.5. Receiving JS Closures in Rust
- 2.6. Promises and Futures
- 2.7. Iterating over JS Values
- 2.8. Arbitrary Data with Serde
- 2.9. Accessing Properties of Untyped JS Values
- 2.10. Working with Duck-Typed Interfaces
- 2.11. Command Line Interface
- 2.12. Optimizing for Size
- 2.13. Supported Rust Targets
- 2.14. Supported Browsers
- 2.15. Support for Weak References
- 2.16. Support for Reference Types
- 2.17. Supported Types
- 2.18. #[wasm_bindgen] Attributes
- 2.18.1. On JavaScript Imports
- 2.18.1.1. catch
- 2.18.1.2. constructor
- 2.18.1.3. extends
- 2.18.1.4. getter and setter
- 2.18.1.5. final
- 2.18.1.6. indexing_getter, indexing_setter, and indexing_deleter
- 2.18.1.7. js_class = "Blah"
- 2.18.1.8. js_name
- 2.18.1.9. js_namespace
- 2.18.1.10. method
- 2.18.1.11. module = "blah"
- 2.18.1.12. raw_module = "blah"
- 2.18.1.13. no_deref
- 2.18.1.14. static_method_of = Blah
- 2.18.1.15. structural
- 2.18.1.16. typescript_type
- 2.18.1.17. variadic
- 2.18.1.18. vendor_prefix
- 2.18.1.1. catch
- 2.18.2. On Rust Exports
- 2.18.2.1. constructor
- 2.18.2.2. js_name = Blah
- 2.18.2.3. js_class = Blah
- 2.18.2.4. readonly
- 2.18.2.5. skip
- 2.18.2.6. skip_jsdoc
- 2.18.2.7. start
- 2.18.2.8. main
- 2.18.2.9. typescript_custom_section
- 2.18.2.10. getter and setter
- 2.18.2.11. inspectable
- 2.18.2.12. skip_typescript
- 2.18.2.13. getter_with_clone
- 2.18.2.14. unchecked_return_type and unchecked_param_type
- 2.18.2.15. return_description and param_description
- 2.18.2.1. constructor
- 3. web-sys
- 4. Testing with wasm-bindgen-test
- 5. Contributing to wasm-bindgen
- 5.2. Internal Design
- 5.3. js-sys
- 5.4. web-sys
- 5.5. Publishing
- 5.6. Team
This documentation isno longer maintained at this domain, and is now maintained at wasm-bindgen.github.io instead.
The `wasm-bindgen` Guide
Note: This section is about Rust target triples, not targets like node/web workers/browsers. More information on that coming soon!
The wasm-bindgen project is designed to target the wasm32-unknown-unknowntarget in Rust. This target is a "bare bones" target for Rust which emits WebAssembly as output. The standard library is largely inert as modules likestd::fs and std::net will simply return errors.
Note that wasm-bindgen also aims to compile on all targets. This means that it should be safe, if you like, to use #[wasm_bindgen] even when compiling for Windows (for example). For example:
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn add(a: u32, b: u32) -> u32 {
a + b
}
#[cfg(not(target_arch = "wasm32"))]
fn main() {
println!("1 + 2 = {}", add(1, 2));
}
This program will compile and work on all platforms, not justwasm32-unknown-unknown. Note that imported functions with #[wasm_bindgen]will unconditionally panic on non-wasm targets. For example:
#[wasm_bindgen]
extern "C" {
#[wasm_bindgen(js_namespace = console)]
fn log(s: &str);
}
fn main() {
log("hello!");
}
This program will unconditionally panic on all platforms other thanwasm32-unknown-unknown.
For better compile times, however, you likely want to only use #[wasm_bindgen]on the wasm32-unknown-unknown target. You can have a target-specific dependency like so:
[target.'cfg(target_arch = "wasm32")'.dependencies]
wasm-bindgen = "0.2"
And in your code you can use:
# #![allow(unused_variables)]
#fn main() {
#[cfg(target_arch = "wasm32")]
#[wasm_bindgen]
pub fn only_on_the_wasm_target() {
// ...
}
#}
The wasm-bindgen target does not support the wasm32-unknown-emscripten nor the asmjs-unknown-emscripten targets. There are currently no plans to support these targets either. All annotations work like other platforms on the targets, retaining exported functions and causing all imports to panic.